Catholic Healthcare primed for “strategic expansion”
“The organisation benefits from high liquidity, substantial working capital, and operates without any outstanding debt.”
Catholic Healthcare says it is entering its next growth phase from a position of financial strength, with higher revenue, stronger liquidity and no debt on its balance sheet.
In its 2025 Annual Review, the Not For Profit, faith-based provider reported revenue increased by $38.7 million to $594.3 million, while total assets rose by $101 million to $1,318.7 million, mainly driven by higher cash holdings.
From FY24 to FY25, liabilities increased by $112.9 million to $948.1 million, reflecting greater RAD liabilities and ingoing contributions linked to higher occupancy and the opening of St Hedwig Retirement Village in Blacktown, 34km west of the Sydney CBD.
“Catholic Healthcare maintains a robust balance sheet, positioning the company for strategic expansion. The organisation benefits from high liquidity, substantial working capital, and operates without any outstanding debt, providing confidence in the company’s ability to meet its obligations,” it stated.
Catholic Healthcare, which employs 5,584 people – 4,411 of them women – plans to invest over $600 million over the next five years to develop five connected communities across NSW.
Over the past financial year, it has constructed two Wellness Centres: Warnervale Wellness Centre on the NSW Central Coast, which opened in September 2025, and Hunters Hill Wellness Centre in NSW, due to open in early 2026.
The organisation currently has 580 retirement living residents in 512 units, 2,865 residential aged care residents (46.9% concessional), 5,821 home care clients and 2,356 Home Care Packages.