Youth Leadership Grants in Australia: Funding the Next Generation of Change-Makers

Young people who develop leadership skills early are more likely to contribute to community life, pursue ambitious careers, and drive positive change. Youth leadership grant funding supports programs that build confidence, communication, decision-making, and civic engagement in young Australians. From school-based leadership programs to Indigenous youth leadership development, these investments shape the leaders that communities, organisations, and governments will rely on in the coming decades.

Youth leadership in Australia

Why leadership development matters

  • Leadership skills built in youth persist into adult life
  • Young people with leadership experience are more likely to engage civically
  • Leadership programs build social networks that support careers and community contribution
  • Many leadership skills — communication, conflict resolution, decision-making — are transferable across all life domains
  • Indigenous and disadvantaged youth particularly benefit from targeted leadership investment

Who youth leadership programs serve

  • Secondary school students developing self-confidence and teamwork
  • Young people from disadvantaged backgrounds who lack access to leadership experiences
  • Indigenous young people with culturally appropriate leadership development
  • Young women and non-binary youth overcoming structural barriers to leadership
  • Rural and regional youth who have fewer leadership opportunities
  • Young people from CALD backgrounds navigating leadership in Australian institutions

Sectors that need young leaders

  • Community organisations and nonprofits
  • Local government and civic institutions
  • Sport and recreation
  • Business and entrepreneurship
  • Environment and sustainability
  • Arts and culture
  • Advocacy and activism

Government youth leadership support

Department of Social Services (DSS)

Youth participation and civic engagement programs.

Department of Infrastructure (regional)

Regional youth programs including leadership components.

State governments

  • Premier's Leadership Programs
  • Youth advisory groups and councils
  • Youth grants for civic participation

Local government

Youth councils, ambassador programs, and leadership scholarships.

Philanthropic youth leadership funders

The Ian Potter Foundation

Youth and community development.

Jack Ma Foundation

Young leadership development programs.

The Snow Foundation

Youth leadership with equity focus.

Foundation for Young Australians (FYA)

Youth leadership, entrepreneurship, and future of work.

The Duke of Edinburgh's International Award

Physical activity, skills, voluntary service, and adventurous journeys for youth leadership development.

Rotary Australia

Youth exchange, leadership, and service programs.

Smith Family

Leadership within disadvantaged youth education programs.

Ramsay Youth Foundation

Youth leadership at community level.

Types of funded youth leadership programs

School-based leadership

  • Student representative councils (SRC) development
  • Peer leadership programs
  • Leadership roles within school activities
  • Outward Bound and outdoor leadership experiences
  • Debating, public speaking, and communication programs

Civic and community leadership

  • Youth councils (local, state, national)
  • Young people in community organisations
  • Youth advisory committees to government
  • Model UN and mock parliament programs
  • Youth civic action projects

Indigenous youth leadership

  • Culturally appropriate leadership development
  • Connection to country and leadership
  • Indigenous-led youth leadership programs
  • Young people as leaders within community
  • Traditional governance and leadership knowledge

Mentoring programs

  • Connecting young people with experienced leaders
  • Career mentoring with leadership components
  • Peer mentoring programs
  • Cross-cultural mentoring

Entrepreneurship and innovation

  • Young entrepreneurs programs
  • Social enterprise for youth
  • Innovation challenges and hackathons
  • Business leadership development

Women's leadership

  • Girls' leadership development
  • Women in leadership programs for young women
  • Addressing structural barriers to leadership
  • Confidence and self-advocacy development

Rural and regional leadership

  • Leadership programs for rural youth
  • Regional youth exchanges and residencies
  • Agricultural and rural community leadership

Sport leadership

  • Captain and leadership roles in sport
  • Junior coaching and officiating development
  • Volunteer leadership in sport

Cultural and arts leadership

  • Young artists as community leaders
  • Cultural leadership in CALD communities
  • Traditional arts and leadership connection

The equity dimension

Many young Australians are significantly under-resourced in leadership development:
- Private schools invest heavily in leadership programs that are not available in public schools
- Rural and regional youth have fewer structured leadership opportunities
- Indigenous youth leadership programs are chronically underfunded relative to need
- Young people from low-income families cannot afford fee-paying programs

Grant funding for youth leadership that specifically serves underrepresented young people addresses a genuine equity gap and builds community leadership capacity where it's needed most.

Grant application considerations

Equity and access

Leadership programs that exclusively serve advantaged young people have limited social return. Applications targeting under-served youth — particularly Indigenous, rural, and disadvantaged young people — are more compelling.

Long-term outcomes

Youth leadership programs vary enormously in quality. Applications with strong follow-up data — where are alumni three or five years later — are more credible than those measuring only immediate satisfaction.

Cultural appropriateness

Indigenous youth leadership programs must be culturally grounded and community-led. Applications with strong Indigenous partnership and cultural design are essential for this population.

Sustainability of leadership development

One-off leadership experiences matter less than sustained development. Applications with ongoing engagement — alumni networks, mentoring continuity, leadership progression — produce more durable leaders.


Tahua's grants management platform supports youth leadership funders and leadership development organisations — with participant tracking, outcome measurement, alumni engagement data, and the reporting tools that help youth leadership funders demonstrate their investment in Australia's next generation of community leaders.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →