Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Government VIC

Victorians waiting longer for homes as public wait times surge

Council to Homeless Persons 2 mins read

Victoria’s public housing waiting times have blown out to an average of almost 20 months for people who have been assessed as a high priority. 

 

New figures released today in the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing annual report show average wait times in 2023/24 increased to 19.8 months for people with priority access.

 

That is 88 per cent longer than the Victorian government’s own target of 10.5 months, and a 30 per cent increase from two years ago.

 

Council to Homeless Persons has warned the state’s dire shortage of social housing is behind the soaring wait times, which are now happening during the worst housing crisis in living memory.

 

People with priority access due to family violence are on average waiting 19.5 months for public housing.

 

The report also shows 101,804 people received help to address and prevent homelessness in 2023/24, an increase of about 3500 on the previous financial year.

 

Council to Homeless Persons Chief Executive Officer Deborah Di Natale said the situation was unacceptable.

 

“People who desperately need public housing are spending years on the waiting list with devastating consequences,” she said.

 

“An average of almost 20 months for people who have been assessed as needing priority housing is an indictment on Victoria’s capacity to provide a basic human right.

 

“More than 100,000 people came to homelessness services – showing how critical we are during a housing crisis. But it’s also important to remember not every person who receives homelessness support gets a home at the end of it.




“Women in unsafe situations with their children are still waiting more than a year and a half for a safe home. This forces people into awful choices between safety and housing.

 

“The number one takeaway from these figures is that the State Government must urgently build more public and community housing. 

 

“It's pleasing to see 2,938 new social homes were added during the year, but it’s clearly just a fraction of what the state needs given the average wait times are up 30 per cent in just two years.

 

“At least 6000 social homes each year for a decade is the bare minimum we need to address this crisis.”

 

Fast facts:

 

  • Homelessness in Victoria rose 24% at the last Census

  • In 2021, more than 30,000 Victorians were without a home on Census night - almost 6,000 more than the previous Census in 2016

  • In June there were 61,587 applications for public and community housing on the waiting list

  • Victoria lags behind every other state and territory on social housing, with public and community housing residents making up just 2.8% of Victoria’s households 


Contact details:

Matt Coughlan 0400 561 480 / matt@hortonadvisory.com.au

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare
  • 13/03/2025
  • 11:00
Oxfam

Oxfam launches paper highlighting exploitation and economic dependency of Palestinian women working in illegal Israeli settlements

Paper released as West Bank sees escalations in Israeli military and settler violence, killings, injuries, forced displacements, residential demolitions and movement restrictions. Oxfam has released a briefing paper Palestinian Women Working in Illegal Israeli Settlements: Dependencies, Exploitation, and Opportunity Costs, shedding light on the harrowing daily realities faced by many vulnerable Palestinian women employed in exploitative and harsh conditions in illegal Israeli settlements, where their rights are being systematically violated. The paper, which draws on data and case studies from two key reports by Oxfam's partners: the Palestine Economic Policy Research Institute (MAS) and the Mother School Society (MSS), examines…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 13/03/2025
  • 07:00
Leukaemia Foundation / World's Greatest Shave

Blonde then bald…Sam Thaiday set to tackle another worthy cause

Fresh out of the jungle and into another challenge for another worthy cause…Sam Thaiday is set to makeover his locks in the name of…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government VIC
  • 13/03/2025
  • 06:21
HACSU, HSU

Disability workers set to rally in Melbourne, and stage a colourful stunt, amid lack of action on pay and conditions

Disability workers set to rally in Melbourne, and stage a colourful stunt, amid lack of action on pay and conditions Dozens of disability workers will today rally against a lack of action on pay and conditions. The Health and Community Services Union Victoria are calling on the state and federal Labor governments not to forget about them. In 2018, the Victorian Government privatised disability services. At the end of this year, over 6,000 workers risk cuts to their pay and conditions unless governments step in. This could see thousands of participants left without support workers they value. The action coincides…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.