Could these actions secure the scheme for the future? Or might they create new barriers for the very people the NDIS was designed to empower?
The government is expected to announce further changes to the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) this week, focused on containing the rising number of participants and the growth in costs, and cracking down on fraudulent activities. The Coalition has also signalled some suggested focus areas for reform, centred on three pillars: a real-time payment system that can verify claims before funds are released a stronger registration system with greater requirements for providers who deliver more risky types of care a commitment to slashing “red tape”. These measures could help restore fiscal discipline and public confidence in the scheme.
But they mustn’t create new barriers for the very people the NDIS was designed to empower. The NDIS can be life-changing The NDIS was conceived to support the social and economic participation of people with disability, and their rights under international treaties. Its world-leading design puts the person with disability at the centre and builds supports and funding around them.
In the ten years since its full roll out, the NDIS has funded people to move out of residential aged care and into their own homes, supported others to transition from school to paid work, and allowed participants to choose what supports they actually need. But such major reforms are rarely simple – which both Labor and Coalition governments have realised in their time presiding over the scheme. While the Coalition has long been critical of the rising costs of the NDIS, it has offered few policy alternatives until now.
Let’s consider what each of its three proposals could look like in practice. The case for real-time payment verification The most tech-heavy of the Coalition’s proposals is a real-time payment system designed to verify claims before funds are released. The logic is sound.
For years the NDIS has operated on a “pay now, check later” model, opening the door to poor quality services and fraud. Validating services at the point of transaction would help the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) prevent “ghosting” of invoices. This is where participants are charged for services they never receive, or payments are made to participants who don’t exist.
There is much to learn from a health system that uses a single Medicare card, enabling payments at the point of service. Such approaches respond to calls for greater NDIS payment transparency and simplicity. However, for a real-time system to work, it must be as seamless and as secure as a credit card transaction – not a new bureaucratic hurdle.
Tighten registration – but don’t pit safety against choice The Coalition’s second pillar is a “step-up” provider registration system, which would be achieved through a tiered, risk-based model. Some changes to registration are already planned through the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, the independent regulator of NDIS providers. This includes new, mandatory registration starting in mid-2026 for providers of specific types of NDIS support, including Supported Independent Living (SIL) providers.
Currently, the NDIS market is split between registered providers, who are subject to heavy auditing, and unregistered providers, who are not required to undergo auditing but can only be used by self- or plan-managed participants. The latest NDIS quarterly reporting data lists 276,581 active providers delivering NDIS supports in 2025 alone. Monitoring the quality and safety of that number is challenging, and even more so if they’re not visible through some form of registration.
But forcing every provider into a one-size-fits-all registration box could limit access and choice within a provider market. For this reason, there have been calls to retain unregistered providers. Read more: Unregistered NDIS providers are in the firing line – but lots of participants have good reasons for using them The Coalition’s proposed tiered model seeks a middle ground between blanket mandatory registration, and a graded approach.
This aligns with recommendations of a previous NDIS registration taskforce. The government’s recent legislative changes to strengthen the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission’s ability to stop fraudulent activity in the scheme are also positive. These approaches, when combined, could lead to greater oversight and quality of the NDIS provider market.
Cut red tape – but try to avoid this backfiring In recent years, the NDIS has become an administrative nightmare for both NDIS participants and providers. The Coalition’s most ambitious goal is the promise to tackle “red tape”. But it hasn’t said exactly how it would do this.
A simple way to cut bureaucracy is to avoid repeated assessments when nothing has changed for the person with disability. An NDIS plan of longer duration (for example, three to five years) would save the costs involved in unnecessary reassessments, reducing the demand on participants and families. The paradox of the Coalition’s plan is that