Become a STA FM Member

Office Hours

Mon – Tue | 9AM – 12PM
Wed – Fri | 9AM – 2:30PM

Phone:

(02) 5619 2439

Email:

admin@stafm.com.au

Grants Available to Back Rural Mental Health

by | Jan 21, 2026 | Agriculture, Community, Media Release, Rural | 0 comments

FRRR’s In a Good Place (IAGP) program is offering grants of up to $20,000 for community-led projects that support the mental health and wellbeing of farmers, farming communities and people living in remote, rural and regional places.

Man in a wide brimmed hat stands at a stall in a field next to a tree and a canvas banner.
Alan Broome, extensions officer with the Burnett Inland Economic Development Organisation (BIEDO) – IAGP grant recipient (Round 8).

Community groups and not-for-profits (NFPs) are invited to apply for grants from a funding pool of $200,000 for initiatives that improve mental health education, build community connections to foster wellbeing and assist local non-clinical services.

These grants are for local organisations to help their community build up the knowledge, skills and networks to support their mental health and wellbeing and to make sure locals know they don’t need to go it alone.

Jill Karena, Head of Granting at FRRR, said when you live in the country or on a remote property, it can be especially tough to put up your hand and ask for help when you’re not in the best place mentally.

“There are so many great things about living life on the land, but limited access to information, resources and services, as well as the geographical isolation, can make it particularly difficult to look after your mental health,” Ms Karena said.

“This is one of the reasons why community groups are so important to the vitality of remote, rural and regional Australia. Because they are on the ground in these communities and out talking to farmers, running wellbeing programs and filling the gaps in mental health services.

“Mental health is a whole-of-community concern. This funding enables NFPs to provide locals with resources and opportunities to connect, develop skills, increase understanding and reduce stigma. They can also use the grants to create safe spaces where people can have honest conversations and be heard.”

Thanks to FRRR’s donor partners, there are two streams of funding available:

  1. Community wellbeing: for projects that focus on strengthening the general mental health and wellbeing of people in remote, rural and regional communities.
  2. Farmers and farming communities: for projects specifically supporting the mental health and wellbeing of farmers and the communities they live in.

The types of projects IAGP grants have previously funded include volunteer training in mental health first aid, community events that encourage locals to connect and feel less isolated, inviting a guest speaker to share their mental health journey and personal wellbeing strategies with the community, and setting up an accessible safe space where locals can talk about their own mental health concerns with trained peer volunteers.

“Together with our funding partners, we look forward to being inspired by the project ideas put forward by NFPs and community groups who are out on the ground, proactively supporting the mental health and wellbeing of their local community,” Ms Karena said.

FRRR will host a free, online grantseeker workshop on Thursday, 22 January, for NFPs and community groups wanting to learn more about the program. To register, visit FRRR’s website.

Applications are currently open and close on 19 February at 5pm AEDT. Funding will be announced late June.

To learn more and apply, visit: https://frrr.org.au/funding/in-a-good-place/.

In a Good Place is collaboratively supported by FRRR’s partners, APS Foundation and CCI Giving; Well Thanks Foundation; the Farmer & Farming Community Funder Collective consisting of Macdoch Foundation, Jibb Foundation, Morris Family Foundation, Norman Family Foundation and Rebecca Gorman & John Sevior; and general donations.

FRRR would welcome more partners for this program. Potential supporters should contact partnerships@frrr.org.au or call 03 5430 2399.

Media Release: Foundation for Rural Regional Renewal

Other News