Domestic Violence Grants in Australia: Funding Family Safety

Domestic and family violence (DFV) is Australia's most significant driver of homelessness, injury, and death for women. On average, one woman is killed by a current or former partner every eight days in Australia. One in six women and one in sixteen men have experienced physical or sexual partner violence since age 15. The DFV sector is predominantly government-funded through state crisis and housing systems, but philanthropic investment fills critical gaps in prevention, specialist services, and innovation.

The scale of domestic and family violence

Statistics
- 1 in 4 women experience partner violence during their lifetime
- Family violence is the leading cause of homelessness for women and children
- Police respond to a DFV incident every two minutes
- Children are present in over half of DFV incidents
- DFV costs Australia an estimated $26 billion per year (economic, health, and criminal justice costs)

Understanding family violence

Family violence encompasses:
- Physical violence
- Sexual violence
- Emotional and psychological abuse (controlling behaviour, gaslighting, threats)
- Financial abuse
- Stalking
- Technology-facilitated abuse
- Spiritual and cultural abuse
- Elder abuse within family settings

Coercive control — patterns of controlling behaviour — is increasingly recognised as the core dynamic, even when physical violence is absent.

Government DFV funding

Commonwealth

  • The National Plan to End Violence against Women and Children 2022-2032
  • Safe and Supported framework
  • Leaving Violence Programme (previously leaving violence payments)
  • DFV policy coordination through DSNVSEC

State and territory

States are primary funders of DFV services:
- Emergency crisis accommodation and refuge funding
- Specialist DFV services (case management, safety planning)
- Family violence courts
- Legal aid (for DFV matters)
- Perpetrator programmes (Behaviour Change Programmes)
- Children's services (recovery programmes for children who witnessed DFV)

Philanthropic DFV funding

Paul Ramsay Foundation

Has invested significantly in DFV systemic change — including Safe and Equal (Victoria's peak DFV body) and evidence-based reform.

Macquarie Group Foundation

DFV financial safety, economic empowerment for survivors.

Westpac Foundation

Financial abuse and economic empowerment post-DFV.

Good2Give and corporate DFV philanthropy

Many corporate foundations fund DFV services:
- Banking industry (financial abuse focus)
- Tech sector (technology-facilitated abuse)
- Real estate and housing sector (access to safe housing)
- Legal sector (access to legal support)

Community foundations

State and regional community foundations fund local DFV services.

Types of funded programmes

Crisis and refuge

Emergency accommodation for women and children fleeing violence:
- Women's refuges and crisis accommodation
- 24-hour crisis lines (1800RESPECT)
- Hospital-based DFV response
- Police liaison programmes

Specialist support services

Beyond crisis, women need ongoing support:
- DFV case management and safety planning
- Court support and legal advocacy
- Counselling and trauma-informed therapy
- Financial counselling and economic recovery
- Immigration support (visa status complicated by DFV)
- Interpreter services

Children's programmes

Children who witness DFV are affected — specific funding covers:
- Therapeutic programmes for children post-DFV
- School-based trauma support
- Play therapy and expressive therapies
- Parenting support for survivors

Perpetrator programmes

Behaviour change programmes for perpetrators:
- Men's Behaviour Change Programmes (MBCP)
- Mandated programmes (through courts)
- Voluntary programmes
- Aboriginal-specific programmes (culturally adapted)

Prevention

Preventing DFV before it occurs:
- Schools-based respectful relationships education
- Bystander programmes
- Primary prevention campaigns
- Community education and awareness

Technology-facilitated abuse

Growing area:
- Technology safety planning
- Device safety checks
- Social media abuse response
- Stalkerware detection

First Nations DFV

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women experience DFV at disproportionate rates — requiring:
- Aboriginal community-controlled DFV services
- Culturally safe refuge and support
- Cultural considerations (land, family, community connections)
- Intersectionality (DFV + child protection + housing)

LGBTIQA+ DFV

DFV occurs in same-sex and gender-diverse relationships — specialist services required:
- LGBTIQA+-specific refuge options
- Non-heteronormative safety planning
- Services that don't make assumptions about gender roles

Grant application considerations

Trauma-informed practice

All DFV applications must demonstrate trauma-informed and strengths-based approaches. Deficit framing (victims as broken) is inappropriate — emphasise survivor agency and safety planning.

Safety planning

Show how your programme manages safety — DFV work involves significant risk for both workers and clients. Funders need assurance about safety protocols.

Cultural safety

DFV for First Nations, CALD, and LGBTIQA+ communities requires specific cultural competency. Show genuine cultural consultation and community partnership.

Perpetrator accountability

Increasingly, funders want to see perpetrator accountability — not just victim support. Applications that address the perpetrator (either through behaviour change or accountability systems) complement victim support and are viewed more systemically.

Children as primary clients

Children affected by DFV are often not explicitly named — make children's recovery and safety explicit in applications, not just as incidental beneficiaries.

Long-term support

DFV recovery is long — crisis services are important but so is longer-term support. Applications addressing sustained recovery (18+ months post-crisis) are often underfunded relative to emergency response.


Tahua's grants management platform supports DFV funders and family violence organisations — with programme participant tracking, outcome measurement across the DFV continuum, safety data management, and the reporting tools that help family violence funders demonstrate their contribution to safer families across Australia.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →