Dublin People

Homeless figures break record high once again

The Department of Local Government and Housing

Over 17,000 people were availing of homeless accommodation in Ireland in January, the highest figure since records began.

17,308 people were confirmed to be in homeless accommodation by the Department of Housing in the most recent round of figures.

The figure is an increase from the 17,112 people figure for January 2026.

Of the figure, 5,457 are children.

When the Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael/independents government took office in January 2025, the figure stood at 15,286 people.

The figures mark a dramatic increase from May 2016, when the 32nd Dáil met for the first time, when 6,189 people were in homeless accommodation.

The temporary introduction of no-fault evictions in late 2022 saw a pronounced drop in homeless figures, with the figure dipping below 12,000; the lifting of the ban in March 2023, in controversial circumstances, directly coincided with a rise in homeless figures since then.

Catherine Kenny, CEO of Dublin Simon Community, said “these numbers are the last figures before the new tenancy rules came into effect, and they come at a moment of real concern across the sector.”
“We are seeing evidence of multiple catalysts converging to create pressure: rising notices of termination (NOTs), affordability challenges, and now new legislation changes – all meeting a system that is already operating at its limits. The risk is that more people will be pushed into homelessness with fewer pathways out.”
“Homelessness figures continue to rise in Dublin. We know firsthand from our winter reporting that our Outreach team has been engaging with up to eight new people a day at risk of rough sleeping, at risk or experiencing homelessness. We saw increased demand for accommodation and services on the frontline during the wet winter months. Our teams were there, day and night, helping to keep people dry and doing what they could to minimise serious health risks in the cold,” Kenny said.
“I am deeply concerned about the reports in the sector of the growing surge of NOTs in the private rental market. As NOTs continued to rise to the end of 2025, there is a frightening wave of demand for emergency accommodation for single and family households looming. Each notice represents a person or family at risk of losing their home, and without urgent, coordinated action, many will have nowhere to turn but already stretched services.”

Social Democrats TD Rory Hearne said, “the cause of this crisis, which continues to spiral out of control, is government failure to treat this situation with the urgency and gravity it demands and progress policy and legislation that will adequately address what has become a defining disaster for this generation.”

“Instead, the government introduced disastrous rental measures on March 1st, the lead up to which saw a dramatic increase in evictions, the likes of which have not been seen since the famine – Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael policies are directly contributing to a stark rise in homelessness,” he said.

“At this rate, we could be faced with a quarter of a million evictions in the coming decade if major policy changes are not introduced at speed and at scale.”

The Dublin North-West TD said, “landlords are kicking out tenants as they’ve been incentivised by Government policy to do so in order to hike up rents, tenants who are not covered by the lease protections introduced, which only apply to new tenancies.”

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