Men's Shed Grants in Australia: Funding Community Connection for Men

The Men's Shed movement — community spaces where men come together, work on projects, and build friendships — is one of Australia's most distinctive and successful community health innovations. With over 1,400 Men's Sheds across Australia (and thousands globally), the movement has created a uniquely effective way of reaching men who would otherwise be isolated, disconnected, and reluctant to seek help. Grant funding supports Men's Shed equipment, facilities, health programs, and the national and state networks that support individual sheds.

Men's Sheds in Australia

What a Men's Shed is

  • A community space where men gather to work on practical projects
  • Typically includes woodworking, metalwork, gardening, and other hands-on activities
  • Open to all men — though often strongest in older demographics
  • Low-barrier entry: "come for the shed, stay for the conversation"
  • Run by volunteers, often with some paid coordination
  • Part of the Australian Men's Shed Association (AMSA) national network

The health case for Men's Sheds

  • Men are less likely to seek health support or social connection through formal channels
  • Men's Sheds create male-appropriate environments where health conversations happen naturally
  • Regular attendance reduces social isolation and loneliness (linked to premature mortality)
  • Men in Sheds report improved mental health, sense of purpose, and social connection
  • Sheds create pathways to health services through trusted peer relationships
  • Volunteer Shed members provide social support that health systems cannot

Who Sheds serve

  • Older men (retirees, particularly) — the largest demographic
  • Men experiencing social isolation
  • Men with mental health challenges (depression, grief, anxiety)
  • Men from regional and rural areas with limited social infrastructure
  • Veterans and men who have experienced trauma
  • Men recovering from illness, surgery, or health events
  • Increasingly: younger men seeking community and practical skills

Government support for Men's Sheds

Department of Health and Aged Care

Men's health programs including Men's Shed support.

Australian Men's Shed Association (AMSA)

Peak body; receives government funding for the network.

State governments

  • State funding for Men's Shed programs
  • Community sport and recreation funding (sometimes applicable)
  • Healthy ageing programs that support Sheds

Local government

Facilities, land, and small grants for local Sheds.

Philanthropic Men's Shed funders

Australian Men's Shed Association (AMSA)

Direct support for member sheds through National Shed Development Program.

Local community foundations

Equipment and operational grants for local Sheds.

Masonic foundations

Some Masonic bodies support Men's Sheds.

Rotary and Lions Clubs

Equipment and facility support for local Sheds.

Hardware suppliers

Bunnings, Mitre 10, and others provide materials and in-kind support.

Health foundations

Men's health funders include Sheds as a program delivery mechanism.

Types of funded Men's Shed programs

Equipment and tools

  • Woodworking equipment (lathes, saws, routers)
  • Metalworking tools
  • Garden tools and materials
  • Safety equipment
  • Computers and technology for the Shed

Facilities

  • Shed construction or renovation
  • Disability access improvements
  • Electrical, plumbing, and infrastructure
  • Storage and ventilation

Health programs

  • Health literacy programs delivered through Sheds
  • Mental health programs (depression awareness, grief support)
  • Dementia-friendly Shed programs
  • Diabetes and cardiovascular health awareness
  • Hearing and vision checks at Sheds

Transport and access

  • Transport to the Shed for isolated members
  • Minibus programs for regional Sheds

Inclusion programs

  • CALD men's inclusion in Sheds
  • Indigenous men's Sheds
  • Disability-inclusive Shed programs
  • Younger men's programs

Network and coordination

  • State and national network coordination
  • Shed coordinator training
  • Shed development support
  • New Shed startup assistance

The mental health case

Men's Sheds are one of the most effective men's mental health programs in Australia — not because they're explicitly mental health programs, but because they work the way men work:
- Side-by-side rather than face-to-face
- Doing before talking
- Low-barrier, voluntary, enjoyable
- Peer support rather than professional
- Regular, consistent attendance builds trust

Research has consistently shown Shed membership reduces depression, loneliness, and social isolation. Some Sheds have embedded mental health nurses, counsellors, or health workers — but even without formal health services, the social connection and purpose that Sheds provide is protective.

Grant application considerations

Health integration

Sheds that integrate health programs — not just as workshops but as regular health-promoting activities — are more compelling to health funders. Applications for health programs within Sheds (rather than equipment grants) may access different funders.

Rural and regional priority

Urban men have other options; rural and regional men often don't. Applications for Sheds in areas of thin social infrastructure are higher-priority.

Indigenous men's Sheds

Indigenous men's Sheds — culturally grounded, community-led spaces — have particular value in communities where men's isolation and health outcomes are poor. Applications for Indigenous men's Sheds should be community-led.

Volunteer sustainability

Most Sheds run on volunteers who are themselves ageing. Applications that address coordination, succession, and sustainability of the Shed beyond its founding volunteers are addressing a real systemic risk.


Tahua's grants management platform supports Men's Shed funders and community health organisations — with member attendance tracking, health outcome data, program participation measurement, and the reporting tools that help Men's Shed funders demonstrate their investment in community connection and health for Australian men.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →