CALD Grants in Australia: Funding for Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Communities

Australia is one of the world's most culturally diverse nations — with over 300 languages spoken and nearly half of all Australians having at least one parent born overseas. Grant funding for culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities supports a wide range of services: in-language health and legal information, ethnic community organisations, refugee settlement and integration, multicultural arts and cultural preservation, and the building of social cohesion across communities.

Why CALD-specific funding matters

Mainstream services often fail CALD communities:
- Language barriers preventing access to information and services
- Cultural differences in health-seeking behaviour, service expectations, and stigma
- Distrust of government and formal services (particularly for refugee communities)
- Lack of culturally safe practice in mainstream organisations
- Discrimination and racism in service contexts
- Religious and cultural practices not accommodated

CALD-specific funding creates services that genuinely reach diverse communities rather than nominally accessible but practically inaccessible mainstream alternatives.

Federal multicultural funding

Department of Home Affairs — Settlement Engagement and Transition Support (SETS)

The SETS programme funds organisations to provide settlement services to migrants and humanitarian entrants:
- Information and orientation
- Employment pathways
- Social connections
- English language support
- Community development

Community Settlement Services Scheme

Smaller-scale settlement support at community level.

Adult Migrant English Program (AMEP)

Government-funded English language tuition for eligible migrants — delivered through registered providers.

Multicultural Affairs in DHA

Grants for multicultural community organisations, intercultural dialogue, and social cohesion programmes.

Fostering Integration programme

Addressing discrimination and building inclusive communities.

State multicultural funding

Each state has a multicultural affairs unit with grant programmes:

  • NSW: Multicultural NSW grants (Community Building Partnership, Community Relations)
  • Victoria: Victorian Multicultural Commission grants
  • Queensland: Multicultural Affairs Queensland grants
  • South Australia: Office of Multicultural SA
  • Western Australia: Office of Multicultural Interests

State funding tends to focus on community capacity, cultural events, and intercultural dialogue.

Local government CALD grants

Many local councils have multicultural or community grants programmes that fund:
- CALD community events (cultural festivals, food and culture)
- Migrant community group activities
- In-language information distribution
- Community interpreting
- Settlement support for newly arrived residents

Health and mental health for CALD communities

CALD health funding

CALD communities face specific health challenges:
- Lower rates of cancer screening (due to language barriers and cultural factors)
- Higher rates of certain chronic conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular disease in some communities)
- Mental health stigma (particularly in East Asian, South Asian, and Middle Eastern communities)
- Trauma from refugee experiences (PTSD, complex trauma)

Key funders include:
- State health departments (CALD health programmes)
- PHNs (Primary Health Networks) — some CALD-specific tender opportunities
- NHMRC and health research funders (CALD health research)

Mental health for CALD communities

CALD communities are significantly underrepresented in mental health services relative to need:
- Foundation House (Victoria) — refugee mental health
- Transcultural Mental Health Centre (NSW)
- Queensland Transcultural Mental Health Centre
- In-language mental health programmes

Refugee and humanitarian community funding

Refugee settlement

In addition to SETS funding above, philanthropy funds refugee settlement:
- UNHCR Australia
- Asylum Seeker Resource Centre (Melbourne)
- Refugee Council of Australia
- STARTTS (NSW) — trauma recovery

Refugee community organisations (RCOs)

Refugee communities establish their own organisations — RCOs providing peer support, advocacy, and community cohesion. Funding for RCOs:
- Settlement grants
- Community capacity grants
- Multicultural grants

Employer engagement and employment

Refugee employment is a growing focus:
- Refugee employment programmes (see separate guides)
- Employment mentoring for CALD communities
- Credential recognition support

Philanthropic CALD funders

The Scanlon Foundation

Australia's major funder of social cohesion research and multicultural community investment — Scanlon-Monash Index of Social Cohesion, community projects.

Foundation for Young Australians (FYA)

Youth employment and futures — includes young people from CALD backgrounds.

Ian Potter Foundation

Multicultural arts, settlement, and community building.

Myer Foundation and Sidney Myer Fund

Arts, social cohesion, and community investment — includes CALD arts and community.

Lord Mayor's Charitable Foundation

Melbourne-based; multicultural community grants.

Types of funded CALD programmes

In-language services

Information, counselling, legal advice, and social support delivered in community languages:
- Health information campaigns in target languages
- In-language mental health counselling
- Legal advice for visa and family law matters
- Financial counselling and welfare rights in language

Community capacity building

Strengthening ethnic community organisations:
- Organisational governance support
- Community worker training
- Financial management capacity
- Grant writing and fundraising skills

Cultural events and expression

  • Cultural festivals and celebrations
  • Multicultural arts programmes
  • Intercultural dialogue events
  • Cultural heritage preservation

Social cohesion

Programmes building connections across cultural communities:
- Interfaith dialogue
- Intercultural sport
- Community conversations on diversity and belonging
- Youth intercultural programmes

CALD women's programmes

CALD women face intersecting disadvantages:
- Domestic violence in culturally specific contexts
- Isolation (particularly for recently arrived women)
- Employment barriers
- Safety programmes and women's support groups

Grant applications for CALD programmes

Community leadership

CALD programmes work best when communities lead them — show genuine community governance and lived experience leadership, not service-provider-driven programmes delivered to communities.

Language and cultural authenticity

Demonstrate that your team includes bilingual staff, bicultural workers, or community members with lived cultural experience. Translation alone is insufficient — cultural brokering requires genuine insider knowledge.

Intersectionality

CALD communities are not monolithic — a Somali refugee in regional Australia faces different challenges to a second-generation Chinese-Australian in Sydney. Show that your programme understands the specific community it serves.

Data on unmet need

CALD funding is competitive; show that your target community is underserved by existing services. Use community consultation, existing data, and lived experience testimony.

Partnerships

Strong applications partner with mainstream services and ethnic community organisations — showing that you complement rather than duplicate the existing ecosystem.


Tahua's grants management platform supports multicultural organisations and CALD funders — with programme participant tracking, language cohort data, community reach measurement, and the tools that help multicultural funders demonstrate impact across Australia's diverse communities.

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