Agriculture Grants in Australia: Funding Farmers, Food Systems, and Rural Communities

Australian agriculture — feeding the nation and exporting to the world — operates in a challenging environment of climate variability, rising input costs, and global market pressures. Government grant programmes, research investment, and philanthropic support provide significant funding across the agricultural sector. Understanding this landscape matters for farmers, agribusinesses, rural communities, and organisations supporting Australia's food systems.

The Australian agriculture funding landscape

Australian agriculture generates approximately AUD 70 billion annually, with significant export value in beef, wheat, dairy, wool, and horticulture. Government investment in agriculture serves multiple purposes:
- Productivity and competitiveness (research, innovation, extension)
- Resilience (drought, flood, and disaster response)
- Environmental sustainability (land and water management)
- Rural community viability (social and economic support)
- Food security (supply chain resilience)

Federal government agriculture programmes

Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF)

DAFF administers multiple grant programmes for agriculture:

Future Drought Fund

One of the largest recent agricultural investments — the Future Drought Fund (established 2019) provides sustained investment in drought preparedness and resilience:
- Agricultural innovation and adoption
- Drought resilience adoption and innovation hubs
- Regional drought resilience planning
- Social support for drought-affected farming communities

Drought communities support

When drought is declared, additional support becomes available:
- Drought Household Allowance (income support)
- Farm Household Allowance
- Additional rural financial counselling
- Mental health and community support

Agricultural Competitiveness White Paper programmes

Various programmes improving market access, supply chain efficiency, and agricultural competitiveness.

Agri-Science

Investment in agricultural R&D through the Rural Research and Development Corporations (RDCs) — producer-owned bodies that levy and co-invest in agricultural research relevant to their industries.

Rural Research and Development Corporations (RDCs)

Australia's unique RDC system channels significant investment into agricultural R&D:
- Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC): wheat, barley, canola, and other grains
- Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA): beef and lamb research and marketing
- Dairy Australia: dairy industry R&D
- Horticulture Innovation Australia: fruit, vegetables, and nuts
- Australian Wool Innovation (AWI): wool research and marketing
- Sugar Research Australia: sugarcane

RDCs fund research through grants to universities, research institutes, and industry bodies. While not typically accessible to individual farmers, RDC-funded research and extension services benefit the whole industry.

State government agriculture programmes

Each state has its own agricultural grant programmes:

Queensland

  • AgTech adoption grants (precision agriculture, digital farming)
  • Drought assistance — water infrastructure, fodder support
  • On-farm water infrastructure rebates
  • Agricultural industry development programmes

New South Wales

  • Farmer assistance in drought and disaster
  • On-farm water efficiency programmes
  • AgTech adoption
  • Primary Industries research grants

Victoria

  • Agriculture infrastructure grants
  • Sustainability and water use efficiency
  • Food and fibre sector development

Western Australia

  • Agricultural land management (salinity, erosion control)
  • Waterwise on farms programmes
  • Innovation and agtech

South Australia

  • Diversification and innovation grants
  • Water security and efficiency

Sustainable agriculture and environmental grants

National Landcare Programme

The National Landcare Programme funds sustainable land management:
- Sustainable agriculture practices (soil health, conservation farming)
- Integrated pest and weed management
- Habitat protection on agricultural land
- Community landcare groups

Emissions Reduction Fund / Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs)

Farmers can access payment for reducing greenhouse gas emissions or sequestering carbon:
- Soil carbon projects
- Avoided deforestation
- Livestock management (methane reduction)

Reef 2050 Agricultural Initiatives

Funding for farmers in Great Barrier Reef catchments to reduce runoff and improve water quality through better land management.

CSIRO and state agricultural research

Research funding for sustainable agriculture innovation — new crop varieties, climate adaptation, water use efficiency.

Agtech and innovation grants

Accelerating Precision Agriculture

Government programmes to accelerate adoption of precision agriculture technologies:
- GPS and variable-rate technology
- Drone monitoring and mapping
- Automated irrigation
- Remote livestock monitoring

AgTech startups and innovation hubs

Funding for agricultural technology startups and innovation:
- Regional AgTech hubs providing infrastructure and support
- Business innovation grants for agricultural technology development
- Accelerator programmes for agriculture-focused businesses

Accessing agriculture grants

Determine your category

Agriculture grants vary by:
- Production type (crops, livestock, horticulture, dairy, mixed)
- Scale (small farm, commercial operation, cooperative)
- Purpose (infrastructure, innovation, sustainability, disaster recovery)
- Location (regional, remote, specific drought or natural disaster zones)

Rural financial counselling

The government funds free Rural Financial Counselling through the Rural Financial Counselling Service — counsellors can help farmers navigate grant programmes, access support, and manage financial pressures. This service is highly valuable and underused.

Industry body support

Industry bodies (NFF, state farming associations, RDCs) often provide grant navigation support and may run their own small grant programmes for members.

Local council and regional development

Regional Development Australia bodies and local councils often administer regional development grants with agricultural components.

Challenges in agricultural grant programmes

Administrative burden

Grant applications can be complex and time-consuming — a significant burden for farmers already stretched by operational demands.

Eligibility complexity

Overlapping federal, state, and industry programmes with different eligibility criteria can be confusing to navigate.

Uptake in rural and remote areas

Farmers in remote areas may face connectivity challenges and limited access to support for grant applications — digital literacy and broadband access are genuine constraints.

Recovery versus prevention

Much agricultural grant funding is reactive (drought response, disaster recovery) rather than proactive (building resilience before the crisis). Shifting toward pre-emptive investment is a growing policy discussion.


Tahua's grants management platform supports organisations managing agricultural grant programmes — with applicant tracking, eligibility management, milestone reporting, and the portfolio tools that help agricultural funding bodies manage complex programme delivery across rural and regional Australia.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →