Digital Divide Grants in Australia: Funding Technology Access and Digital Inclusion

Australia's digital divide — the gap between those who can fully participate in the digital economy and digital society, and those who cannot — is a significant and growing equity issue. As government services, employment, healthcare, banking, and social connection increasingly require internet access and digital skills, those who lack access or skills are progressively excluded. Grant funding supports device access programs, affordable internet initiatives, digital literacy for disadvantaged groups, and the infrastructure that brings technology to underserved communities.

The digital divide in Australia

Who is digitally excluded

  • Older Australians: lower digital skills; higher rates of non-use
  • Low-income households: cost of devices and internet connectivity
  • Rural and remote communities: infrastructure limitations; poor connectivity
  • People with disability: accessibility barriers, affordability challenges
  • First Nations communities: infrastructure gaps in remote areas; cultural barriers
  • CALD communities: language barriers to digital participation; lower digital confidence
  • People experiencing homelessness: no fixed address for service delivery; device access

Dimensions of digital exclusion

  • Access: no device (computer, tablet, phone)
  • Connectivity: no reliable or affordable internet
  • Skills: unable to use digital tools effectively
  • Motivation: not seeing the relevance of digital participation
  • Trust: concerns about privacy, security, or reliability

Consequences of digital exclusion

  • Inability to access government services (MyGov, Centrelink)
  • Exclusion from telehealth
  • Difficulty finding employment (most jobs require digital applications)
  • Exclusion from online banking and financial services
  • Social isolation (particularly for older people)
  • Inability to access education and training online

Government digital inclusion support

Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications

  • National Broadband Network (NBN) rollout
  • Telecommunications funding for regional areas
  • Digital Inclusion for Regional Australia programs

Services Australia

Digital service delivery and support.

Department of Education

Student device and connectivity programs.

State governments

Digital inclusion programs for seniors, disadvantaged communities.

Philanthropic digital inclusion funders

Telstra Foundation

Digital inclusion as a core mission.

NBN Co Community Grants

Connectivity and digital inclusion.

Good Things Foundation Australia

Digital inclusion for older and disadvantaged Australians.

Google.org

Digital skills and inclusion programs.

The Smith Family

Digital access and skills for disadvantaged students.

NAIDOC and Indigenous foundations

Technology access for First Nations communities.

Types of funded digital inclusion programs

Device access

  • Device lending or gifting programs
  • Refurbished device programs (reusing donated computers)
  • Tablet and phone programs for low-income households
  • Device programs for specific populations (seniors, students, people experiencing homelessness)

Affordable internet

  • Subsidised internet plans for low-income households
  • Community WiFi hotspots
  • NBN access support
  • Emergency data and connectivity support

Digital skills for seniors

  • Technology training at libraries, community centres, aged care facilities
  • One-on-one digital mentoring
  • Tablet use for older people
  • Video calling to combat social isolation
  • Online banking and government services for older people

Digital skills for disadvantaged communities

  • Basic digital skills (email, internet use, online forms)
  • MyGov and Centrelink navigation digitally
  • Online job search and applications
  • Digital skills in employment support contexts

First Nations digital inclusion

  • Infrastructure for remote community connectivity
  • Device programs for remote communities
  • Culturally appropriate digital skills training
  • Indigenous digital inclusion strategies

CALD community digital inclusion

  • Digital skills in community languages
  • Navigation of Australian online services
  • Language-specific technology support

People with disability

  • Assistive technology access
  • Accessibility-aware digital training
  • Screen readers, voice input, and adaptive tools

Telehealth access

  • Devices and connectivity for telehealth access
  • Digital skills for accessing health services online
  • Support for telehealth in remote communities

Children and young people

  • Digital access for disadvantaged students (learning at home)
  • Online safety alongside access (not just connectivity, but safe use)
  • Creative digital skills development

The Good Things Foundation model

Good Things Foundation Australia (part of the UK-originated Good Things network) provides a network-based model for digital inclusion:
- Works through a network of Online Centres (libraries, community centres, nonprofits)
- Delivers training through trusted community organisations
- Has developed proven digital skills curricula
- Provides national scale through local trusted organisations

Applications partnering with or building on the Good Things model benefit from an established, evidence-based framework.

Grant application considerations

Combination approach

Device access without skills training doesn't produce digital inclusion. Connectivity without devices or skills doesn't either. Applications that address multiple dimensions — device, connectivity, and skills together — are more likely to produce genuine inclusion.

Trust and relationship

Digital skills training is most effective when delivered by trusted, familiar organisations — not government services or unfamiliar agencies. Applications that leverage community organisations (neighbourhood centres, libraries, churches) for delivery are more likely to reach excluded populations.

Targeted populations

Generic digital inclusion programs reach people who are already somewhat included. Applications that specifically target the most excluded — remote First Nations communities, older Australians without family support, people experiencing homelessness — are more impactful.

Sustainability

One-off device or training programs don't produce lasting inclusion if there's no ongoing support. Applications with peer support, helplines, or follow-up are more durable.


Tahua's grants management platform supports digital inclusion funders and technology access organisations — with participant tracking, skills outcome measurement, device and connectivity data, and the reporting tools that help digital inclusion funders demonstrate their investment in closing Australia's digital divide.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →