Skip to content
Disability, Property Real Estate

People with disability are missing out on homes

Everybody's Home 2 mins read
A new analysis shows only six per cent of people with disability who are homeless or at-risk of homelessness are getting the long-term housing they need. 

Everybody’s Home’s analysis of AIHW data shows:
  • 3,652 people with disability sought help from homelessness services for long-term housing in 2022-23 
  • This is up from 2,873 about a decade ago (2013-14)
  • More than nine in ten were turned away because there isn’t enough social housing.
In 2022-23, more than half (53%) of people with a disability identified housing (e.g. affordability, availability, accessibility) as the main reason for seeking assistance, while one in five (21%) identified family breakdown or domestic violence as the primary driver.

The findings come after the recent Disability Royal Commission and NDIS review called for better access to social housing for people with disability. 

Inclusion Australia CEO Catherine McAlpine: “Having a safe and steady place to call home is the foundation for any good life.

“Sadly for many people with an intellectual disability, there is very little support to understand and navigate the complexities of finding a home. Combined with a lack of housing options and low income security levels, this means that real choice about where you live and who you live with is limited. This increases the chance of people with disabilities being grouped together in segregated settings, where violence and abuse are more common.”

Disability Advocacy Network Australia, Director of Policy and Advocacy, El Gibbs: “Housing is one of the top issues that people with disability and disability advocates are dealing with every day. The lack of affordable, accessible and available housing is a crisis for people with disability in every single area. 

“Many people with disability rely on income support, or part-time work, making the current affordability challenge even more acute. For people living in private rentals, getting home modifications to stay safe is often impossible.”

Everybody’s Home spokesperson Maiy Azize: “The lack of rentals for people with disability is a growing crisis. It’s already hard enough finding and securing a safe, decent, affordable rental in Australia, let alone one that is accessible and disability-friendly. 

“The system is pushing more and more people with disability into homelessness, boarding houses, and even aged care because they can’t find a suitable home. The federal government must act with urgency to build more social housing for people with disabilities.”
 
 

2013-14

2022-23

People with disability needing long-term accommodation 

2,873

3,652

Nothing provided

1,573 (54.8%)

2,446 (67%)

Referred only

1,111 (38.7%)

978 (26.8%)

Provided 

189 (6.6%)

228 (6.2%)

Source: AIHW Specialist Homelessness Services Annual Reports (2013-14 and 2022-23)

 

Media contact: Sofie Wainwright 0403 920 301

 

More from this category

  • Building Construction, Property Real Estate
  • 18/12/2025
  • 14:56
Attic Group

Attic Group’s Award Winning 50-Year Milestone Reflects Ongoing Demand for More Space at Home

Key Facts: · Attic Group marked its 50th anniversary in 2025 and received two major housing awards from MBA NSW and HIA VIC. · Demand for extra space in the home continues to grow, driven by changing household dynamics, working-from-home trends and rising moving costs. · Founded in 1975 as an attic ladder business, Attic Group has evolved to meet demand for more space, delivering attic storage, attic conversions and first-floor additions, as a registered builder in NSW and VIC.Accelerating shift across Australian homes A quiet but accelerating shift is long underway across Australian homes. Instead of moving or undertaking…

  • Government WA, Property Real Estate
  • 17/12/2025
  • 09:00
WA Alliance to End Homelessness (WAAEH)

NEW REPORT PROVIDES TARGET FOR SUPPORTIVE HOUSING AS EFFECTIVE SOLUTION TO THE CHRONIC HOMELESSNESS CRISIS IN WA

In an Australian first, a new report has estimated the scale of housing and support needed to address chronic homelessness in Perth and Bunbury. Supportive Housing Needs Assessment WA was commissioned by the WA Alliance to End Homelessness (WAAEH) to calculate the unmet need for Supportive Housing in Perth and Bunbury. Supportive Housing, such as the Common Ground model, combines the provision of stable housing with wrap-around supports for people experiencing chronic homelessness and complex challenges. The report sets out the number of homes required, the investment needed to deliver and sustain them, and the social and economic benefits of…

  • Property Real Estate
  • 16/12/2025
  • 09:15
Maple Property Group

Granny flats move from side hustle to serious yield

New rental data and planning reforms show granny flats have shifted from family accommodation into serious yield assets, with two bedroom secondary dwellings in Sydney and Melbourne now routinely earning investor grade income. According toFundd’s 2025 granny flat guide, typical two-bedroom granny flats in Sydney and Melbourne now rent for about $350 to $600 a week, pushing potential annual gross income into the $18,000 to $36,000 plus range depending on location and finish. In Victoria, planning reforms introduced in late 2023 andnow fully in effect allow “small second dwellings” of up to 60 sqm to be built without a planning…

  • Contains:

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.