Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has pledged to tackle family violence affecting Indigenous Australians with a $25 million allocation to services.

The funding is part of the Coalition's third phase of the 12-year national plan to tackle family violence and comes from a $100 million allocation made in the 2016-17 federal budget.

Mr Turnbull announced the breakdown of the funding after meeting with state and territory leaders in Brisbane today.

He told reporters that he and his staff had been meeting with Indigenous leaders on how best to address the problem of violence against women.

"We are definitely working with our first Australians on this," he said.

"It's an issue of the keenest focus."

The remaining $75 million will be spent on prevention and early intervention programs, improve domestic and family violence services and establish frontline legal services.

It will also provide $10 million to develop a national online complaints mechanism and police training package to counter "revenge porn".

The funding is in addition to the Coalition's $100 million women's safety package, announced when Mr Turnbull became Prime Minister last year.

But Deputy Opposition Leader Tanya Plibersek said none of the funding was new money.

Ms Plibersek told the ABC the funding was not enough.

"It's re-announced money ... and it doesn't go even a fraction of the way to replacing the more than $50m that's been cut from legal services," she said.

"Some community legal centres are talking about closing their doors."

Ms Plibersek also raised the issue of accommodation, stating that the Government needed to provide funding for the National Partnership Agreement on Homelessness, which runs out mid-2017.

"The question shouldn't be 'why doesn't she leave' but where would she go'," she said.