Addressing Transgender and Gender
Non-Conforming Youth Homelessness 

Transgender and gender non-conforming youth face a disproportionately high risk of homelessness, with studies showing they are 120% more likely to experience homelessness compared to cisgender and heterosexual youth. Once homeless, these youth encounter unique challenges and barriers to accessing safe housing, supportive services, and pathways to housing. 

Transgender and Gender Non-Conforming (TGNC) Youth Homelessness

TGNC youth are significantly overrepresented in the homeless population. A population-based survey in Minnesota found that 2.7% of adolescents identified as TGNC, but 6.7% of these youth reported experiencing homelessness with their families, and 3.6% reported being homeless unaccompanied, compared to just 3.5% and 1.1%, respectively, for cisgender youth. Studies in 2012 also estimated that LGBTQ youth make up 7-39% of the homeless youth population, despite comprising only 5-7% of the overall youth population—transgender youth, in particular, face unique risks and trajectories into homelessness. Many are forced to leave home due to a lack of acceptance and support from their families surrounding their gender identity. Once homeless, 85% of transgender youth report avoiding shelters altogether for fear of mistreatment and harassment by staff and other residents. Of those who do seek shelter, 41% are denied access, often explicitly due to their gender identity. These factors lead to transgender youth being heavily overrepresented among the unsheltered homeless population - 63% of transgender individuals and 80% of non-binary individuals experiencing homelessness were unsheltered in 2019. Addressing the crisis of transgender youth homelessness requires ensuring welcoming, gender-affirming shelter options and focusing on family acceptance to prevent youth from becoming homeless due to rejection.

Unique Problems TGNC Youth Experience in the Homelessness Services

TGNC youth face numerous unique challenges and barriers when experiencing homelessness:

Discrimination and Mistreatment in Shelters


Rejection from Family and Support Systems


Unsafe Survival Behaviors


Lack of Appropriate Services


Health and Safety Risks


How to Improve Systems to be Justice-Focused, Equitable, and Inclusive for TGNC Youth Experiencing Homelessness

Youth homelessness systems can take several steps to become more just, equitable, and inclusive for TGNC youth:

Implement Robust Non-Discrimination Policies

Provide Gender-Affirming Housing Options

Increase Cultural Competency

Strengthen Family Support Services

Improve Data Collection

Partner with TGNC Organizations

Addressing discrimination, ensuring safe and affirming housing, building competency, strengthening family support, ethical data practices, and elevating TGNC voices are vital to making homelessness systems more just and inclusive for this vulnerable population.

What System Change Partners Can Provide and Recommends

System Change Partners can play a crucial role in driving systems-level changes to make youth homelessness responses more inclusive, equitable, and justice-focused for transgender and gender non-conforming (TGNC) individuals. Here are some key ways we can contribute:

Facilitate Community Partnerships

System Change Partners can facilitate partnerships between youth homelessness systems and TGNC-led organizations and provide best practices to work with TGNC with lived experience to co-create more inclusive policies, practices, and services. By bringing these partners together, we can ensure TGNC voices and lived expertise are centered in decision-making processes.

Revise Coordinated Entry Processes

We can guide revising coordinated entry systems to be more affirming and accessible for TGNC youth. This includes implementing gender-inclusive intake forms, ensuring safe and appropriate emergency shelter placements based on gender identity, and training staff on cultural competency.

Strengthen Family Acceptance Services

We can support efforts to strengthen family counseling and support services aimed at increasing acceptance of a young person’s gender identity. Reducing family rejection, a significant driver of TGNC youth homelessness is crucial for prevention.

Isaac Sanders