2026-27 Federal Budget: Limited funding for family violence will cost lives

2026-27 Federal Budget: Limited funding for family violence will cost lives

Wednesday 13 May 2026

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Despite rising rates of family and gender-based violence across the nation, limited funding to prevent and respond to the crisis was announced in last night’s 2026-27 Federal Budget. 

Safe and Equal recognises the Commonwealth Government’s commitment to ending family and gender-based violence and its overall investment to date. Disappointingly, the investment outlined in this year’s Budget does not come close to addressing the scale of family violence we are seeing in Australia. 

Safe and Equal has concerns that cuts to the NDIS and insufficient focus on increasing social housing stock will disproportionately impact family violence victim survivors, as many are dependent on these universal systems to escape and recover from abuse.  

“The Government had a tough job. It’s a tough economic environment, and the Budget reflects that,” said Christine Mathieson, Interim CEO at Safe and Equal. 

“But if we don’t invest in stopping this violence before it starts and responding to those who are in crisis, it will end up costing the economy more and – most importantly – it will end up costing more lives.”   

While new investment in preventing and responding to family violence is limited, there are several welcome commitments, including: 

  • $218.3 million over five years from 2025-26 for a package of initial actions under the first dedicated standalone Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander plan for family safety, Our Ways – Strong Ways – Our Voices. 
  • An investment of $182.6 million to prevent systems abuse through misuse of the Child Support Scheme and financial abuse through other government systems. 
  • $59.4 million to help Community Housing Providers provide social housing for over 4,000 young people aged 16-24 who are at risk of or experiencing homelessness. 

The Budget also outlines several initiatives to improve access to support for victim survivors and to better support workers in frontline services. However, the continued funding for the 500 Workers Initiative will do little to address skyrocketing demand for family violence support. 

“Frontline workforces all over the nation are buckling under the strain of demand. They’re being asked to do more with less,” said Ms Mathieson. 

“The best way to support them is through job security – and that can only come through increased and secure funding for specialist family violence services.” 

The ongoing focus on primary prevention and early intervention in the budget is also welcome, building on existing work across the country. Expanding the engagement of men and boys in prevention initiatives and addressing new challenges posed by technology are critical.  

Safe and Equal looks forward to engaging with the Commonwealth Government as part of the planned consultation to develop the Second Action Plan for the National Plan this year. 

“Our services are relying on being heard, and we want to ensure the Action Plan reflects the on-the-ground expertise and practice leadership of both the prevention and response workforces in Victoria,” said Ms Mathieson. 

“Family violence isn’t inevitable – but it will remain so unless our leaders make difficult choices, take bold action and prioritise change.”  

“On behalf of the specialist family violence sector, I want to say to the Commonwealth Government: we’re ready and waiting to take those steps. But we can’t do it without your support.” 

 

About Safe and Equal 

Safe and Equal is the peak body for Victorian organisations that specialise in family and gender-based violence across the continuum, including primary prevention, early intervention, response and recovery. Our vision is a world where everyone is safe, respected and thriving, living free from family and gender-based violence. 

Media contact

For media enquiries: media@safeandequal.org.au

Page last updated Wednesday, May 13 2026

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Legislative Council Legal and Social Issues Committee Inquiry into anti-LGBTIQA+ hate crimes in Victoria

Legislative Council Legal and Social Issues Committee Inquiry into anti-LGBTIQA+ hate crimes in Victoria

8 May 2026

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Safe and Equal welcomes the opportunity to contribute to the Legislative Council Legal and Social Issues Committee Inquiry into anti-LGBTIQA+ hate crimes in Victoria.

As the peak body for Victorian organisations that specialise in family and gender-based violence, our submission highlights that anti-LGBTIQA+ hate crimes share common drivers with men’s violence against women, namely the enforcement of rigid and hierarchical gender norms and efforts to punish and control people whose bodies, identities and relationships do not conform to expectations of cisnormativity and heteronormativity.

There is a need for national coordinated policy efforts, as well as sustained investment and strengthened community-led and education-based prevention work. Prevention must be embedded at each level – the socio-structural level and the community level – to address the shared drivers of violence against women and LGBTIQA+ people, maintain accountability and reduce the disproportionate harms experienced by LGBTIQA+ people and communities.

Page last updated 13 May 2026.

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Victorian Budget 2026-27: Funding held steady as family violence continues to escalate

Victorian Budget 2026-27: Funding held steady as family violence continues to escalate

Tuesday 5 May 2026

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The Victorian Government has reinstated crucial funding for family violence services in today’s 2026-27 State Budget, in what is a huge relief to the sector. Nearly $100 million in funding for family violence services was due to cease at the end of the financial year. 

“We are extremely relieved at this news,” said Christine Mathieson, Interim CEO of Safe and Equal. 

“This investment is welcome and takes a huge amount of immediate pressure off services and frontline workers. But unfortunately, it’s not enough to address the rising rates of family and gender-based violence in Victoria. Two years of funding leaves the sector in an insecure position,” said Ms Mathieson. 

According to Crime Statistics Agency data, there were 106,430 family violence incidents reported to police in 2024-25 – an 8 per cent increase from the previous year. 

“Specialist family violence services save lives. And yet all over the state, they are grappling with increased demand and investment that has not kept pace,” said Ms Mathieson. 

“More victim survivors are reporting, but without increased funding they won’t receive the help they need. We need long-term funding for services and for prevention in order to save lives and stop the profound harm we’re currently seeing.” 

Safe and Equal’s Budget Submission called on the Victorian Government to reinstate all lapsing funding, alongside increased long-term investment and certainty across primary prevention, early intervention, response and recovery. 

The submission also called for increased investment to support children and young people as victim survivors in their own right. Instead, this Budget prioritises punitive youth justice responses over dedicated resourcing for young people experiencing family violence. 

“We recognise that it’s a difficult economic environment at the moment, and that the government has a tough job, but family and gender-based violence only gets worse in times of crisis,” said Ms Mathieson. 

“The reality is that unaddressed family violence costs the economy so much more when governments fail to properly invest. We see impacts across health, education, justice responses and the workforce.” 

Safe and Equal will continue to advocate for a sustained, comprehensive approach from the Victorian Government, backed by the investment required. 

“All eyes will now turn to the Victorian election. The community has spoken – family and gender-based violence demands and deserves urgent, sustained action. We’re calling on every political party to step up with the leadership and long-term investment needed to deliver real change.” 

 

About Safe and Equal 

Safe and Equal is the peak body for Victorian organisations that specialise in family and gender-based violence across the continuum, including primary prevention, early intervention, response and recovery. Our vision is a world where everyone is safe, respected and thriving, living free from family and gender-based violence. 

Media contact

For media enquiries: media@safeandequal.org.au

Page last updated Tuesday, May 5 2026

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Support us to keep family violence on the agenda

Support us to keep family violence on the agenda

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Every day in Australia, women and children are put at risk by men’s violence. This is unacceptable. 

Family and gender-based violence is a growing crisis in this country. In 2025 alone, more than 50 women were killed. The number is rising again in 2026, and these are only the cases we know about. Behind every statistic are lives, families and communities deeply affected. 

But this violence is preventable. With the right action and investment, we can stop it before it happens and better support those experiencing it. 

With a state election coming up later this year, we are at a critical moment. We cannot let the safety of women and children fall off the agenda. 

Safe and Equal are calling on all political parties to commit to real, long-term action, and we need your support to help make that happen.

As Victoria’s peak body for specialist family violence services, we work to make sure the people on the frontline – supporting women and children every day – have what they need to do their jobs safely and effectively. We advocate to government, push for better funding and stronger systems, and make sure real experiences and voices from the sector are heard. 

This end of financial year, your tax‑deductible gift will help us speak up for the sector, back frontline services and hold decision-makers to account. 

Together, we can help keep women and children safe – now and into the future. 

Please give before 30 June and keep family violence on the agenda.

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