Carer Support Grants in Australia: Funding Those Who Care for Others

Australia's 2.65 million unpaid carers are one of the most essential and most overlooked groups in the social service ecosystem. Carers provide care for family members and friends with disability, chronic illness, mental health conditions, or frailty — doing work that would otherwise cost the health and disability system billions of dollars. The cost to carers is high: financial, physical, emotional, and social. Grant funding supports the respite, information, wellbeing, and peer connection that keeps carers going.

Carers in Australia

Scale

  • 2.65 million Australians provide unpaid care for someone with disability, chronic illness, or aged care needs
  • Primary carers: approximately 900,000 — providing most or all of the care for one person
  • Unpaid care value: estimated at over $77 billion annually (what it would cost to replace this care in the formal system)
  • Carer ages: carers are found across all ages, including children (young carers) and elderly carers looking after very elderly spouses

Who carers are

  • Most carers are women (approximately 68%)
  • Spousal carers: often elderly, looking after a partner with age-related disability or dementia
  • Parent carers: parents of children or adults with disability
  • Child/young carers: children and young people (under 25) caring for a parent or sibling
  • Adult children: caring for ageing parents
  • Carers from CALD backgrounds: carers from multicultural families, often without access to mainstream services

Carer health and wellbeing

Carers experience significantly worse health and wellbeing outcomes than non-carers:
- Higher rates of depression and anxiety
- Physical health impacts (back pain, cardiovascular, neglected own health)
- Social isolation and loneliness
- Financial disadvantage (reduced employment, out-of-pocket costs)
- Carer burnout and psychological exhaustion

Young carers

Young carers (under 25 providing care) face particular impacts:
- Educational disruption (missing school, difficulty studying)
- Social isolation (less time for friendships and activities)
- Limited career development
- Taking on adult responsibilities prematurely

Government carer support funding

Carer Gateway

Australian Government's national carer support system:
- Carer Gateway online portal (information, resources)
- Services funded through Carer Gateway: counselling, coaching, respite coordination, peer support
- Carer counselling (up to 3 sessions, free)
- Emergency respite

Carer Payment and Allowance

Income support for primary carers — means-tested.

NDIS

Carer respite funded through NDIS for carers of NDIS participants.

Aged Care

  • Residential respite (up to 63 days per year for carers of people with aged care needs)
  • Home Care Packages include carer support components

State governments

State-based carer support programmes and services.

Philanthropic carer support funders

Carers Australia

National peak body:
- Policy advocacy
- Information and resources
- Young Carers network

Carers NSW / VIC / QLD / WA / SA / TAS

State-based carer organisations:
- Information, support, and advocacy
- Respite coordination
- Young carer programmes

Alzheimer's Australia (Dementia Australia)

Dementia-specific carer support.

Multiple Sclerosis organisations

Carer support for MS carers.

Parkinson's state organisations

Carer support programmes.

Mental health organisations

SANE, ARAFMI — carers of people with mental health conditions.

EACH Foundation and disability organisations

Carer support through disability services.

Types of funded carer support programmes

Respite

Respite allows carers to take a break:
- In-home respite (someone comes to be with the care recipient)
- Centre-based respite (day programmes for care recipients)
- Overnight and residential respite
- Emergency respite (crisis situations)
- Planned respite

Peer support

Carers benefit from connecting with others in similar situations:
- Support groups (in person and online)
- Peer coaching and mentoring
- Online carer communities
- Phone-based peer support

Information and navigation

  • Carer information (rights, services, legal)
  • Service navigation (helping carers access what's available)
  • Financial guidance (benefits, entitlements)
  • Future planning (what happens when the carer can no longer care?)

Counselling and mental health

  • Individual counselling (free through Carer Gateway)
  • Group therapy programmes
  • Psychology and psychotherapy access
  • Mindfulness and stress management

Young carer support

  • Young Carer Register
  • School-based identification and support
  • Youth worker support for young carers
  • Scholarship and bursary programmes
  • Peer connection (young carers understanding each other)

Dementia carer support

Dementia care is one of the most demanding caring roles:
- Dementia carer education programmes
- Support groups for dementia carers
- Managing behaviour changes
- End-of-stage support and grief

Mental health carer support

Caring for someone with mental illness is uniquely stressful:
- ARAFMI (carers of people with mental illness)
- Family peer support workers (those with lived experience as carers)
- GROW and similar community mental health support

Carer health

  • Carer health check programmes (carers often neglect their own health)
  • Exercise and wellbeing programmes for carers
  • Nutrition and physical health support

Financial support

  • Emergency financial assistance
  • Utility and bill assistance
  • Equipment grants for home care
  • Legal and financial planning for carers

End of caring

When caring ends (through death, residential placement, or other transition):
- Grief and bereavement support
- Identity support (carers often lose their sense of purpose and identity)
- Social reconnection

Cultural considerations

Carers from CALD backgrounds often:
- Do not identify as "carers" (care is seen as a family duty, not a role)
- Do not access mainstream services (cultural stigma, language barriers)
- May face discrimination in the health system
- Provide care within culturally defined frameworks

Culturally adapted carer support — in community languages, delivered through trusted community organisations — is essential and underserved.

Grant application considerations

The unpaid care argument

$77 billion in unpaid care — funded at a fraction of its value by government — is a compelling equity argument. Carers subsidise the health and disability system enormously. Applications that articulate this are compelling.

Young carer visibility

Young carers are largely invisible — many don't self-identify, schools don't recognise them, services don't reach them. Applications that identify and support young carers are well-positioned.

Dementia carer priority

Dementia carer burden is enormous — and with an ageing population, dementia carer numbers are growing rapidly. Applications targeting dementia carers address a growing and urgent need.

Respite access equity

Respite is consistently the top need of carers — but access is inequitable. Rural carers, CALD carers, and carers of people with complex needs often face greater difficulty accessing respite. Equity-focused respite applications are compelling.


Tahua's grants management platform supports carer support funders and carer organisations — with programme participant tracking, carer wellbeing outcome measurement, respite utilisation data, and the reporting tools that help carer funders demonstrate their investment in the wellbeing of Australia's 2.65 million unpaid carers.

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