Digital Inclusion Grants in Australia: Funding Technology Access and Skills

Australia has a significant digital divide — between those with fast, reliable internet, modern devices, and strong digital skills, and those who lack one or more of these necessities. Digital exclusion limits access to employment, healthcare, education, government services, and social connection. As more of daily life moves online — from telehealth to government applications to job searching — the consequences of digital exclusion become increasingly severe. Grant funding supports programmes bridging this divide.

The digital divide in Australia

Who is digitally excluded

Digital exclusion is concentrated in:
- Older Australians (particularly those 75+)
- People on low incomes (unable to afford devices, data, or internet connection)
- People with disability
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people (particularly in remote areas)
- People in rural and remote areas (connectivity infrastructure gaps)
- Newly arrived migrants and refugees (unfamiliar with digital environments)
- People experiencing homelessness

Three dimensions of digital inclusion

The Australian Digital Inclusion Index (Telstra/RMIT) measures three dimensions:
1. Access: ability to connect (broadband/mobile data)
2. Affordability: cost relative to income
3. Digital ability: skills and confidence

Exclusion can occur on any dimension — having broadband doesn't help if you can't afford it or lack skills.

Key funders for digital inclusion

NBN Co Digital Inclusion

NBN Co (the National Broadband Network company) has digital inclusion programmes:
- Digital Ambassador training
- Digital literacy partnerships
- Targeted support for priority communities

Department of Social Services

DSS has funded digital inclusion through various programmes:
- Be Connected programme (digital skills for older adults)
- Settlement ESOL digital inclusion components

Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development

NBN infrastructure investment and connectivity equity.

Telstra

Telstra runs digital inclusion programmes:
- Telstra Connected Seniors
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander digital inclusion
- Telstra Foundation grants

Australia Post

Digital skills for small businesses and communities — through postal network.

Major philanthropic funders

  • The Ian Potter Foundation (digital inclusion for older adults)
  • Paul Ramsay Foundation (digital inclusion as part of disadvantage reduction)
  • BHP Foundation (Indigenous digital inclusion)

Key organisations

Good Things Foundation Australia

Leading digital inclusion organisation — delivering Be Connected programme and digital literacy initiatives.

ACCAN (Australian Communications Consumer Action Network)

Consumer advocacy for telecommunications access and affordability.

National Seniors Australia

Older adult digital inclusion.

Infoxchange

Not-for-profit digital inclusion — technology for communities and social services.

Types of funded digital inclusion programmes

Device access

  • Refurbished device distribution (laptops, tablets, smartphones)
  • Device loan programmes
  • Mobile device programmes for homeless people
  • Device subsidy for low-income families

Connectivity access

  • Community Wi-Fi in public housing, libraries, community centres
  • Data vouchers for low-income households
  • Mobile broadband for remote communities
  • Starlink and satellite access for remote areas

Digital skills for older adults

  • Be Connected programme (community-based digital skills)
  • Library-based digital literacy programmes
  • One-on-one technology support
  • Digital Champions (trained volunteers supporting others)
  • Intergenerational digital mentoring (young people helping older adults)

Digital skills for low-income families

  • Device + skills bundled programmes
  • Online safety training
  • Government services navigation (MyGov, Centrelink)
  • Job searching and application skills

Indigenous digital inclusion

  • Remote community connectivity
  • Culturally appropriate digital skills
  • Indigenous language digital content
  • Digital business skills for Indigenous enterprises

Disability digital inclusion

  • Accessible technology training
  • Assistive technology for online access
  • Screen reader and accessibility tools
  • Communication devices

ESOL and migrant digital inclusion

  • Digital skills in English language programmes
  • Multilingual digital safety resources
  • Government services navigation for migrants

Community digital hubs

  • Library digital hubs (devices, assistance, learning)
  • Community centre computer rooms
  • Mobile digital libraries for rural areas
  • Neighbourhood house digital programmes

Telehealth and digital inclusion

Telehealth has expanded — but requires digital skills and devices:
- Older adults who struggle with video calling miss telehealth benefits
- Remote communities with connectivity gaps cannot access telehealth
- Digital inclusion programmes explicitly linked to telehealth access are compelling for health funders

Grant application considerations

The three-way access problem

Digital inclusion is not just about devices OR skills OR connectivity — it's all three. Applications that address only one element while ignoring the others miss systemic barriers. Show how your programme addresses the full picture or articulates what complementary programmes address the other elements.

Sustainability of skills

Digital skills require ongoing support — technology changes rapidly. Show how your programme provides ongoing assistance, not one-off training sessions.

Trusted community delivery

Digital skills are most effectively delivered by trusted community organisations — libraries, neighbourhood houses, community centres — not telecommunications companies directly. Show community delivery model.

Outcome measurement

Digital inclusion outcomes include: government services accessed online, telehealth appointments completed, job applications submitted, online learning modules completed, social connection via video call. Measure actual use, not just skills acquisition.

Hardware sustainability

Donated and refurbished devices need maintenance and replacement — show a sustainable hardware pipeline, not just a one-off donation.


Tahua's grants management platform supports digital inclusion funders and community technology organisations — with programme participant tracking, skills outcome measurement, community reach data, and the reporting tools that help digital inclusion funders demonstrate their investment in bridging Australia's digital divide and expanding access to online opportunity.

Book a conversation with the Tahua team →