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A UK charity focused on social support is seeking a Homelessness Support Worker in Harringay, London. This role is essential for providing practical and emotional support to clients transitioning towards independent living. Duties include delivering personalized assistance and managing client relationships. Candidates should demonstrate empathy and a commitment to inclusion and fairness. This permanent position offers benefits like tailored training, flexible working, and an annual leave package. Salary is £27,636, with applications welcomed from diverse backgrounds.
Homelessness Support Worker
Location: St Vincent Mews, Harringay
Salary: £27,636
Closing Date: 25 January, 2026
Employment Type: Permanent
Hours per week: 37.5
You’ll play a vital part in delivering the charity’s mission: tackling homelessness, widening opportunity and championing fairness. Whatever your specialism, you’ll help create a safe, inclusive and empowering environment where people can thrive and move forward with confidence.
As a Homelessness Support Worker (Harringay, London), you will provide practical, emotional, and goal-focused support to our clients (40 - 50 years old), helping them develop the skills, confidence, and resilience needed to move towards independent living.
You will manage a caseload of people with a range of support needs, building trusted relationships and delivering structured, person-centred support plans. The role involves supporting our clients through key transitions, including leaving care, sustaining accommodation, and accessing education, training, or employment.
Your work will be underpinned by the Endeavour Model, an assets-based and psychologically informed approach, ensuring young people are supported to build on their strengths and achieve positive outcomes.
You believe in people — their strengths, their rights and their potential. You bring empathy, energy and a solution focused mindset to your work. You communicate clearly, stay organised and adapt well in a fast moving environment. You’re committed to inclusion, fairness and continuous learning, and you turn values into meaningful action, whatever your role.
The charity is committed to fair and inclusive recruitment, and we welcome applications from people of all backgrounds. If a role requires it under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exceptions) Order 1975, we will carry out the appropriate Disclosure & Barring Service (DBS) check. We only look at information that is relevant to the role, and a criminal record will never be treated as an automatic barrier to employment. All DBS information is handled sensitively, confidentially and in line with the DBS Code of Practice, and we encourage applicants to discuss any concerns with us openly.
In the 1980s, high unemployment and steep inflation was contributing to a shocking rise in youth homelessness across London. Thousands of young people were sleeping rough every night, with many areas notoriously dubbed “cardboard cities” due to the visible rise in street homelessness. Appalled by the scenes playing out across the capital, a group of people came together to tackle the challenge head on. Led by Cardinal Basil Hume and Mark McGreevy OBE, in 1989 the charity was born.
What began as a single housing project in North London soon expanded across London, Greater Manchester and the North East of England. Today, the charity provides accommodation, prevention and support services to thousands of marginalised young people across the UK each year.