LGBTQ+ Grants in Australia: Funding Inclusion, Health, and Community

LGBTQ+ Australians face significant and distinct challenges — higher rates of mental health conditions, experiences of discrimination, family rejection, and inadequate healthcare from providers unfamiliar with LGBTQ+ needs. Despite significant social progress including marriage equality (2017), discrimination and its health consequences persist. Grant funding supports LGBTQ+ health services, community organisations, youth support, trans and gender diverse specific programmes, and the advocacy that continues to improve the legal and social environment for LGBTQ+ Australians.

LGBTQ+ communities in Australia

Scale

  • Approximately 11% of Australians identify as LGBTQ+ (varying by age — higher in younger generations)
  • Marriage equality achieved 2017 (through postal survey — 61.6% Yes)
  • LGBTQ+ Australians remain protected from discrimination under federal law (Sex Discrimination Act)

Health disparities

LGBTQ+ Australians experience significant health disparities:
- Mental health: significantly higher rates of depression, anxiety, suicidality — particularly in youth
- Suicide: LGBTQ+ young people are approximately 5x more likely to attempt suicide than their non-LGBTQ+ peers
- Sexual health: gay, bisexual, and men who have sex with men (GBMSM) bear disproportionate HIV burden
- Trans and gender diverse: higher rates of depression, anxiety, and self-harm; significant barriers to healthcare
- Lesbian and bisexual women: higher rates of some cancers (linked to lower screening and healthcare access)
- Substance use: higher rates, partly related to minority stress

Discrimination

Despite legal protections, discrimination persists:
- Religious organisations can still exclude LGBTQ+ students and staff (religious discrimination debate)
- Conversion practices (still legal in some jurisdictions)
- Workplace discrimination
- Healthcare discrimination and inadequate training of providers
- Family rejection (a major driver of LGBTQ+ youth homelessness)

Government LGBTQ+ funding

National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)

Research grants including LGBTQ+ health research.

Department of Health

HIV/AIDS funding and LGBTQ+ specific health programmes.

Attorney General

Anti-discrimination and legal reform.

State equality offices

Each state has some form of LGBTQ+ equality framework — some with specific funding.

Conversion Practices

Victoria, QLD, ACT, SA have banned conversion practices — with some funding for survivor support.

Philanthropic LGBTQ+ funders

ACON (NSW)

Australia's largest LGBTQ+ health organisation:
- HIV prevention and testing
- LGBTQ+ mental health
- Rainbow Tick (LGBTQ+-inclusive organisations)
- Community programmes

Rainbow Health Australia

National coordination of LGBTQ+ health.

QLife

National LGBTQ+ peer support phone and webchat.

Thorne Harbour Health

Melbourne-based LGBTQ+ health organisation.

LGBTIQ+ Health Australia

Peak national LGBTQ+ health organisation.

PFLAG Australia

Families and friends of LGBTQ+ people.

Various corporate foundations

ANZ, NAB, and major corporations fund LGBTQ+ inclusion through community investment.

Community foundations

Some community foundations have specific LGBTQ+ grant streams.

Types of funded LGBTQ+ programmes

Mental health

LGBTQ+ specific mental health is a priority:
- QLife (peer support telephone line)
- LGBTQ+ affirming counselling and therapy
- Youth LGBTQ+ mental health (headspace LGBTQ+ specific services)
- Group programmes (LGBTQ+ support groups)
- Online mental health resources

HIV and sexual health

  • HIV prevention (PrEP promotion, condom access, testing)
  • HIV treatment support
  • Testing programmes
  • Sexual health clinics
  • HIV stigma reduction

Trans and gender diverse

A significant and underserved population:
- Gender-affirming healthcare access (hormones, surgeries)
- Trans-specific mental health
- Trans youth support (including families)
- Trans employment support
- Trans legal support (name/gender change on documents)

LGBTQ+ youth

Young LGBTQ+ people are at highest risk:
- Safe schools and inclusive education
- Youth LGBTQ+ groups (face-to-face and online)
- LGBTQ+ youth housing (family rejection is a major cause of youth homelessness)
- Online peer support
- Schools advocacy (supporting LGBTQ+ students)

Coming out support

  • Coming out resources
  • Support for LGBTQ+ people in religious communities
  • Family support (PFLAG)

Older LGBTQ+ people

  • LGBTQ+ inclusive aged care
  • Social groups for older LGBTQ+ people
  • Aged care worker training (LGBTQ+ awareness)

LGBTQ+ families

  • Same-sex parenting support
  • Rainbow families networks
  • Donor-conceived person support
  • Legal advice for rainbow families

Rural and regional LGBTQ+

  • Online support (particularly important where local services don't exist)
  • LGBTQ+ rural networks
  • Visibility and safety in rural communities

LGBTQ+ culture and arts

  • Pride events
  • LGBTQ+ arts funding
  • Mardi Gras and similar events
  • LGBTQ+ history and archives

Conversion practice survivor support

  • Counselling for people harmed by conversion practices
  • Advocacy for bans in remaining jurisdictions
  • Research on harm

Workplace inclusion

  • LGBTQ+ employee networks
  • Employer education
  • Rainbow Tick certification

Rainbow Tick

Rainbow Tick is Australia's LGBTQ+ inclusive organisation certification:
- Developed by GLHV (Gay and Lesbian Health Victoria)
- Used across health, aged care, and community services
- Demonstrates commitment to LGBTQ+ inclusive practice
- Increasingly required by funders

Grant application considerations

Intersectionality

LGBTQ+ identity intersects with other identities — Aboriginal LGBTQ+ people, CALD LGBTQ+ people, LGBTQ+ people with disability. Applications that address intersecting identities are more sophisticated.

Trans and gender diverse priority

Trans and gender diverse people face the most acute challenges within the broader LGBTQ+ community — highest rates of mental health challenges, greatest barriers to healthcare, and significant legal and social discrimination. Applications addressing trans-specific needs are compelling.

Youth urgency

LGBTQ+ youth mental health (including suicidality) is an urgent priority. Applications addressing youth — with particular attention to family rejection, school environments, and peer connection — have strong moral urgency.

Affirmative approaches

LGBTQ+ programmes must be genuinely affirmative — not just "welcoming" but actively affirming of all sexual orientations, gender identities, and relationship structures. Show this in your approach.


Tahua's grants management platform supports LGBTQ+ funders and community health organisations — with programme participant tracking, mental health outcome measurement, community reach data, and the reporting tools that help LGBTQ+ funders demonstrate their investment in the health, safety, and inclusion of LGBTQ+ Australians.

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