Social Enterprise Grants in Australia: Funding Business with Purpose

Social enterprises are businesses that trade to deliver social, environmental, or cultural outcomes — not just financial profit. Australia has an estimated 12,000+ social enterprises, employing approximately 206,000 people and generating approximately $21 billion in revenue. Social enterprises include op shops (Salvos, Vinnies), NDIS service providers, employment enterprises for people with disability, environmental enterprises, and community businesses. Grant funding supports social enterprise development, incubation, capacity building, and the market development that helps social enterprises grow.

Social enterprise in Australia

The landscape

  • Estimated 12,000+ social enterprises in Australia
  • Employing approximately 206,000 people
  • Generating approximately $21 billion in annual revenue
  • Growing sector — particularly in disability services (NDIS) and employment

Types of social enterprise

  • Work integration social enterprises: employ people facing barriers to employment
  • Community enterprises: owned and operated by communities for community benefit
  • Environmental enterprises: social enterprise model for environmental outcomes
  • Service delivery enterprises: non-profit services with trading model (op shops, NDIS providers)
  • Cooperative enterprises: member-owned, democratically governed

The grant-enterprise tension

Social enterprises are different from charities:
- They generate revenue through trading, not just donations
- They need business skills alongside social mission
- Grant funding alone is not the model — revenue sustainability is the goal
- But early-stage social enterprises often need grant support to reach viability

Government social enterprise support

Business Enterprise Centres

General small business support — available to social enterprises.

Department of Social Services

  • NDIS (major driver of social enterprise in disability sector)
  • Employment programmes including social enterprise employment

Social Ventures Australia

Government-partnered social investment.

State social enterprise programmes

  • Victoria: Social Enterprise Support (LaunchVic-related)
  • NSW: Social Enterprise Development and Investment Funds (SEDIF) — loans
  • QLD: Social Enterprise Sector Investment Programme

Philanthropic social enterprise funders

The Paul Ramsay Foundation

Systems change including social enterprise.

Social Ventures Australia (SVA)

Major social enterprise development organisation:
- Consulting to social enterprises
- Social impact measurement
- Impact investment readiness

The NAB Foundation

Social enterprise development.

ANZ Foundation

Social enterprise capacity building.

Impact Investing Australia

Developing the impact investment market.

The Kilfinan Group

Pro bono executive mentoring for social enterprises.

STREAT

Social enterprise (hospitality training) and social enterprise advocacy.

Types of funded social enterprise programmes

Incubation and accelerators

  • Social enterprise incubator programmes (STREAT, Foundation for Young Australians)
  • Accelerators (igniting social enterprise growth)
  • Pitch competitions and social enterprise prizes
  • Social enterprise fellowship programmes

Capacity building

  • Business planning for social enterprises
  • Financial management for social enterprises
  • Marketing and communications for social impact
  • Legal structure advice (charity vs company)
  • Governance for social enterprise boards

Impact measurement

  • Social return on investment (SROI) analysis
  • Impact measurement frameworks
  • Outcomes reporting for funders
  • B Corporation certification support

Impact investment readiness

  • Investment readiness programmes
  • Impact investor matching
  • Social enterprise financial modelling
  • Blended finance (grants + loans + equity)

Market development

  • Social procurement facilitation (helping enterprises access procurement opportunities)
  • Social enterprise directories and matching platforms
  • Government social procurement policy advocacy
  • Corporate social procurement partnerships

Sector development

  • Social enterprise peak body support
  • Network development
  • Research and data on the social enterprise sector
  • Policy advocacy for social enterprise-enabling legislation

Work integration

  • Social enterprises employing people with disability
  • Social enterprises employing long-term unemployed
  • Prison-release employment enterprises
  • Social enterprises for young people at risk

Cooperative development

  • Worker cooperative development
  • Housing cooperative support
  • Community enterprise governance
  • Platform cooperative development

Rural social enterprise

  • Social enterprises in rural and regional Australia
  • Community-owned services in declining rural towns
  • Agricultural social enterprise

The NDIS effect on social enterprise

The NDIS has fundamentally transformed the disability service sector — from grant-dependent charities to trading service providers. Many disability organisations are now social enterprises:
- Revenue from NDIS participant plans
- Market competition with for-profit providers
- Need for business skills alongside disability expertise

This shift has forced the sector to develop commercial capabilities — creating both opportunity and challenge.

Grant application considerations

Trading model clarity

Grant funding for social enterprise should support organisations on the path to revenue sustainability — not perpetuate grant dependency. Applications with a clear theory of how grants enable them to reach trading viability are more credible.

Employment outcomes

Work integration social enterprises that create employment for disadvantaged people have a clear, measurable social outcome. Applications with strong employment outcome data are compelling.

Market development

Individual social enterprise capacity is important, but market development — making it easier for all social enterprises to access procurement, impact investment, and market recognition — has more systemic impact.

Ecosystem approach

The strongest social enterprise funding strategies invest across the ecosystem: incubators for early-stage, capacity building for growing enterprises, investment vehicles for scaling, and sector advocacy.


Tahua's grants management platform supports social enterprise funders and social impact organisations — with enterprise performance tracking, social outcome measurement, investment readiness data, and the reporting tools that help social enterprise funders demonstrate their investment in Australian business with purpose.

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