In the quarter ending March 2019 for Lower Hutt, 803 emergency housing grants totalling $1,320,659 were approved.
Wellington City, which has double the population of Lower Hutt, had 364 grants approved in the same time.
Andrew Plant, deputy chief executive of strategic purchasing and public housing supply, said the council was aware of people living in hotels and motels.
"While our preference is to see people placed in stable, long-term accommodation such as public or transitional housing, the EHSNG is available to meet the cost of short-term accommodation, usually a motel, for individuals and families with an immediate housing need."
Community housing and transitional housing providers were also feeling the pressure.
Philippa Wells, Hutt City women's refuge manager, said the refuge was putting more time into supporting women finding housing, when it could be doing better things.
"The women sometimes give up and return to the abuser because it just takes too long to find housing. The women feel very disillusioned and as staff we also feel this, although perhaps not to the same degree."
The council had agreed to participate in the Governance of Housing First in the Hutt Valley and Wellington along with partners.
Housing First is a government-funded programme targeting the sharp end of homelessness – people who are sleeping rough and had been sleeping rough for the past 12 months.
The Government announced additional funding in the Wellbeing Budget for the programme in Wellington. Services for up to 200 people in Wellington City and the Hutt were expected to start this month.
The council said after conversations, it had no date for when it would start in Lower Hutt, but believed practical implementation may begin later this year.