The effects of subsidies and regulatory contexts on precarious housing among low-income renters: a cross-national comparison

Publication type

Journal Article

Series Number

Authors

Publication date

January 4, 2026

Summary:

This study examines the extent to which housing allowances and social housing protect against housing precarity experienced by low-income renters. By applying panel data modelling to Australian and UK data, we estimate how housing allowances and social housing affect low-income renters’ experience of housing stress, overcrowding, rent arrears and forced moves. We find that the design of rental subsidy programs and the regulatory context within which each subsidy is implemented, are systematically linked to the level and type of precarity experienced by low-income renters. Specifically, relative to housing allowances, the design of social housing subsidies feature more targeted eligibility criteria and caps to rental costs. This design is more effective at reducing housing stress and rent arrears. We find no evidence that subsidy payment modes reduce overcrowding. The more stringent regulations featured in the social housing sector offer stronger protections against forced moves than what is seen in the private rental market where housing allowance recipients reside. We conclude by proposing various ideas for policy reform to improve the effectiveness of both social housing and housing allowance programs as buffers against precarious housing.

Published in

Housing Studies

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1080/02673037.2025.2603994

ISSN

2673037

Subjects

Notes

© 2026 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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