Before you apply for public housing and community housing, contact your nearest Housing Service Centre to discuss your eligibility and housing needs:
We will talk to you about:
If you’re eligible, we'll also ask you:
To apply, complete an application form (PDF, 1.5 MB) and provide evidence of:
Sign the form in front of one of these witnesses:
The witness will need to see 2 proof-of-identity documents. You can also sign your application and provide your identity documents at a Housing Service Centre.
If your circumstances change after you apply, you must tell your local Housing Service Centre about the changes within 28 days.
The Housing Service Centre can give you advice and support, and help you with your application.
If you receive a pension or allowance from Services Australia (Centrelink) and are at least 15 years old, you can use the income confirmation service.
This free service lets us access your income and assets information directly from Centrelink. This means you don’t have to provide proof of your Centrelink income each time we assess your eligibility.
If you or a household member earns other income, such as wages, you still need to provide proof of this income to us before we can assess your application.
To sign up for this service:
You can also get the form from your nearest Housing Service Centre.
Once you're signed up for the service, we send your details to Centrelink electronically. Centrelink sends us information that’s on your Centrelink income and asset statement, including:
We use the information that Centrelink sends us only to assess your eligibility for housing assistance.
We will ask you for information about other income if required.
You can withdraw from the service any time by contacting your nearest Housing Service Centre.
If you choose not to use this service, you’ll need to provide your income and assets information each time we ask for it.
Failing to provide this information will affect your eligibility for social housing.
Income support payments:
Earned income (wages, salaries, casual, overtime, bonuses and fringe benefits):
Other income types:
If you or a household member owns or part-owns any of these property types in Australia or overseas, you must provide evidence of ownership with your housing assistance application:
Evidence of property ownership includes:
Your evidence of ownership must include:
Liquid assets include:
You must provide evidence of all liquid assets that you and your household own. This could include:
For more information and help with providing evidence to support your application, contact your nearest Housing Service Centre.
You must lodge 2 original and valid (not expired) proof-of-identification documents with your application.
At least 1 of the documents must be a primary identification document.
If you can't provide any primary identification, provide 2 forms of secondary identification.
Note: An 'incorporated' organisation is an organisation set up as a legal entity (i.e. a 'corporation' or 'company'). It can be a private or public business, non-profit organisation, sports club or government organisation.
If you have a medical condition or disability that affects your housing needs, you need to provide information about this with your application. This helps us work with you to find a housing option that's appropriate for you and your household’s disability and medical needs.
Provide information about:
If the physical amenity of your current housing doesn't meet your needs, you can provide:
If your current housing lacks essential facilities or shared facilities, you can provide confirmation from a relevant community or support agency that the living conditions are inappropriate due to a lack of essential facilities.
These may include:
If your current housing has health and safety issues (i.e. structural condition or size of property), you can provide:
If you need to move, you must provide evidence of the reason.
If your current housing isn't located near essential services or transport, provide information that explains:
This information should be provided by:
If your current housing doesn't enable access to/custody of child, shared care of child or foster care arrangements, you should provide:
If you have safety concerns, please talk to us by contacting a Housing Service Centre in person or over the phone.
If your current housing is far from family, social and community connections, provide an affidavit or statutory declaration from a family member or informal support provider that confirms:
If your current housing is far from your current education or training location, provide details from the registered education or training provider confirming:
If the location of your current housing prevents you accepting an employment offer, provide information from the employer, recruitment agency or government agency about the need to move. (The employment must be at least 20 hours per week.)
If your job needs you to transfer to another location, provide information from your employer confirming that you need to transfer to another work location to maintain your employment.
If your family is split across more than one location and you need appropriate housing, provide:
If you need to move for cultural reasons, provide information that explains the circumstances. This information may be from:
If you spend 30% or more of your income on rent, provide evidence of the rent you currently pay. This can include:
If you or a household member is experiencing domestic and family or sexual violence, contact us to talk about your situation.
Tell us if you need to leave your current housing immediately, and we'll connect you to support services.
You don’t need to provide evidence of your safety needs, but please tell us if you have any of these documents, as it helps us understand your needs:
We will complete our assessment once you've given us
We will tell you in writing whether you’re eligible for public and community housing.
If you are eligible, we'll ask you about the kind of home you need as part of your application.
You can choose which of the following types of housing you want to apply for.
The type of housing you may be offered, if you’re eligible, depends on what's available in your chosen areas and the number of bedrooms your household is entitled to.
Detached house – a house with 2 or more bedrooms on 1 block of land
Duplex – usually 2 units, with 1–3 bedrooms in each, divided by a common wall, on 1 block of land
Dual occupancy – 2 properties on 1 block of land
Cluster house – several attached or separate homes, with 2–4 bedrooms in each, within a housing development
Townhouse – 3 or more units next to each other, with 1–4 bedrooms in each, divided by common walls
Apartment / flat / unit – usually a complex of 2 or more storeys, with 1–3 bedrooms in each
Seniors’ unit – for people over the age of 55, usually in a complex of 1–2 storeys, with 1–2 bedrooms in each
We will work out how many bedrooms your household is entitled to based on the number, age and gender of the people in your household.
These are the bedroom entitlements:
Bedrooms
People
5 bedrooms (reviewable property)
6 bedrooms (reviewable property)
7 bedrooms (reviewable property)
You can ask for housing with fewer bedrooms to increase your chance of getting a property sooner. However, we first need to agree that serious overcrowding won't occur.
To make this request, complete an Acceptance of smaller housing form (PDF, 995.2 KB) and take it to your nearest Housing Service Centre.
If you request and are offered the smaller housing, you won't be able to transfer to larger housing unless there are special circumstances.
If there are any changes to your household or housing need, you must tell us within 28 days.
We review your eligibility and housing need again while you're on the housing register and before we may consider you for an offer of housing.
You should also talk to your nearest Housing Service Centre if a household member needs an extra bedroom for:
Note: Housing offers will depend on the availability of housing in your chosen areas and the number of people ahead of you on the housing register with higher needs.
Your guardian, administrator, informal guardian, informal administrator or support person can help you with your application.
The Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT) makes decisions about the personal, health or financial affairs of an adult with impaired decision-making capacity.
QCAT may appoint a formal guardian or administrator to help the adult with decisions. The adult can have more than one guardian or administrator making decisions on their behalf. QCAT will clearly explain the decision-making powers that the guardian or administrator has.
A guardian or administrator:
Formal guardians or administrators must complete a formal guardian and/or administrator details form (PDF, 961.2 KB) and attach a copy of QCAT’s order.
If we need to contact your guardian or administrator, we need to have their contact details and know what decisions they can make. We won't contact a guardian or administrator about your decisions unless they complete this form.
Informal guardians or administrators must complete an informal decision-maker details form (PDF, 998.9 KB) and return it to the nearest Housing Service Centre. We won't contact your informal guardian or administrator about your decisions unless they complete this form.
Your nearest Housing Service Centre also has these forms.
Community housing is a form of social housing assistance delivered by non-government organisations, local governments and community organisations. It is for eligible people in need of housing assistance, who cannot access other forms of housing.
Community housing is a type of social housing.