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06 Sept 2025

Charity issues warning amid ‘significant’ increase in number of homeless in Tipperary

Charity issues warning amid ‘significant’ increase in number of homeless in Tipperary

The number of homeless adults and children is still rising in Tipperary, and around Ireland, according to Department of Housing figures for May – with a charity warning that the figures will continue to increase as people struggle with the cost of living.

Last months figures indicated that Tipperary currently have 63 homeless, with Tipperary making up part of the figures for the South-East (along with Carlow, Kilkenny, Waterford and Wexford), which has seen an increase in homelessness of 3% in May.

The department’s latest monthly figures also show there are 7,297 adults and 3,028 children registered as homeless – a total of 10,325 nationwide

This is an increase from the 10,049 adults and children who were recorded as homeless in April.

There were 1,366 families recorded as homeless in May, 58 more than the previous month, which housing charity Focus Ireland called a “significant” increase.

Focus Ireland chief executive Pat Dennigan said: “As well as facing the housing and homeless crisis, we are now facing one of the worst periods of inflation in living memory.

“In addition to rocketing rents, vulnerable people nationwide are struggling to pay their petrol energy bills and many families can barely put food on their table.

“If urgent action is not taken by the Government, we will undoubtedly see these figures rise in the coming months.

“It is terrible to see that the progress made through such challenging work during the pandemic has so quickly been lost, and we are back to rising numbers of adults and children experiencing homelessness.”

Focus Ireland also welcomed Housing Minister Darragh O’Brien’s recent changes to Housing Assistance Payments, but added that the move does not go far enough and more needs to be done to curb the rising numbers becoming homeless.

Mr Dennigan said the “discretionary” increase from 20% to 35% will help, “but the measure needs to go further, and it only applies to Dublin”.

“We hope these welcome but limited initial announcements by Minister O’Brien are only part of what he plans to do and there will be further announcements as the legislation is published,” he added.

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