# “I just don’t know what will be better other than an apartment which I can’t afford”: Experiences of housing quality following homelessness in Ontario, Canada

**Authors:** Carrie Anne Marshall, Patti Plett, Jessica Allen, Corinna Easton, Rebecca Goldszmidt, Elham Javadizadeh, Shauna Perez, Brooklyn Ward, Paolo Raile, Paolo Raile, Paolo Raile

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmen.0000297 · 2025-05-22

## TL;DR

This study explores how people who have experienced homelessness in Ontario perceive the quality of housing they access afterward, highlighting structural barriers and the need for policy change.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel thematic analysis of housing quality experiences from the perspective of individuals transitioning out of homelessness.

## Key findings

- Individuals often face undesirable and unsafe housing conditions after homelessness.
- Structural factors like poverty and lack of affordable housing hinder access to quality housing.
- Social support and community resources are crucial for creating a sense of home.

## Abstract

Having access to good quality housing is a key determinant of well-being. Little is known about experiences of housing quality following homelessness from the perspectives of persons with lived experience. To build on existing literature, we conducted a secondary analysis of qualitative interviews with 19 individuals who had experiences of transitioning to housing following homelessness. Interview transcripts were drawn from a community-based participatory research study exploring the conditions needed for thriving following homelessness in Ontario, Canada. We analyzed these transcripts using reflexive thematic analysis. We coded transcripts abductively, informed by theories of social justice and health equity. Consistent with reflexive thematic analysis, we identified a central essence to elucidate experiences of housing quality following homelessness: “negotiating control within oppressive structural contexts.” This was expressed through four distinct themes: 1) being forced to live in undesirable living conditions; 2) stuck in an unsafe environment; 3) negotiating power dynamics to attain comfort and safety in one’s housing; and 4) having access to people and resources that create home. Overall, our findings indicate that attaining good quality housing following homelessness is elusive for many and influenced by a range of structural factors including ongoing poverty following homelessness, a lack of deeply affordable housing stock, and a lack of available social support networks. To prevent homelessness, it is essential to improve access to good quality housing that can support tenancy sustainment and well-being following homelessness. Policymakers need to review existing housing policies and reflect on how over-reliance on market housing has imposed negative impacts on the lives of persons who are leaving homelessness. Given the current economic context, it is imperative that policymakers devise policies that mitigate the financialization of housing, and result in the restoration of the social housing system in Canada and beyond.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12798546/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12798546