Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Government Federal

New report finds housing and homelessness crisis is driving a wellbeing crisis: Homelessness Australia

Homelessness Australia 2 mins read

New report finds housing and homelessness crisis is driving a wellbeing crisis: Homelessness Australia

 

Homelessness Australia is urging federal and state governments to act on the latest findings from the National Housing Supply and Affordability State of the Housing System 2025 report released today. 

 

The 2025 report revealed households are under growing pressure, with increasing rental stress, and a sharp rise in people stuck in rental stress for over two years, and social housing as a proportion of all housing continuing to decline. 

 

New data in the report reveals the direct impact of this crisis on people’s wellbeing, with renters in rental stress experiencing worsening mental health over the past decade. 

 

New data also reveals that rental stress is increasing risk factors for homelessness, with one in four stressed renters not having savings to manage an emergency. 

 

“What’s scary about this housing crisis is there is no end in sight. This report is the latest indicator telling us how bad things are. It’s affecting people’s mental and physical health and it has to end,” Homelessness Australia CEO Kate Colvin said. 

 

The report noted the strong connection between rental stress, lack of social housing and homelessness. It cited data showing 280,000 people accessed homelessness services between 2023-24, and that persistent homelessness and the unmet need for homelessness services are growing.

 

“Homelessness Australia supports the report’s recommendations to boost social housing to 6%, with a long-term target of 10% of all homes. 

 

“This report calls for bold action to address the housing crisis and provide all Australians with the stability and security of a safe, affordable home. We urge the federal government to act swiftly on this report, and to work with us to turn this crisis around,” Kate Colvin said. 

 

“Alongside growth in social housing we urgently need increased government investment in homelessness services to meet the growing need for support and ensure no one is turned away.

 

Media contact: Kathleen Ferguson - 0421 522 080

 

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, International News
  • 21/03/2026
  • 11:47
Saturday, 21 March 2026

World Vision Welcomes Australian Humanitarian Support as Lebanon Crisis Deepens

Key Facts: Australian Government pledges $5 million in humanitarian aid to Lebanon, where over 1 million people have been displaced since 2 March More than 1,000 people killed (including 100+ children) and 2,000 injured in less than three weeks of conflict World Vision Lebanon has assisted over 150,000 people (52,000 children) with essentials across 322 shelters Critical infrastructure targeted by airstrikes, hampering civilian movement and aid delivery across South Lebanon Australia's total humanitarian support for Lebanon and surrounding area exceeds $130 million since October 2023 Forqueries and media requests, please contact:Domi Gonzales at [email protected] or 0413 788 380.World Vision Australia…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Disability
  • 20/03/2026
  • 15:25
Vision Australia

Vision Australia welcomes fines for TTSS refusals

Media Release March 20, 2023 Vision Australia welcomes fines for TTSS refusals Fines for taxi providers who refuse to accept fares from passengers using the Taxi Transport (TTSS) Subsidy Scheme have been welcomed by Vision Australia. The NSW Government this week announced providers that refuse TTSS passengers face fines of up to $3000, which Vision Australia hopes will help put an end to such refusals. “People who are blind or have low vision often rely on point-to-point transport such as taxis to be active and independent members of the community and the TTSS is designed to alleviate the financial burden…

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 20/03/2026
  • 14:33
The Climate Council

Gas decision leaves Aussies exposed to more price hikes

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEFRIDAY 20 MARCH, 2026 TheAlbanese Government has just approved a new gas export project, leaving Australians highly exposed to volatile international markets and rising costs of living. The project is approved until 2081 – more than three decades after Australia plans to finish its switch to clean energy – and brings the Albanese Government’s tally of new climate-polluting projects to 36 coal, oil and gas projects approved since 2022. Climate Councillor Greg Bourne said: “Digging up and exporting more gas directly exposes Australians to price hikes driven by global conflict, as we're seeing play out right now. Since…

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.