← Back to Entity Graph

St Vincent de Paul Society Housing Australia

Concentration Risk
FoundationRegistryPBIABN 38103181700NSW
Relationships
27
Data Sources
2
Revenue
$12.3M
Contract Value
$3.1M
Preview
Data as of: 17 June 2026
Found in 3 systemsProcurementACNC CharitiesFoundations

About

St Vincent de Paul Society Housing Australia, formerly known as Amélie Housing, is a Tier 1 Community Housing Provider (CHP) and the national housing company for the St Vincent de Paul Society in Australia. Established in 2012, its primary mission is to provide secure, affordable rental housing and associated support services to individuals experiencing homelessness, disadvantage, or living on low to moderate incomes.

Top Contracts (4)

ECCLESIA CHLP - General
NSW Department of Communities and Justice · June 2015–June 2028
$2.4M
ECCLESIA CHLP - General
NSW Department of Communities and Justice · June 2015–June 2028
$2.4M
Ecclesia CHLP - Homelessness
NSW Department of Communities and Justice · Apr 2017–June 2028
$713K
Ecclesia CHLP - Homelessness
NSW Department of Communities and Justice · Apr 2017–June 2028
$713K

Giving Philosophy

The foundation approaches its work by aiming to 'build hope through housing' for the most disadvantaged members of Australian society. It focuses on increasing the supply of Social and Affordable Housing and provides various housing solutions, including crisis, transitional, specialist disability, social, and affordable accommodation. Their unique connection to the St Vincent de Paul Society's network of members and volunteers enables them to offer wrap-around support and case management, promoting tenancy sustainment and improved quality of life.

Wealth Source:As a national community housing provider for the St Vincent de Paul Society, its revenue sources likely include government funding/contracts for housing provision, donations, and potentially rental income from its property portfolio. It is endorsed as a Deductible Gift Recipient (DGR).
Parent:St Vincent de Paul Society Australia

Tips for Applicants

As a direct housing and service provider rather than a traditional grantmaker, potential applicants seeking assistance should refer to the St Vincent de Paul Society's general support services for individuals facing housing stress or homelessness. For partnership opportunities, direct engagement with Amélie Housing/St Vincent de Paul Society Housing Australia's operational teams would be appropriate.

Financial History (7 years)

YearRevenueExpensesAssetsSurplus
2023$12.3M$13.2M$174.0M$-740,715
2022$15.5M$12.0M$153.6M$3.4M
2021$10.5M$11.3M$127.5M$5.7M
2020$9.1M$10.1M$121.4M$747K
2019$15.0M$5.3M$29.6M$9.7M
2018$3.2M$3.8M$18.6M$-625,580
2017$3.3M$3.1M$19.6M$197K
Govt Revenue
$972K
0
Staff (FTE)
37.1
0
Donations Received
$35K

Community Evidence

External Evidence

Identity

GS ID
AU-ABN-38103181700
ABN
38103181700
Sector
community
Financial Year
2023

Focus Areas

Themes
communitydisabilityhuman_rights
Geography
AU-NationalAU-ACTAU-NSWAU-SA
Target Recipients
individualcommunity_org
Purposes
General PublicSocial Welfare
Beneficiaries
Financially DisadvantagedHomelessness RiskDisabilityVictims of Crime

Board & Leadership (9)

Financials

Revenue
$12.3M
Assets
$174.0M

Method

Match Confidence
registry
Cross-references
2 datasets
Match Key
ABN
Relationships
27

Matched by Australian Business Number (ABN) — high confidence. This entity was found across multiple government datasets using the same ABN.

Data Sources

ACNCFoundations

JusticeHub

External Link

This entity is also tracked in JusticeHub with 0 interventions and 0 evidence records.

External ecosystem profile linked from GrantScope for additional context. JusticeHub content is maintained separately.

View on JusticeHub

Location Intelligence

Postcode
2049
Locality
2049
SEIFA Disadvantage
Decile 9/10
Entities in Area
134

Disability Market Context

NDIS Layer
State Providers
4,591
Thin Districts
2
Very Thin
1
Local Alternatives
0
5 community-controlled orgs in postcode

This organisation shows disability-related delivery signals. The strategic question is whether it sits inside a resilient market, a thin market, or a captured market where large providers take most of the money and local alternatives are scarce.

Thinnest Districts In NSW
Far West49 providers
Far West51 providers
Southern NSW242 providers
Captured Markets
Far West95%
Mid North Coast89%
Western NSW75%
Murrumbidgee71%