NDIS Overhaul Aims to Cut Costs, Tighten Eligibility Amid Rorts Concerns

April 22, 2026
NDIS Overhaul Aims to Cut Costs, Tighten Eligibility Amid Rorts Concerns
  • The overhaul will reassess current participants against new eligibility criteria and remove those not originally intended for the scheme to protect funding and sustainability.

  • Opposition voices, including a senior Nationals figure, criticize the current design and back reform, citing earlier warnings about rising costs.

  • Legislation aims to reduce eligibility and overall size, cutting participants from about 760,000 to roughly 600,000, with costs expected to fall from about $70 billion to $50 billion per year by 2030.

  • The minister argues the NDIS’s future hinges on cost control, framing reform as essential to preserve the scheme for people with disability in the years ahead.

  • The interview outlines long-standing concerns about rorts and organized crime, detailing steps like tougher checks, a digital payments system, and stronger oversight to ensure funds reach legitimate recipients.

  • Both sides acknowledge reform will require collaboration with states and ongoing political negotiation, with a focus on delivering practical improvements rather than avoiding change.

  • As part of the changes, independent living providers must register by July 1 and adopt a digital payments system to curb rorts and improve funding transparency, with claims evidence a concern.

  • The minister insists the overhaul is necessary to secure the NDIS’s future and should be implemented in partnership with states, territories, and the disability community, not dumped on governments.

  • The health minister contends the NDIS drifted from its original intent and must be reined in to curb inflation and rorting.

  • The exact number of people affected by eligibility changes remains fluid as tools are designed, but the aim is to align the scheme with its original purpose.

  • The overhaul seeks to save about $35 billion by 2030 and cap annual cost growth at two percent while limiting participants to around 600,000.

  • A dedicated digital payment system will provide a clear line of sight to every dollar, addressing concerns about waste and misuse.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

Reason for giving 160k Aussies the boot

news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site for latest headlines • Apr 22, 2026

Reason for giving 160k Aussies the boot

TV interview with Minister Butler, Sunrise - 23 April 2026

Australian Government Department of Health, Disability and Ageing • Apr 22, 2026

TV interview with Minister Butler, Sunrise - 23 April 2026

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