Your NDIS plan can feel overwhelming at first. Here's how to read it, what each budget means, and how to make sure your funding works as hard as possible for you.
When your NDIS plan arrives, it can feel like a lot to take in. There are budgets, support categories, registered and unregistered providers — and it's not always obvious what you can and can't spend your funding on. This guide breaks it down in plain English.
Every NDIS plan has up to three types of funding: Core Supports, Capacity Building, and Capital Supports. Core Supports is the most flexible — it covers day-to-day assistance, community participation and consumables. Capacity Building is for building your skills and independence over time, including Support Coordination and therapies. Capital Supports is for big-ticket items like assistive technology and home modifications.
How your plan is managed affects who you can use as a provider. NDIA-managed means you can only use registered providers. Self-managed gives you the most flexibility — you can use any provider, registered or not, and pay invoices yourself. Plan-managed sits in between: a plan manager handles the payments, and you can use both registered and unregistered providers.
First, make sure you understand your goals — they drive everything in your plan. Second, don't let funding sit unspent; the NDIA looks at utilisation when reviewing your plan. Third, if something isn't working, talk to your Support Coordinator early — there are often ways to flex your funding within the rules. And finally, start preparing for your plan review at least three months out.
If you'd like help understanding your specific plan, our Support Coordinators are happy to sit down with you and walk through it. Just give us a call.
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