2,061 young people aged 18–24 now represent 17.4% of adults in emergency accommodation
Reacting to the latest homelessness figures, the National Youth Council of Ireland (NYCI) has said it is “unacceptable” that over 2,000 young people aged 18–24 are currently living in emergency accommodation, representing 17.4% of adults in homelessness.
While wider housing pressures such as rising costs and lack of supply continue to drive homelessness across the population, NYCI said young people face additional and distinct risk factors. These include family breakdown, leaving care, and difficulty accessing age-appropriate supports. The organisation also warned that official figures do not capture the full scale of the crisis, as many young people remain in “hidden homelessness”, couch surfing or living in unstable and precarious situations.
Grace McManus, NYCI Campaigns Manager, said:
“These figures represent a profound failure to protect young people at a critical stage in their lives. No young person should be forced into homelessness because they cannot afford rent or access the supports they need. Government action, through policy and resourcing, can tackle the unique causes and challenges of youth homelessness.
“The Government’s three-year youth homelessness strategy covering 2023 to 2025 has now ended. Out of a total of 27 actions, only eight have been officially marked as complete. Missed actions must be reviewed and updated, and successes such as the Supported Housing for Youth programme must be expanded.
“The Government cannot go through 2026 without taking concrete action to tackle youth homelessness. These actions must be guided by a new Youth Homelessness Strategy, that gets to the core of the issue and has ambitious targets to eradicate youth homelessness.
“We are urging the Minister and Government to significantly increase attention and action on youth homelessness, alongside all other cohorts of people experiencing homelessness today.”