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Coming NDIA webinar: what providers need to know as legislation overhauls eligibility, budgets, and compliance
Major changes to the NDIS Act have reshaped how participants are assessed and funded, and tighten rules for providers. The NDIA will host a special webinar to provide details of key changes next week.
It’s been nine months since Bill Shorten’s major legislative overhaul of the NDIS officially came into effect at the beginning of October last year. The ‘Getting the NDIS Back on Track’ aimed to rein in growth, improve integrity, and embed new structures.
It was the legal foundation for a very different scheme - one defined not by hope, but by structure.
The new law doesn’t just tinker around the edges. It redraws the map.
From now on, everyone in the Scheme must be told, in writing, exactly how they qualify: through permanent disability or early intervention. Plans are divided into new and old frameworks and the old will be phased out. The new ones separate funding into two categories: flexible and fixed. Budgets are itemised and providers will need to follow these strictly.
The costs had spiraled out of control. That’s why the PM gave Shorten the job of making clear the days of open-ended spending are over. It was a case of ‘you started it; now you fix it’.
Some cuts were easy. Services that didn’t have a clinical or evidence base - like crystal therapy, reiki, or general wellness products - were out. Shorten loved using examples like these in his sound-bites. The same with ‘lifestyle extras’ and ‘holiday costs’. If it wasn’t on the approved list, it’s not claimable.
He didn’t bother explaining why they’d crept on in the first place. That might have been a bit embarrassing.
But there are other changes too. A new set of “funding periods” is also coming in. Instead of releasing a participant’s budget in full, the NDIA will now drip-feed funding every few months. This gives the Agency more control—and participants less flexibility.
The shift has already started. But this is just the start. At the core of the changes is a tighter, centralised model for determining participant eligibility and funding levels. This marks the biggest legislative shift since the scheme’s inception.
The law now requires every participant to be issued a written decision on whether they are in the Scheme because they met the disability requirements, the early intervention requirements, or both. That may sound administrative, but it's more than a label: it defines what support they’re entitled to, and for how long.
Plans are now divided into two types: new framework plans clearly outlining flexible versus fixed (“stated”) budgets, and old framework plans reflecting legacy arrangements which will be phased out. The NDIA is also shifting to a “funding period” model, where money is made available in staged blocks, such as quarterly, rather than all at once.
Providers will need to take particular care. Only supports that appear on the new, authorised NDIS supports list are eligible. That means common (but non-clinical) therapies are no longer covered. Neither are ‘lifestyle’ expenses.
Last year Shorten insisted that the changes “restore the scheme’s original intent: to serve people with significant and permanent disability.”
To ease the transition, the reforms are being introduced in stages and that’s the purpose behind next weeks webinar being held by the NDIA. Making sure everybody’s on the same page.
The Briefing

PM launching the Early Education Fund (supplied)
Setting up the Building Early Education Fund for Success
by Australian Disability & Aged Care
The Building Early Education Fund aims to improve outcomes for disadvantaged children through integrated early childhood hubs in underserved areas. Success hinges on targeted investment, sustainable funding, community partnerships, and dedicated support for services.
Advocates call out guardianship misuse
by Disability Advocacy Network Australia
Advocates are warning that adult guardianship orders are being misused against individuals capable of making their own decisions. A new report urges greater focus on supported decision-making to protect people’s rights and prevent unnecessary legal intervention.
NMHCCF Lived Experience Theory of Change
by National Mental Health Consumer and Carer Forum
The NMHCCF's Lived Experience Theory of Change outlines a vision centred on valuing personal mental health experiences in reform. It promotes leadership by those with lived experience to guide inclusive, compassionate change in services and communities.
The intersectionality between black and disabled
by Physical Disability Australia
This piece highlights the compounded discrimination faced by Aboriginal people with disabilities, emphasising societal neglect and institutional bias. It calls for unified community efforts to challenge racism and support resilience within the intersections of identity and disadvantage.

The Wrap
NDIS boss Rebecca Falkingham sick with breast cancer, as new acting CEO announced
by Daily Telegraph
EXCLUSIVE: Disability providers are calling for more transparency about who is in charge of the beleaguered $48.5 billion-a-year NDIS after discovering two different stand-in executives have been at the helm in the last six weeks.
A third of young workers are exploited, with many never receiving entitlements
by ABC
Young workers are less likely to speak up, with only a third going to unions or agencies, such as the Fair Work Ombudsman, for help. Experts and advocates say often these workers don't see their entitlements, and that more is needed to protect young workers.
Disability, Sex and What’s Missing on our Screens
by SBS
Love Without Limits: Despite growing conversations around representation, one area continues to be left behind: authentic representation of disabled people as sexual beings in film and television. The ongoing invisibility of disabled people in stories about sex, intimacy, and romance — and working to change that.
The Diary
