Mental Health Carers Grants in Australia: Funding Support for Those Who Care

Approximately 1 million Australians provide unpaid care to a family member with mental illness — partners, parents, adult children, and siblings who support people living with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, severe depression, and other mental illnesses. Carers provide enormous value to the health system and to their loved ones — but at significant cost to their own wellbeing. Carers have elevated rates of depression, anxiety, and social isolation. Young carers who care for a parent with mental illness face particular challenges — interrupted education, social isolation, and the weight of adult responsibility. Grant funding supports carer education, respite, peer support, and young carer programmes that give carers the recognition and support they deserve.

Mental health carers in Australia

Scale

  • Approximately 1 million unpaid carers of people with mental illness in Australia
  • Most are family members — partners (most common), parents, children
  • Carers contribute approximately 1.4 billion hours of care annually
  • Estimated economic value: approximately $77 billion per year

The carer experience

Mental illness affects the whole family:
- Unpredictability: relapses, hospitalisations, crises
- Grief: grieving the person they knew before the illness
- Stigma: often hidden from family, friends, workplace
- Financial impact: reduced employment due to caring responsibilities
- Social isolation: focus on caring leaves little time for relationships

Carers' own health

  • Carers of people with mental illness have significantly elevated rates of depression and anxiety
  • Social isolation is common
  • Physical health neglected due to caring demands
  • Burnout and compassionate fatigue

Young carers

Young people who care for a parent with mental illness face particular challenges:
- Interrupted education (missing school, difficulty concentrating)
- Social isolation (can't invite friends home, doesn't explain to peers)
- Taking on adult responsibilities (cooking, managing the household)
- Often invisible — parents don't identify as having young carers

Government mental health carer funding

Carer Recognition Act 2010

Recognition of carers' rights and contributions.

Centrelink Carer Payment

Financial support for carers who can't work due to caring responsibilities.

Mental Health Australia

Peak body — some carer focus.

ARAFMI

Mental health carer association — some government support.

Philanthropic mental health carer funders

ARAFMI (Assisting the Relatives and Friends of those with Mental Illness)

Peak organisation for mental health carers:
- Support groups
- Education
- Respite
- Advocacy

Mental Health Carers Australia

National peak body for mental health carers.

SANE Australia

Mental health community including carers.

Wellways

Carer support alongside mental health services.

Headspace (for young carers)

Some young carer mental health support.

Types of funded mental health carer programmes

Carer education

  • Mental illness education (understanding the illness)
  • How to support someone with mental illness
  • Communication skills
  • Crisis management training
  • Family therapy (for family systems, not just the person with illness)

Peer support

  • Carer support groups
  • One-on-one carer peer support
  • Online carer communities
  • Carers' retreats and events

Respite

  • Planned respite (time off from caring)
  • Emergency respite
  • In-home respite support
  • Social activities for carers

Psychological support

  • Counselling for carers
  • Mental health support for carers
  • Grief and loss support
  • Burnout recovery

Young carers

  • Young carer support groups
  • School support for young carers
  • Mentoring for young carers
  • Holiday programmes
  • Education support (catching up after caring interruptions)

Family and relationship support

  • Family therapy
  • Couples counselling for partners of people with mental illness
  • Sibling support
  • Navigating boundaries in care relationships

Carer rights and advocacy

  • Carer rights education
  • Hospital and mental health service engagement
  • Carer participation in treatment planning (with consent)
  • Carer advocacy organisations

Carer workforce participation

  • Supporting carers to maintain employment
  • Flexible work arrangements
  • Re-entry into workforce after full-time caring

Cultural support

  • CALD carer support (culturally appropriate, in language)
  • Indigenous carer support

The invisible burden

Carers of people with mental illness are often invisible:
- Stigma means they don't disclose the caring role
- Mental illness is often hidden by the person experiencing it
- Carers don't identify as "carers" — "I'm just supporting my [family member]"
- Services focus on the person with mental illness, not the family

Recognition — identifying, naming, and acknowledging carers — is the first step to supporting them.

Grant application considerations

Peer support as primary

Carers most value support from other carers who truly understand the experience. Applications centring peer support — support groups, peer mentoring — are aligned with what carers say they need.

Young carers

Young carers are among the most invisible and under-supported group. Applications specifically identifying and supporting young people caring for parents with mental illness — in schools and communities — are addressing a gap.

Respite

Carers cannot sustain caring without breaks. Applications that provide genuine respite — not just advice about respite — enable sustained caring and prevent carer breakdown.

ARAFMI model

ARAFMI is the established Australian model for mental health carer support. Applications building on ARAFMI's model — and supporting ARAFMI's reach — are building on proven foundations.


Tahua's grants management platform supports mental health carer funders and carer support organisations — with carer engagement tracking, wellbeing outcome measurement, respite programme data, and the reporting tools that help mental health carer funders demonstrate their investment in the million Australians caring for loved ones with mental illness.

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