Globalytic
GlobalyticPoliticsConflictsTechScienceHealthBusinessWorld

Globalytic

Independent world coverage — geopolitics, conflicts, science, and health — with AI-assisted editing and verification.

Sections

  • World
  • Politics
  • Conflicts
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Business
  • World
  • All news
  • Search

Resources

  • About
  • RSS Feed
  • Search

Summaries and analysis may be AI-assisted. Content is for informational purposes only.

Not professional advice.

© 2026 Globalytic. All rights reserved.

  1. Home
  2. /News
  3. /NDIS cuts could leave some participants with a funding gap. How will the changes affect you?
Load next article
PoliticsBreakingurgent

NDIS cuts could leave some participants with a funding gap. How will the changes affect you?

The Guardian World1h ago5 min readOriginal source →
NDIS cuts could leave some participants with a funding gap. How will the changes affect you?

TL;DR

Funding for some services in the National Disability Insurance Scheme will be cut, potentially creating funding gaps for participants. The proposed changes also give the health minister significant control over funding and pricing.

Key points

  • Funding for some NDIS services will be cut
  • Participants may face funding gaps
  • Health minister gains significant control over NDIS funding
  • Government aims to save $36.2 billion over four years
  • Changes do not require state approval for the first year

Mentioned in this story

Mark ButlerNational Disability Insurance Scheme

Why it matters

The proposed funding cuts to the NDIS could significantly affect the support available to individuals with disabilities, impacting their quality of life.

Funding for some services within the National Disability Insurance Scheme will be slashed – even in cases where participants could be left with a funding gap – as part of a sweeping proposal to drastically curb the scheme’s annual growth.

The proposed changes, revealed on Thursday, will also grant the health minister, Mark Butler, god-like powers to reduce overall funding for support categories, determine pricing guides and caps for services and support, and the ability to change NDIS rules without state and territory approval for the first 12 months.

The changes form part of a major savings measure designed to tip $36.2bn back into the federal budget over the next four years.

As we peel back hundreds of pages of legislation and accompanying explanatory documents, here’s what you need to know.

Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email


How is NDIS eligibility changing?

Starting with one of its most contentious proposals, Labor’s plan will establish a legal framework to determine who can, and cannot, access the NDIS.

Butler said this will be focused on limiting scheme entry to people with “substantially reduced functional capacity”, which will be determined by a standardised, evidence-based tool.

The bill will also clarify the meaning of permanence and only grant participants access to the NDIS if they can first show they have exhausted “all appropriate” treatment options.

Finally, it will include more detail on how NDIS eligibility may be limited for individuals already accessing support from other mainstream services.

For example, if a person is receiving workers compensation or motor vehicle accident scheme support, they may not be eligible for the NDIS.


What other NDIS changes are planned?

As foreshadowed by Butler, the legislation will rework plan reassessments – when a participant requests additional funding for their NDIS plan because of unexpected or unbudgeted costs. The proposed changes will narrow such requests to moments of “significant and ongoing” change to participants’ needs.

The NDIS determines support funding on a “reasonable and necessary” basis, but the bill will add sustainability and equity to funding considerations.

Q&A

What are the proposed changes to the National Disability Insurance Scheme funding?

The proposed changes involve cuts to funding for certain services and grant the health minister authority to adjust funding and pricing without state approval.

How much money is the government aiming to save from the NDIS changes?

The government aims to save $36.2 billion from the NDIS changes over the next four years.

Who is Mark Butler and what role does he play in the NDIS changes?

Mark Butler is the health minister who will gain significant powers to alter NDIS funding and rules under the proposed changes.

How will the NDIS funding cuts affect participants?

Participants may face funding gaps for essential services due to the proposed cuts in the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

People also ask

  • NDIS funding cuts impact on participants
  • Mark Butler NDIS changes explained
  • how much money will NDIS cuts save
  • what are the new NDIS rules and funding

Related Articles

For anxious Taiwan, Trump’s silence after Xi talks is best possible outcome
Politics

For anxious Taiwan, Trump’s silence after Xi talks is best possible outcome

Taiwan Relieved by Trump's Silence on Island During Xi Talks

The Guardian World·45m ago·1 min read
Florida crew recounts ‘miraculous’ Atlantic plane rescue with fuel low
World

Florida crew recounts ‘miraculous’ Atlantic plane rescue with fuel low

Florida military crew saves 11 survivors from Atlantic plane crash with minutes of fuel left.

The Guardian World·45m ago·1 min read
GB News should lose its licence, says ex-Sky News editor Adam Boulton
Politics

GB News should lose its licence, says ex-Sky News editor Adam Boulton

Ex-Sky News editor Adam Boulton says GB News should lose its licence over impartiality issues.

The Guardian World·1h ago·1 min read
‘Magical’ objects from iron age hoard found in UK go on display
Science

‘Magical’ objects from iron age hoard found in UK go on display

Discover the 'magical' Iron Age objects from the Melsonby hoard on display in York!

The Guardian World·1h ago·1 min read
‘The world is sounding an alarm’: Why big tech is the new colonist
Conflicts

‘The world is sounding an alarm’: Why big tech is the new colonist

How Big Tech is Shaping Modern Warfare and Reviving Decolonisation Debates

Al Jazeera English·1h ago·1 min read
'The system is so broken', killer's mum tells inquiry
Conflicts

'The system is so broken', killer's mum tells inquiry

Valdo Calocane's mother calls the care system 'so broken' at inquiry

BBC News·1h ago·1 min read

More from News

View all →

See every story in News — including breaking news and analysis.

At a glance

  • Funding for some NDIS services will be cut
  • Participants may face funding gaps
  • Health minister gains significant control over NDIS funding
  • Government aims to save $36.2 billion over four years
  • Changes do not require state approval for the first year

Advertisement

Placeholder

Plans will be suspended if reasonable attempts to contact a participant go unanswered. Plans can be revoked entirely if a participant cannot be contacted after being suspended for at least 90 days.

Basic registration details will be required for a number of NDIS providers. The National Disability Insurance Agency will be given new monitoring and investigation powers to deal with any wrongdoing but will need to undertake risk assessments before approaching participants.

Other changes include:

  • Payments made to participants who have not kept appropriate records can be raised by the NDIA as debts. Providers without records could be handed a civil penalty.
  • NDIS supports will need to be claimed within 90 days of delivery, reduced from two years.
  • Automation for processing claims and payments will be allowed.

Who will decide how the NDIS changes?

While some specific changes to the NDIS are yet to be determined, the proposal will expand the health minister’s powers considerably.

One of those changes includes the ability to reduce funding for whole groups of supports. There are four main funding groups within a participant’s budget: core, capacity building, capital and recurring.

Core supports include personal care and transport, capacity building includes therapies and work programs, and capital supports include home modifications and assistive technology.

Last month, Butler flagged he intended to claw back funding for social and community participation activities (within the capacity building funding pool) because it had grown “substantially bigger”. Daily activities (also within capacity building funding) are also on the downsizing list.

The minister will also have final say over maximum prices for NDIS supports and services.

Finally, the bill includes a 12-month “Henry VIII” clause to give the minister sweeping powers to directly change NDIS laws without needing the support of states and territories.


Are the changes centred on cost?

While the government has talked up its focus on returning the NDIS back to its “original intent”, there’s no doubt the scheme’s fast-growing cost is the government’s main priority.

In the bill’s explanatory document, there is also a suggestion the funding reduction could result in a funding gap for some participants.

“To improve consistency and equity across the scheme, the application of ‘reasonable and necessary supports’ must link to consideration of what is reasonable for the scheme to fund,” it said.

“This means funding for some NDIS supports may be less than the actual cost of providing or acquiring the support.”

The federal budget papers revealed the government hopes to save $36.2bn from the changes, and limit the scheme’s growth to an average 3.6% until 2030.


Are the changes set in stone?

The bill has been introduced to parliament but it will be sent to an inquiry due to report back in June. It will hold at least two public hearings.

At a press conference on Thursday, Butler suggested many of the details were still being worked through and would be consulted on with the technical advisory group – members of which will be chosen by the minister and the NDIA, and will include people with lived experience of disability.

As for the questions around a potential payment gap for some supports, Butler provided a cryptic response.

“There’ll be quite differentiated pricing in place. What we’re doing is providing the minister with the power to implement that, and that will become clear as we develop the detail over time,” he said.

For now, watch this space.