Equine Therapy Grants in Australia: Funding Horses for Healing

Horses have been partners in human healing for centuries — and modern equine-assisted therapy programmes bring rigorous therapeutic frameworks to these ancient relationships. From children with cerebral palsy improving their balance through hippotherapy, to veterans with PTSD processing trauma through equine-assisted psychotherapy, horses offer something unique: embodied interaction with a living being that responds authentically to human emotional states. Grant funding supports the centres, practitioners, and programmes making equine therapy accessible across Australia.

Types of equine-assisted programmes

Hippotherapy

Hippotherapy is a physical, occupational, or speech therapy strategy — using the movement of the horse as a treatment tool:
- The three-dimensional movement of a horse's walk mirrors human gait
- Improves postural control, balance, sensory integration, and motor function
- Particularly effective for cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and neurological conditions
- Delivered by registered therapists (physiotherapists, OTs) using horses as clinical tools
- Evidence base is growing and practice is regulated

Therapeutic Horsemanship (TH)

Therapeutic horsemanship (sometimes called adaptive riding) focuses on equestrian skills and relationship:
- Learning to ride and care for horses as therapeutic goal
- Delivered by credentialed instructors (PATH International or NAGS equivalent)
- Benefits: confidence, social skills, physical conditioning, sensory processing, self-regulation
- Accessible to people with a wide range of disabilities and mental health challenges

Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy (EAP) / Equine-Assisted Learning (EAL)

Horses as partners in psychological and emotional learning:
- Horses mirror human emotional states — providing biofeedback
- No riding required — ground-based activities with horses
- Facilitator plus mental health professional co-deliver (EAP model)
- Used for trauma, PTSD, depression, anxiety, grief, addiction recovery
- Growing evidence base — particularly for veterans with PTSD

Riding for the Disabled Association (RDA)

RDA Australia is the peak body for therapeutic horse riding — with centres across Australia:
- Therapeutic riding for people with disability and mental health challenges
- Volunteers are central to RDA programmes (horse care, side-walkers, leaders)
- Primarily funded through philanthropy and participant fees

Who benefits from equine therapy

People with physical disabilities

  • Cerebral palsy (hippotherapy improves spasticity and gait)
  • Multiple sclerosis (balance and posture)
  • Acquired brain injury
  • Spinal cord injury (therapeutic riding with appropriate adaptations)
  • Muscular dystrophy

People with autism spectrum disorder

  • Horses provide sensory input and social interaction in a different modality
  • Animal-human bond as social bridge
  • Routine and predictability of horse care
  • Research shows benefits for social communication and behaviour

Children with learning and developmental needs

  • Sensory processing
  • Attention and self-regulation
  • Confidence and self-esteem
  • Social skills

Mental health and trauma

  • Veterans with PTSD (particularly strong evidence)
  • Trauma survivors
  • Depression and anxiety
  • Eating disorder recovery
  • Adolescent mental health

At-risk youth

  • Diversion from justice involvement
  • Disengaged youth
  • Youth in care
  • Youth from disadvantaged backgrounds

Key funders for equine therapy

Riding for the Disabled Association (RDA) state bodies

RDA state bodies distribute funding to affiliated centres — gaming trusts, government, and philanthropy.

Gaming trusts

Major funders of equine therapy in Australia:
- Equipment (adaptive saddles, helmets, mounting ramps)
- Horse care costs
- Programme delivery
- Volunteer coordination

Lotteries (in relevant states)

Some state lotteries funds accessible recreation including equine therapy.

Philanthropic foundations

  • Lord Mayor's Charitable Foundation (disability and health)
  • Community foundations (local equine therapy centres)
  • Corporate philanthropy (horse industry companies often support equine therapy)

Health funders

  • NDIS: some participants use NDIS plans for equine therapy (under Improved Daily Living or Improved Health and Wellbeing)
  • PHNs: some fund equine therapy within mental health programmes
  • Hospital foundations: therapeutic programmes

Types of funded programmes

Therapeutic riding sessions

  • Weekly sessions for enrolled clients
  • Session costs (horse, instructor, equipment)
  • Transport for clients to centres

Hippotherapy clinics

  • Registered therapist sessions using horses
  • Clinical assessment and outcome measurement
  • Client transport

Veterans equine programmes

  • Groups for defence personnel and veterans
  • PTSD-focused equine-assisted psychotherapy
  • Peer support within group equine experiences

Youth programmes

  • After-school equine programmes
  • Holiday programmes
  • Justice diversion equine programmes

Horse care and volunteering

  • Volunteer training (RDA volunteers are essential)
  • Horse welfare and maintenance costs
  • Centre infrastructure

Grant application considerations

Safety standards

Equine therapy requires rigorous safety management — horses are large animals with unpredictable behaviours. Show your safety protocols: instructor qualifications, horse selection and training, emergency procedures, site management, and insurance.

Professional qualifications

Distinguish between professional therapeutic models (hippotherapy with registered therapists, EAP with qualified mental health practitioners) and recreational/community models (therapeutic riding, EAL). Funders in health contexts expect clinical qualifications.

Evidence alignment

Reference the evidence for your specific programme type. Hippotherapy evidence is strongest for neurological conditions. EAP evidence for veterans is compelling. Generic "horses help people" isn't evidence-based enough for sophisticated funders.

NDIS navigation

For participants with disability, NDIS is a funding source — show that you help participants access their NDIS plans for equine therapy where eligible. This reduces philanthropic dependence and demonstrates sector awareness.

Volunteer workforce

RDA programmes particularly depend on volunteers. Show volunteer recruitment, training, supervision, and retention — the volunteer story is compelling to community funders.


Tahua's grants management platform supports equine therapy funders and therapeutic riding centres — with participant outcome tracking, clinical session data, volunteer management, and the reporting tools that help equine therapy funders demonstrate the unique therapeutic value of horses in human healing and wellbeing programmes.

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