NATIONAL DISABILITY INSURANCE AGENCY (NDIA)

Delivering the NDIS & Supporting Australians With Disability

 

🟡 WHAT THEY DO

(Navy text on yellow background)

  • Deliver the National Disability Insurance Scheme

  • Provide funding for disability supports & services

  • Strengthen participant outcomes, independence & inclusion

  • Partner with providers, communities & governments

 

🟦 KEY OUTPUTS

(White text on deep navy/teal background)

  • NDIS participant plans

  • Provider registration & quality oversight

  • Disability support funding

  • Inclusion & capability initiatives

NATIONAL DISABILITY INSURANCE SCHEME (NDIS)

AI‑ENABLED, PARTICIPANT‑CENTRED, REDUCED‑BUDGET MODEL

Australians Unified – Disability, Inclusion, Community Wellbeing & National Care Portfolio Lean system • Higher capability • Lower cost • Stronger outcomes for participants

 

OUR ROLE

The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS):

  • Provides funding for Australians with permanent and significant disability

  • Ensures access to essential supports, services, and community participation

  • Protects the rights, dignity, and independence of participants

  • Partners with families, carers, providers, and community organisations

  • Ensures the scheme is financially sustainable and free from exploitation

This model transforms the NDIS into a lean, AI‑powered, fraud‑resistant, participant‑centred system that delivers better outcomes with lower cost.

Refocusing on core purpose

  • Clarify eligibility and scope: Tighten and clearly define eligibility criteria to ensure support is directed to people with permanent and significant disabilities, rather than becoming a catch‑all welfare program.

  • Prioritise reasonable and necessary supports: Focus funding on essential services—care, therapy, equipment, and support that directly improves quality of life and independence—rather than peripheral or lifestyle extras.

  • Reduce administrative burden: Simplify planning and review processes so more money goes to frontline support and less to bureaucracy, consultants, and red tape.

2. Introducing fair and sustainable means‑testing

  • Income and asset thresholds: Introduce means‑testing so that higher‑income households contribute more to their own support, while lower‑income and vulnerable Australians continue to receive fully funded assistance.

  • Tiered contribution model: Develop a tiered model where participant contributions are proportionate to capacity to pay, protecting equity while easing pressure on the federal budget.

  • Protecting the most vulnerable: Guarantee that no person with severe disability and low financial capacity loses access to essential supports as a result of reform.

3. Resetting pricing and pay rates to sustainable levels

  • Review provider pricing: Conduct a full review of NDIS price caps and service fees to reduce rorting, overcharging, and unnecessary intermediaries, while still ensuring quality care.

  • Align specialist and non‑specialist rates: Adjust specialist and non‑specialist pay rates to reflect market reality, qualifications, and genuine complexity of work—removing inflated margins and excessive consultancy costs.

  • Encourage efficiency and innovation: Reward providers who deliver high‑quality outcomes at lower cost through outcome‑based funding models and longer‑term service agreements.

4. New efficiency measures and cost modelling

  • Data‑driven cost modelling: Use real‑time data on participant needs, service usage, and outcomes to model future costs and set sustainable funding trajectories over 5‑, 10‑, and 20‑year horizons.

  • Fraud and leakage reduction: Strengthen auditing, verification, and compliance systems to identify fraud, over‑servicing, and misuse of funds—redirecting savings back into genuine support.

  • Benchmarking and performance metrics: Introduce benchmarks for cost per participant, outcomes achieved, and administrative overheads, with clear targets to reduce waste year‑on‑year.

  • Integration with other systems: Better coordinate NDIS with health, education, housing, and employment services to avoid duplication and cost‑shifting between systems.

Eligibility Integrity & Demand Management

Efficiency Measures

 

  • Clearer eligibility definitions to ensure the scheme supports people with permanent and significant disabilities.

  • Independent functional assessments to reduce inconsistent decision‑making.

  • Tiered support pathways so lower‑intensity needs are met through mainstream services rather than the NDIS

 

Cost Impact

  • Reduces unnecessary long‑term entrants.

  • Ensures funding is prioritised for high‑need participants.

  • Stabilises annual growth rates

We offer a range of specialized services tailored to meet your individual needs. Our approach is focused on understanding and responding to what you require, providing effective and practical solutions.

 

OUR STRENGTHS

Disability & Inclusion Strengths

  • Nationally recognised rights‑based framework

  • Strong participant protections

  • Broad provider network

  • High public trust and visibility

AI‑Enhanced Strengths (New Model)

  • Automated fraud detection

  • AI‑driven plan optimisation

  • Real‑time service‑delivery dashboards

  • Predictive demand modelling

  • Reduced manual workload

OUR WEAKNESSES (PRE‑AI)

  • High administrative overhead

  • Provider fraud and overcharging

  • Slow plan approvals and reviews

  • Inconsistent service quality

  • Fragmented data systems

  • Unsustainable long‑term cost growth

 

 

OUR THREATS

External Threats

  • Rising demand and cost pressures

  • Workforce shortages in disability support

  • Provider exploitation and price inflation

  • Fragmented state–federal responsibilities

Internal Threats

  • Legacy systems

  • Manual plan‑management processes

  • Inconsistent decision‑making

  • Limited real‑time oversight

.

OUR OPPORTUNITIES (AI‑ENABLED)

  • Automate plan approvals and reviews

  • Deploy AI‑enabled fraud and anomaly detection

  • Reduce administrative overhead

  • Improve transparency and reporting

  • Strengthen independence through tamper‑proof systems

  • Reinvest savings into frontline disability supports

 

Long‑term savings through fair, balanced reform

These reforms aim to:

  • Protect the scheme for those who truly need it.

  • Stabilise and reduce long‑term cost growth through smarter design, not blunt cuts.

  • Improve value for money so every dollar delivers real outcomes for participants.

  • Restore public confidence that the NDIS is fair, sustainable, and responsibly managed.

Australians Unified supports reforming the National Disability Insurance Scheme so it returns to its original purpose: providing reasonable and necessary support to people with genuine and ongoing disability needs. The goal is to protect the integrity of the scheme, ensure long‑term sustainability, and guarantee that funding reaches those it was truly designed to help. Over four years, this could save $15–20 billion compared with the current system—without taking essential support away from anyone with a real disability.

COSTING TILES — NATIONAL DISABILITY INSURANCE SCHEME (NDIS)

20% reduction in operating cost, offset by AI‑enabled efficiency

 

TILE 1 — BASELINE FUNDING (REDUCED)

$0.80B per year

(Reduced from $1.00B — 20% efficiency gain)

 

TILE 2 — PHASE 1 (Years 1–2)

$1.10B – $1.50B

Stabilise & Modernise

 

TILE 3 — PHASE 2 (Years 2–4)

$2.20B – $3.00B

Automate & Enhance

 

TILE 4 — PHASE 3 (Years 4–6)

$1.60B – $2.20B

Strengthen Capability

 

TILE 5 — PHASE 4 (Years 6–10)

$4.40B – $5.80B

Transform & Protect

 

TILE 6 — PEOPLE & COMMUNITY

Dignity • Independence • Inclusion

  • Participant‑rights protections

  • Community inclusion programs

  • Digital accessibility tools

  • Carer and family support

  • National disability‑literacy uplift

 

TILE 7 — TOTAL INVESTMENT

6‑Year Total:

$4.90B – $6.70B

10‑Year Total:

$10.10B – $12.50B

 

OUTCOME

A lean, AI‑enabled, fraud‑resistant NDIS that delivers faster, fairer, more transparent disability supports — strengthening dignity, independence, and inclusion for all Australians.

Means‑Testing & Contribution Framework

Why it matters

The NDIS is currently funded almost entirely by taxpayers, regardless of a participant’s financial capacity.

Efficiency Measures

  • Income and asset‑based contribution tiers for higher‑income households.

  • Co‑payment models for non‑essential or lifestyle‑adjacent supports.

  • Hardship protections for low‑income and vulnerable participants.

Cost Impact

  • Reduces pressure on the federal budget.

  • Creates a fairer distribution of cost responsibility.

  • Preserves full support for those who cannot contribute.

 

3. Provider Pricing Reform & Market Efficiency

Why it matters

Service inflation, inconsistent pricing, and provider overcharging are major cost drivers.

Efficiency Measures

  • Review and recalibration of price caps to reflect real market conditions.

  • Differentiated pricing for specialist vs. non‑specialist services.

  • Outcome‑based funding to reward efficiency and quality, not volume.

Cost Impact

  • Reduces inflated margins and unnecessary intermediaries.

  • Encourages innovation and competition.

  • Improves value for every dollar spent.

 

4. Administrative Streamlining & Digital Modernisation

Why it matters

A significant portion of NDIS funding is absorbed by administration, planning, and compliance processes.

Efficiency Measures

  • Digitised planning tools to reduce manual processing.

  • Simplified review cycles for stable, long‑term participants.

  • Automated fraud detection using data analytics.

Cost Impact

  • Lower administrative overheads.

  • Faster service delivery.

  • Reduced fraud, leakage, and double‑billing.

 

5. Integrated Service Delivery Across Systems

Why it matters

The NDIS often pays for supports that overlap with health, education, housing, and mental‑health systems.

Efficiency Measures

  • Shared funding models with state systems for overlapping services.

  • Clear responsibility boundaries between NDIS and mainstream services.

  • Joint service hubs to reduce duplication.

Cost Impact

  • Prevents cost‑shifting onto the NDIS.

  • Reduces duplication of assessments and services.

  • Improves participant outcomes through coordinated care.

 

6. Long‑Term Cost Modelling & Sustainability Planning

Why it matters

The NDIS requires accurate forecasting to remain viable over 10‑, 20‑, and 30‑year horizons.

Modern Cost‑Modelling Approach

  • Real‑time data analytics to track participant needs and service usage.

  • Scenario modelling to test policy changes before implementation.

  • Growth caps tied to demographic and economic indicators.

  • Annual sustainability reviews to adjust settings proactively.

Cost Impact

  • Predictable long‑term expenditure.

  • Early identification of emerging cost pressures.

  • Evidence‑based policy adjustments.

 

7. Fraud, Leakage & Compliance Strengthening

Why it matters

Fraudulent billing, over‑servicing, and unqualified providers significantly inflate costs.

Efficiency Measures

  • Mandatory provider accreditation with regular audits.

  • AI‑assisted anomaly detection to flag suspicious claims.

  • Stronger penalties for fraudulent operators.

Cost Impact

  • Protects billions in taxpayer funding.

  • Ensures money reaches genuine participants.

  • Builds public trust in the scheme.

 

Summary: A Sustainable, Fair, and Effective NDIS

Reforming the NDIS through targeted efficiency measures, modern cost‑modelling, and clearer eligibility ensures:

  • Support remains strong for those who truly need it

  • Taxpayer funds are used responsibly

  • The scheme remains viable for future generations

  • Outcomes improve through smarter, not harsher, reform

The Bottom line

How NDIS Reform Can Save Money and Protect Support

The NDIS is one of Australia’s most important support systems, but it’s growing faster than the budget can handle. If we don’t fix the waste and inefficiency now, the people who rely on the scheme most could be at risk in the future.

Our plan focuses on cutting waste—not cutting support.

Below is a clear breakdown of how smarter reforms can save billions while keeping the NDIS strong for generations to come.

 

1. Clearer Eligibility = Less Waste

Right now, the NDIS is supporting people who should be receiving help through other services like health, education, or mental‑health programs.

By tightening eligibility and making sure the NDIS is used only for permanent and significant disabilities, we can:

  • Reduce unnecessary spending

  • Make sure funding goes to those who truly need it

Estimated savings: $2–4 billion per year once fully implemented.

 

2. Fair Contributions for Higher‑Income Households

The NDIS is currently paid for almost entirely by taxpayers, even when some participants have the financial capacity to contribute.

A fair means‑testing system would:

  • Ask higher‑income households to contribute a small amount

  • Protect low‑income and vulnerable Australians

  • Keep essential supports fully funded

Estimated savings: $1.5–2.5 billion per year.

 

3. Fixing Overcharging and Inflated Provider Prices

Many providers charge more simply because the NDIS is paying. Some services cost far more under the NDIS than they do outside it.

By resetting price caps and cracking down on inflated fees, we can:

  • Stop overcharging

  • Encourage competition

  • Deliver better value for every dollar spent

Estimated savings: $3–5 billion per year.

 

4. Cutting Red Tape and Modernising the System

A lot of NDIS money is lost in paperwork, administration, and outdated processes.

By modernising the system with digital tools and simpler planning, we can:

  • Reduce admin costs

  • Speed up approvals

  • Make the scheme easier for participants

Estimated savings: $0.8–1.5 billion per year.

 

5. Stopping Fraud and Rorts

Fraud, over‑servicing, and unqualified providers cost taxpayers billions.

Stronger auditing, better data tracking, and tougher penalties will:

  • Stop dodgy operators

  • Protect participants

  • Keep money where it belongs

Estimated savings: $1.5–3 billion per year.

 

Total Savings: Up to $9–15 Billion Per Year

When all reforms work together, the NDIS becomes:

  • More sustainable

  • More efficient

  • More focused on people who genuinely need support

Over four years, this could save $15–20 billion compared with the current system—without taking essential support away from anyone with a real disability.

Over ten years, the savings could reach $50–70 billion, helping secure the future of the entire scheme.

 

The Bottom Line

These reforms protect the NDIS by making it fairer, stronger, and financially sustainable. They target waste—not people. They protect support—not cut it. And they ensure the NDIS will still be there for every Australian who truly needs it, now and in the future.