Landaid Charitable Trust Limited

Charity Number: 295157

Annual Expenditure: £1.5M

Stay updated on changes from Landaid Charitable Trust Limited and other funders

Get daily notifications about new funding opportunities, deadline changes, and programme updates from UK funders.

Free Email Updates

Quick Stats

  • Annual Giving: £1.5+ million (2023)
  • Success Rate: Not publicly available
  • Decision Time: 3-4 weeks for EOI, 2 weeks post-committee for full application
  • Grant Range: £1,000 - £100,000 (depending on programme)
  • Geographic Focus: UK-wide (England, Scotland, Wales)

Contact Details

Website: www.landaid.org

Email: enquiries@landaid.org | grants@landaid.org

Phone: 020 3102 7190

Grant Enquiries: For questions about applications, contact grants@landaid.org

Pro Bono Programme: probono@landaid.org

Overview

LandAid Charitable Trust Limited (registered charity 295157) is the property industry charity working to end youth homelessness in the UK. Founded with the mission to unite the property industry's resources and expertise, LandAid has positioned itself as the only charity able to aggregate and multiply the property industry's effort and funding to maximise impact nationwide. In 2023, LandAid awarded over £1.5 million in grants across 22 youth homelessness charities, creating 362 bedspaces for young people aged 16-25. Through their Routes Out of Homelessness Programme and StreetSmart partnership, they distributed over £740,000, supporting over 1,000 young people in London and hundreds more across the country. Their 2024-29 strategy sets an ambitious target to positively support 10,000 young people with homes, jobs and skills. LandAid operates through six regional boards across the UK and offers both monetary grants and free property expertise through their Pro Bono Programme, which has brokered over £2 million in support since 2021.

Funding Priorities

Grant Programs

LandAid offers three core Routes Out of Homelessness Grant Programmes:

1. Safe Places Programme (Rolling basis)

  • Grant Range: £1,000 - £3,500 per bedspace
  • Average Cost: £2,200 per bedspace, £1,100 per young person supported
  • Creates new/additional hosting bedspaces in homes of individuals or families for emergency or supported housing
  • No funding limits, costs vary based on location and support needs

2. Capital Grants Programme (Rolling basis)

  • Grant Range: £20,000 - £100,000
  • Creates bedspaces in properties owned by or on long-term lease to charitable organisations
  • For emergency, supported or move-on accommodation
  • Includes revenue grants for management costs directly related to project delivery

3. Move-on Grants Programme (Rolling basis)

  • Grant Range: £1,000 - £2,000 per bedspace
  • Unlocks bedspaces in private or social rental sector
  • Supports young people ready for independent living who face barriers accessing rental accommodation

4. StreetSmart Campaign Grants (Annual distribution)

  • Funded through £1 donations added to restaurant bills in November/December
  • Over £740,000 distributed in 2023 to 40+ charities
  • Supports caseworkers, training programmes, and specialist services

Priority Areas

  • Creating bedspaces for young people aged 16-25 who are homeless, at risk of homelessness, or have experienced homelessness
  • Projects providing emergency, supported, or move-on accommodation
  • Services offering holistic support including employment, education, and training opportunities
  • Initiatives supporting care-experienced young people and vulnerable groups (LGBTQ+, young migrants)
  • Therapy, mental health support, and life skills programmes directly connected to accommodation projects
  • Collaborative solutions in targeted locations with greatest need

What They Don't Fund

  • Projects outside the UK
  • Retrospective funding for completed projects
  • Projects that are the statutory duty of government funders
  • Projects that organisations could reasonably fund themselves
  • Unrestricted grants towards general running costs
  • Services for people outside the 16-25 age range
  • Faith promotion activities (though faith-based organisations can apply for youth homelessness projects)
  • Management costs not directly related to project delivery
Helpful Hinchilla

Ready to write a winning application for Landaid Charitable Trust Limited?

Our AI helps you craft proposals that match their exact priorities. Save 10+ hours and increase your success rate.

Get Free Beta Access

Governance and Leadership

Board of Trustees

LandAid is governed by a board of 14 trustees comprising senior figures from the property industry, supported by four committees overseeing fundraising, grants, communications, and finance/audit.

Chair of Trustees: Neil Slater, Global Head of Real Assets at ABRDN (appointed April 2022)

Recent Trustees: Gemma Kataky (Blackstone) and Damian Wild (EG), with Wild chairing the Fundraising Committee

Executive Leadership

Chief Executive: Paul Morrish

Paul joined LandAid in 2015 after 25 years working across charities and not-for-profit organisations, including as Deputy Chief Executive of VoiceAbility. On the challenges facing young people, he stated: “As the number of children and young people growing up in absolute poverty increases to a staggering one in five, the need for LandAid is greater than ever.”

Regional Structure

LandAid operates through six Regional Boards covering:

  • Scotland
  • The Midlands
  • The South West
  • The North West
  • Eastern Region
  • Yorkshire

Application Process and Timeline

How to Apply

Two-Stage Process:

Stage 1: Expression of Interest (EOI)

  • Brief form designed to be quick and easy to complete
  • Submit via online portal at www.landaid.org
  • EOIs reviewed fortnightly
  • Response provided within 3 weeks, definitely within 1 month

Stage 2: Full Application

  • Invited applicants complete detailed longer-form application
  • Must include latest annual accounts, impact report, safeguarding policy, and equality/diversity/inclusion policy
  • Applications reviewed by grant committee

Application Portal: All programmes operate on a rolling basis through online Expression of Interest forms

Decision Timeline

  • EOI Response: Within 3 weeks (maximum 1 month)
  • Full Application to Decision: Grant committee meets regularly; decisions made at meetings
  • Offer Letter: Within 2 weeks of grant committee approval
  • Total Timeline: Approximately 1.5-3 months from initial EOI to grant offer

Success Rates

Specific success rate percentages are not publicly disclosed. LandAid focuses on supporting “exceptional small-medium sized charities” and targets investment to “the very best charities tackling homelessness.”

Reapplication Policy

LandAid does not have hard and fast rules on reapplying. However, if an application is unsuccessful, the same project application is unlikely to be successful within the next 12 months unless there is a significant change to the local/regional situation and need.

Feedback: LandAid provides feedback on unsuccessful Stage 2 applications and, where possible, brief feedback on unsuccessful EOIs.

Application Success Factors

What LandAid Looks For

Alignment with Values: When completing applications, pay particular reference to LandAid's values and how they apply to their grant programmes. They seek charities that demonstrate:

  • Exceptional work with young people aged 16-25 experiencing homelessness
  • Focus on creating sustainable bedspaces and pathways out of homelessness
  • Collaborative approaches and partnerships
  • Strong safeguarding and inclusion policies

Flexibility and Co-Design: LandAid states they are “flexible and try to work with applicants to co-design projects which may not be an exact fit,” indicating openness to dialogue and project refinement.

Recent Funded Projects as Examples

Modular Housing (South-West): £120,000 total funding to 1625 Independent People, United Communities, and Somerset Care Repair for eight new modular homes

WomenCentre Homes (West Yorkshire): Capital grant to purchase three dispersed single-family homes for young women aged 16-25 with children in Halifax area, in partnership with Halifax Opportunities Trust

New Horizon Youth Centre: £40,000 grant for housing support worker salary; Project Vista partnership with Network Homes won London Homelessness Awards 2017

Gloucestershire Nightstop: Safe Places grant to increase volunteer hosting capacity for short-term and longer-term emergency accommodation

LGBTQ+ Support: Specialist caseworker funding for advice and advocacy addressing unique challenges facing LGBTQ+ youth in accessing emergency and supported accommodation

Employment Training: Nourish 12-month programme providing training and skills to young people facing employment barriers

Key Success Indicators

  • Clear focus on bedspace creation: All core programmes centre on creating new accommodation
  • Age-specific impact: Projects must specifically support the 16-25 age group
  • Demonstrable need: Evidence of local/regional homelessness challenge
  • Governance: Minimum three unrelated board members required
  • Professional approach: Latest accounts, policies, and impact data required

Additional Support Available

If organisations lack expertise in capital projects, LandAid encourages including a request for free professional support via their Pro Bono Programme in applications. The Pro Bono Programme has provided over £2 million in property expertise since 2021.

Key Takeaways for Grant Writers

  1. Focus on bedspace creation: Every application must demonstrate how the project creates new bedspaces for young people aged 16-25. LandAid's core mission centres on providing accommodation, so emphasise tangible housing outcomes.
  1. Know your programme: Match your project to the correct programme (Safe Places for hosting, Capital for owned/leased properties, Move-on for private sector access) and ensure your budget aligns with typical grant ranges.
  1. Start with the EOI: The Expression of Interest is designed to be quick and accessible. Don't over-invest time before understanding if there's initial interest. Response times are fast (3 weeks).
  1. Emphasise property industry alignment: LandAid is the property industry charity. Projects that can demonstrate property sector partnerships, innovative use of property, or potential for pro bono property expertise may have additional appeal.
  1. Leverage the Pro Bono Programme: If your organisation needs property expertise (feasibility studies, project management, legal advice), explicitly request Pro Bono support in your application. This demonstrates resourcefulness and can strengthen capital projects.
  1. Demonstrate “exceptional” work: LandAid seeks to fund “exceptional small-medium sized charities.” Highlight what makes your approach innovative, your track record of impact, and your evidence-based outcomes.
  1. Be open to co-design: LandAid emphasises flexibility and working with applicants to refine projects. If invited to Stage 2, be prepared to discuss project adjustments that might increase fit with their criteria.
  1. Regional engagement: With six Regional Boards across the UK, consider engaging with your local LandAid hub. Regional connections can provide insight into local priorities and strengthen applications.

Similar Funders

These funders frequently fund the same charities:

🎯 You've done the research. Now write an application they can't refuse.

Hinchilla combines funder's specific priorities with your organisation's past successful grants and AI analysis of what reviewers want to see.

Data privacy and security by default

Your organisation's past successful grants and experience

AI analysis of what reviewers want to see

A compelling draft application in 10 minutes instead of 10 hours

References

  1. LandAid Official Website - Homepage and About Us (https://landaid.org/ and https://landaid.org/about-us/) -
  1. Charity Commission Register - LandAid Charitable Trust Limited, Charity Number 295157 (https://register-of-charities.charitycommission.gov.uk/charity-details/?regId=295157) -
  1. LandAid Routes Out of Homelessness Grant Programmes (https://landaid.org/apply-for-funding-support/grants-landaid-offers/) -
  1. Grant Application and Assessment Process (https://www.landaid.org/apply-for-funding-support/grants-landaid-offers/how-grants-are-awarded/) -
  1. Grant Eligibility Criteria and FAQs (https://www.landaid.org/apply-for-funding-support/grants-landaid-offers/faqs/) -
  1. LandAid's 2024-29 Strategy to End Youth Homelessness (https://landaid.org/about-us/our-vision-mission-values/ending-youth-homelessness-landaids-plan-2024-2029/) -
  1. LandAid Looking Back - Snapshots of Success in 2023 (https://landaid.org/news-and-stories/landaid-wrapped-2023/) -
  1. LandAid Awards Over £640,000 in New Grants (https://landaid.org/news-and-stories/landaid-awards-over-640000-in-new-grants/) -
  1. LandAid and StreetSmart Award Grants Totalling Over £740,000 (https://landaid.org/news-and-stories/landaid-and-streetsmart-award-grants-totalling-over-740000-to-charities-tackling-youth-homelessness-across-the-uk/) -
  1. Finance and Governance (https://www.landaid.org/about-us/finance-and-governance/) -
  1. LandAid Pro Bono Programme (https://landaid.org/apply-for-funding-support/apply-pro-bono-programme-and-wider-support/) -
  1. Projects We Have Supported (https://landaid.org/our-impact/projects-weve-supported/) -
  1. Neil Slater Appointed New Chair of LandAid's Board of Trustees (https://www.landaid.org/news/neil-slater-appointed-new-chair-landaid%E2%80%99s-board-trustees) -
  1. Our People - Team LandAid (https://www.landaid.org/about-us/our-team) -
  1. LandAid Regional Hubs (https://landaid.org/support-our-mission/our-regional-hubs/) -