Homelessness Grants in New Zealand: Funding Housing and Support for People Without Homes

New Zealand has one of the highest rates of homelessness in the developed world — approximately 42,000 people are severely housing deprived, including those living rough, in emergency accommodation, in severely overcrowded conditions, or in uninhabitable dwellings. The housing crisis that has driven homelessness reflects decades of under-investment in social housing and persistent poverty. Grant funding supports the organisations working directly with people who are homeless — from rough sleeper outreach to transitional housing and Housing First.

Understanding homelessness in New Zealand

Types of homelessness

Homelessness exists on a spectrum:
- Rough sleeping: living outside, in vehicles, or in public places
- Emergency accommodation: motels, emergency housing grants, refuges
- Severely overcrowded housing: significant numbers of people in a single dwelling
- Uninhabitable housing: living in conditions that are unsafe or hazardous to health

The 2018 Census found approximately 1% of the population severely housing deprived.

Who experiences homelessness

Homelessness is concentrated among:
- Single men (particularly rough sleeping)
- Māori (approximately 50% of the homeless population is Māori, despite being 17% of the general population)
- Young people (particularly those who have left care)
- Women fleeing family violence
- People with mental health and addiction challenges
- People leaving prison
- Pacific peoples

Drivers

  • Affordable rental housing shortage (house prices far outstripping income growth)
  • Social housing waitlist (over 25,000 applicants)
  • Family violence (the largest driver of women's homelessness)
  • Mental health and addiction (intersecting with housing instability)
  • Justice system release without housing plans

Government homelessness funding

Ministry of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

HUD funds:
- Social housing (Kāinga Ora and community housing providers)
- Transitional housing grants (funded through emergency housing)
- Housing First programme investment
- Homelessness Action Plan implementation
- Rapid rehousing initiatives

Ministry of Social Development (MSD)

MSD funds:
- Emergency Housing Special Needs Grants (motel-based emergency accommodation)
- Night shelter contracts
- Housing support services

Kāinga Ora

Kāinga Ora (Housing New Zealand successor) provides social housing and tenancy management.

Community Housing Providers

The community housing sector (housing associations, iwi housing, community trusts) receives government funding for social housing — but also philanthropic support.

Housing First in New Zealand

Housing First is the evidence-based approach to rough sleeping — providing stable housing first, then support:
- Housing is provided unconditionally (not as a reward for sobriety or treatment)
- Wrap-around support follows housing
- Significantly better outcomes than shelter + treatment first models

Housing First programmes in NZ

Housing First has been implemented in:
- Whangarei, Hamilton, Tauranga, Wellington, Nelson, Christchurch, Dunedin
- Government and philanthropic co-investment
- Managed by community housing organisations

Philanthropic homelessness funding

The Tindall Foundation

The Tindall Foundation has invested significantly in homelessness:
- Housing First programme investment
- Community housing sector support
- Wraparound support services

JR McKenzie Trust

Housing as a justice issue — supports homelessness and housing affordability advocacy.

Foundation North

Auckland homelessness and housing support programmes.

Community foundations

Regional foundations fund local homelessness services.

Types of funded programmes

Rough sleeping outreach

  • Night outreach teams (connecting with people sleeping rough)
  • Mobile welfare checks
  • Street-level needs assessment
  • Connecting to services and accommodation

Emergency and night shelter

  • Night shelters providing immediate safe accommodation
  • Day centres (warmth, showers, meals, services)
  • Drop-in services

Transitional housing

Time-limited supported housing between emergency and long-term:
- Transitional housing places
- Resident support coordination
- Pathways to permanent housing

Housing First

  • Permanent housing placement
  • Intensive wrap-around support (health, mental health, addiction, social)
  • Peer support within Housing First teams
  • Tenancy sustainment

Housing advocacy and navigation

  • Housing advocates assisting people to navigate housing system
  • Tribunal representation
  • Bond and rent in advance support
  • Tenancy support preventing eviction

Rough sleeping women

Women's experience of rough sleeping differs — often hidden:
- Women-only shelter and services
- Family violence and homelessness intersection
- Safer space services

Youth homelessness

Young people (16-25) without homes:
- Youth-specific housing and support
- Transition from care (many young homeless people have been in care)
- Youth Employment and training pathways
- Reconnection to family or safe adults

Māori homelessness

Kaupapa Māori approaches to homelessness:
- Māori-led housing and support services
- Whānau ora approach to housing stability
- Cultural reconnection alongside housing

Grant applications for homelessness

Housing First evidence

Housing First has the strongest evidence for rough sleeping outcomes — cite the evidence. Applications that depart from Housing First principles need strong justification.

Systems thinking

Homelessness is a systems failure — housing, mental health, justice, family violence. Show where your programme sits in the system and how it connects to other services.

Non-judgmental practice

People who are homeless are not to blame for their situation. Show harm reduction and non-judgmental approaches — not requiring sobriety or behaviour change as conditions of service.

Lived experience involvement

People with lived experience of homelessness should inform programme design and ideally participate in delivery (peer support is an evidence-based component of Housing First).

Data

Use local homeless population data — rough sleeping counts, social housing waitlist numbers, emergency housing grant use. Show that your area has genuine need.


Tahua's grants management platform supports housing funders and homelessness organisations — with programme participant tracking, housing outcome measurement, community reach data, and the tools that help homelessness funders demonstrate their investment in addressing New Zealand's housing crisis and its human cost.

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