Haumaru Housing: opening doors to brighter futures
The Foundation’s housing for older people joint venture with Auckland Council – Haumaru Housing – provides holistic tenancy and asset management ...
Respectful Ageing for All, within Thriving Communities | Oranga Mātua, Oranga Tāngata
Good Shepherd New Zealand’s research on the housing challenges of older women living alone brings together the voices and experiences of thirteen older women aged between 57 and 83 who are living with housing stress or on low incomes. Through in-depth interviews, they spoke about what secure housing means to them, the pressures they are navigating, and the support that helps them stay well.
For many of the women who took part, housing challenges are shaped not only by limited income, but by lifetime patterns of low pay, caregiving, disability, racism, migrant experiences and the long-term effects of trauma. These overlapping and intersecting factors influence how older women access and maintain housing and how they experience the systems around them.
A consistent message is that housing insecurity is not the result of poor choices or a lack of capability. It stems from system settings that have not kept pace with the realities of ageing alone and which leave older women without stable, suitable or affordable options to age alone on a low income. Rising living costs, inaccessible homes, unstable rentals and services that are confusing or slow to respond all contribute to the pressure women are under.
The insights shared here offer a clear picture of what secure housing looks like for older women, the barriers that get in the way, and the opportunities to support women to age in place with stability, dignity and connection.
Across the interviews, women provided a clear picture of what a secure and nourishing home would look and feel like. These principles are grounded in lived experience and represent the foundations needed for older women to age well.
While the findings describe the broader systems shaping older women’s housing insecurity, they also point to practical ways support can be provided. These opportunities build directly on what women said they needed – support that is dignifying, empowering and easy to access, delivered by someone they trust. They also recognise that financial and housing challenges are deeply intertwined and cannot be solved by a loan alone.
For more insights into the challenges and opportunities for support, download the full report at: https://goodshepherd.org.nz/publications/research-housing-challenges-of-older-women-living-alone/
Image credit: Good Shepherd NZ
Good Shepherd’s Policy and Advocacy Lead Brittany Goodwin discusses the above issues and the current challenges facing older people here:
Cost-of-living squeeze hits pensioners, with some using foodbanks to survive | RNZ News
In 2025, The Selwyn Foundation launched a pioneering partnership with Good Shepherd NZ to fund, design and pilot an innovative social lending-based programme to improve access to safe, affordable and suitable housing for vulnerable single older women in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland and Te Tai Tokerau Northland. For more details: Helping vulnerable single older women access safe and affordable housing
For more insights into the challenges and opportunities for support, download the full below
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