Skip to content
Government Federal, Property Real Estate

Thousands of affordable homes axed this year sparks call for more social housing

Everybody's Home 2 mins read

National housing campaign Everybody’s Home is urging the federal government to make 2026 the year it significantly stumps up funding to plug the social housing shortfall, as an affordable housing scheme comes to an end.

 

The National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS), designed to provide affordable rentals to people earning low and middle incomes, has been winding down since 2018 and is set to end in June 2026.

 

The latest federal figures reveal more than 4,500 affordable homes will exit NRAS this year - the final lot of the more than 36,000 affordable homes that have phased out of the scheme over the past decade.

 

The NRAS rentals will take years to be replaced by the 40,000 social and affordable homes set to be built under the federal government’s Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF).

According to Housing Australia, as of November 2025, 889 homes under the HAFF had been completed, with a further 9,501 described as under construction. 

 

State/territory

NRAS allocations ceasing in 2026

New South Wales

2,008

Victoria

24

Western Australia

1,550

South Australia

2

Tasmania

596

ACT

361

Northern Territory

50

Total

4,591

*Number of total allocations under the National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS) as at January 1, 2026. Source: Department of Social Services.

 

Everybody’s Home spokesperson Maiy Azize said: “The number of social and affordable homes the federal government plans to build in the next few years is barely replacing what’s already been lost. 

 

“Affordable rentals are vanishing faster than social housing is being built, leaving tens of thousands of households worse off.

 

“This year we will see another 4,500 affordable homes come offline, which means more families facing the brutal and expensive unsubsidised private rental market. This means more Australians are at risk of plunging into housing stress, homelessness and financial insecurity. 

 

“For people living in these rentals, this isn’t an abstract policy. We’re hearing from people genuinely afraid they’ll have nowhere to turn when the scheme ends.

 

“Australia already has a social housing shortfall of 640,000 homes and demand is only growing. Losing thousands more affordable rentals only further deepens the crisis.

 

“A key affordable rental scheme is ending, rents are rising and there’s nowhere to move - 2026 must be the year the Albanese Government finally funds social housing at scale.”


Contact details:

Lauren 0422 581 506

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Religion
  • 20/01/2026
  • 18:19
Zionist Federation of Australia (ZFA)

ZIONIST FEDERATION OF AUSTRALIA WELCOMES BIPARTISAN AGREEMENT ON BANNING EXTREMIST ORGANISATIONS

MEDIA RELEASE - For immediate release Quotes attributable to Jeremy Leibler, President of the Zionist Federation of Australia "Hizb ut-Tahrir has spent years intentionally promoting extreme forms of antisemitic hatred, while carefully skirting the law. Extremism doesn’t begin with violence, it begins with normalising hatred.” On the Bill set to pass the Senate tonight, he said, “We welcome the bipartisan support for this regime - which rightly allows for dangerous groups like Hizb ut-Tahrir and the National Socialist Network to be banned.”About us: The ZFA is the representative body of the Australian Jewish community and its Zionist organisations. We have…

  • Contains:
  • Government Federal, Political
  • 20/01/2026
  • 10:27
Charles Darwin University

CDU EXPERT: Hate speech laws must be ‘robust’ and ‘restrained’, forensic linguist urges

TUESDAY JANUARY 20 2026 Who: Charles Darwin University (CDU) forensic linguist and legal discourse analyst Dr Awni Etaywe, who has lodged a formal expert submission to the Australian Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security as part of its inquiry into the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026. Topics: Dr Etaywe’s submission, A Forensic and Legal Linguistic Perspective: Review of the Exposure Draft Legislation – Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026, examines how key terms in the Bill, such as fear, hatred, and leadership operate linguistically and legally in shaping criminal liability. The submission focuses on the Bill’s…

  • Government Federal, Oil Mining Resources
  • 16/01/2026
  • 11:48
Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia

Productivity Commission report reinforces case for meaningful circular construction reform

Key Facts: CCAA endorses Productivity Commission's final report on circular economy, supporting removal of regulatory barriers for recycled materials in constructionReport calls for shift from prescriptive standards to performance-based regulations and national harmonisation of state-based specificationsNational stocktake of infrastructure standards recommended, particularly focusing on cement and concrete standardsCurrent Australian Cement Standard AS 3972-2010 needs updating to accommodate modern materials and emissions reduction whilst maintaining safetyIndustry supports cross-jurisdictional coordination to enable circular construction and infrastructure delivery whilst transitioning to net zeroCement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has welcomed the Productivity Commission’s final report into Australia’s circular economy: unlocking the opportunities, saying…

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.