Flooding is Australia's most costly natural disaster — causing more economic damage than any other event type. The 2022 south-east Queensland and NSW floods, the 2011 Brisbane floods, the 2022 Murray Darling floods — each demonstrating that flooding is not a rare anomaly but a recurring reality for much of Australia. Climate change is intensifying rainfall and flooding events. Grant funding supports immediate relief, long-term recovery, community preparedness, and ecological restoration for flood-affected communities.
Scale and impact
Who is most affected
Climate change and flooding
Climate change increases flooding risk:
- More intense rainfall events
- Longer, wetter La Niña events
- More rapid intensification of weather systems
- Flood risk in unexpected locations expanding
Disaster Recovery Funding Arrangements (DRFA)
Commonwealth-state cost-sharing for disaster recovery:
- Activated after declared disasters
- Individual assistance (payments to affected households)
- Community recovery grants
- Public infrastructure repair
State governments
States manage disaster recovery:
- NSW Resilience NSW (now Emergency Management NSW)
- VIC Emergency Management Victoria
- QLD Queensland Reconstruction Authority
National Flood Insurance Inquiry
Government investment in flood insurance affordability and community protection.
Local councils
Councils fund local flood management:
- Levee maintenance
- Drainage infrastructure
- Stormwater management
Australian Red Cross
Primary emergency welfare responder — cash assistance, psychosocial support, recovery programmes.
The Salvation Army
Emergency relief, material aid, and longer-term recovery support.
Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR)
Disaster recovery in rural communities — has distributed tens of millions after major flood events.
Community foundations
State-based community foundations often establish flood relief funds — directing corporate and individual donations to community-led recovery.
Corporate philanthropy
Major Australian companies contribute to flood recovery:
- Banks (financial hardship management)
- Insurance companies (claims processing, community investment)
- Mining and resources companies (in affected regions)
- Agricultural companies (supporting farming communities)
Immediate relief
Household recovery
Farming recovery
Community infrastructure
Mental health and wellbeing
Business recovery
Preparedness and mitigation
Ecological restoration
Rural communities face distinct flood challenges:
- Isolated road access (cut off for weeks)
- Limited emergency services
- Long distances to relief centres
- Agricultural economic dependence
- Community mental health stresses
FRRR has become the primary conduit for philanthropy to rural flood recovery — with established processes for rapid deployment of community grants.
Recovery timeline
Flood recovery takes 3-5+ years. Applications that show sustained commitment — particularly for mental health and economic recovery — align with the actual recovery timeline rather than optimistic short-term programmes.
Community agency
Communities lead their own recovery — outside organisations that arrive to "help" are sometimes a burden. Show how your programme supports community-led priorities rather than imposing external solutions.
Pre-event preparedness
Some of the most effective investments are in preparedness — community flood plans, early warning systems, evacuation route awareness. Applications for preparedness are often underfunded relative to recovery.
Uninsured and underinsured
Many Australians in flood-prone areas are underinsured or cannot afford insurance. Show how your programme targets those without insurance safety nets — often the most vulnerable community members.
Data and learning
After major flood events, systematic learning and data collection improves future response. Applications that include evaluation and learning components are particularly valuable.
Tahua's grants management platform supports disaster recovery funders and flood resilience organisations — with programme participant tracking, community recovery outcome measurement, geographic reach data, and the reporting tools that help flood recovery funders demonstrate their investment in building resilient communities prepared for Australia's ongoing flood challenge.