Therefore, we recommend you check this blog frequently for any future updates. Last Updated on 1/6/2026.
The NDIS reform is no longer a future concept—it is actively reshaping how providers operate across Australia in 2026.
For NDIS providers, the focus is no longer just on understanding the reforms. The priority now is implementation, compliance readiness, and operational alignment.
These changes are driving a more regulated, structured, and evidence-based environment, where providers must demonstrate not only service delivery, but clear justification, documentation, and accountability.
For Supported Independent Living (SIL) providers and NDIS digital platform providers, this is now a time-critical issue. From 1 July 2026, mandatory registration requirements apply to these higher-risk service models, with new SIL-specific Practice Standards commencing on that date as well.
The Australian Government has already commenced legislative changes to the NDIS Act. Several changes took effect from 3 October 2024, while other reforms will be introduced progressively as new rules, systems, and transition arrangements are developed.
Here is the journey so far, and what is still ahead.
Providers must ensure all services:
Risk: Claims outside the scope may be rejected or investigated.
NDIS plans now include structured funding periods (commonly quarterly). This means:
Operational impact: Cash flow, rostering, and service scheduling must be tightly managed.
The claims framework is now more defined and enforceable. Providers must ensure:
Audit reality: If it’s not documented, it didn’t happen.
The reform direction is more targeted and risk-based. Mandatory registration is initially being expanded to higher-risk service models, including Supported Independent Living (SIL) and NDIS digital platform providers. Support Coordination remains a reform priority, but mandatory registration has been paused while the regulatory model is considered.
This will be based on:
High-priority groups include:
From 1 July 2026, providers delivering SIL must be registered to do so. A new registration group has been created specifically for SIL: 0138 – Assistance with Supported Independent Living.
Existing registered providers delivering SIL under registration group 0115 are expected to have registration group 0138 added through a registration variation process. Providers that do not wish to deliver SIL should use the Commission process to notify that they do not wish to be registered for SIL.
Unregistered providers already delivering SIL must apply for registration by 1 October 2026 to continue delivering SIL during the transition. Providers that start delivering SIL after the commencement of the new requirements must be registered before delivering SIL.
Providing SIL without registration is a serious compliance risk and may expose the provider to enforcement action and penalties.
A key documentation issue is that registration group 0115 should no longer be treated as a simple substitute for SIL. Providers and consultants must describe the actual service model being delivered.
The provider’s documentation should clearly identify whether the provider delivers SIL, STA, MTA, ILO, or other in-home supports, because not all 0115-type supports automatically become SIL.
| Support/abbreviation | Meaning | Likely treatment under the reform |
|---|---|---|
| SIL (Support Independent Living) | A package of home and living supports for people with higher support needs, where the provider manages and delivers supports for a participant who needs support all or most of the day. | 0138 – Assistance with Supported Independent Living |
|
STA (Short-Term Accommodation and Assistance) |
Temporary accommodation and related support provided for a short period, usually to give the participant a change of environment, provide short-term support away from their usual home, or support respite-style arrangements. | Generally remains under 0115 / not automatically SIL. |
| MTA (Medium-Term Accommodation) | Temporary transitional accommodation provided for a limited period while a participant is waiting for a more permanent housing or support arrangement to become available. | Generally remains under 0115 / not automatically SIL. |
| ILO (Individualised Living Options) | a flexible home and living support arrangement designed around how and where a participant wants to live, focusing on planning, setting up and maintaining a personalised living arrangement rather than providing a standard shared-living support package. | Generally remains under 0115 / not automatically SIL. |
| Other In-home Supports | Supports that do not meet the SIL definition, such as a few hours of support per day or week, or participant-directed/self-managed worker arrangements. | Not 0138 unless the SIL definition is met; may remain under 0115 or other applicable support categories depending on the service model. |
From 1 July 2026, registered SIL providers need to comply with the new SIL Practice Standards. These are expected to operate as a supplementary module alongside the NDIS Practice Standards Core Module.
The new SIL Practice Standards focus on the quality and safety of support delivered in a person’s home, including participant voice, rights, freedoms, choice and control, supported decision-making, dignity of risk and frontline worker practice.
Providers should be prepared to demonstrate compliance at their next mid-term audit or registration renewal audit after 1 July 2026.
From 2026 onwards, providers should expect stronger evidence expectations across planning, claiming and service delivery. Providers should avoid relying on broad descriptions of support and should maintain clear records that demonstrate assessed need, participant goals, service delivery, risks, consent, participant choice and outcomes.
What this means for providers:
The environment in 2026 can be summarised in one sentence:
NDIS is moving from a trust-based model to an evidence-based system.
Providers must now demonstrate:
Providers are currently exposed if they have:
These gaps are now being scrutinised more closely under the strengthened enforcement framework introduced through the 2026 NDIS reform, significantly increasing the consequences of non-compliance
Review your current systems against:
Ensure:
For SIL and NDIS digital platform providers, registration is no longer a general future possibility — it is now a defined reform pathway with specific transition requirements. Providers should review their current service model, confirm whether the new requirements apply, and prepare documentation early so that registration, variation, audit, and participant transition obligations can be managed without unnecessary pressure.
Providers should:
Move away from fragmented systems and adopt:
At ISO Consulting Services, we work with NDIS providers across Australia to:
Our ISO+™ platform provides:
Learn more at https://www.isoconsultingservices.com.au/isoplus-compliance-software/.
Reform is not finished. The Government has confirmed that further legislation, regulatory changes, and system redesigns are underway. Providers who build flexible, evidence-based compliance systems now will be best positioned to adapt to future changes without significant disruption.
A third tranche of legislation — the National Disability Insurance Scheme Amendment (Securing the NDIS for Future Generations) Bill — is expected to be introduced following the 2026–27 Federal Budget. This Bill is anticipated to focus on the long-term sustainability of the Scheme, building on the Independent Review and Royal Commission outcomes, with potential changes to eligibility frameworks, funding models, and system governance.
The Government is progressing a Foundational Supports Strategy, introducing a new tier of community-based supports for individuals who do not meet NDIS access requirements but still require assistance. This initiative is intended to reduce pressure on the Scheme by redirecting lower-intensity supports to mainstream and community services. Providers operating across disability and community sectors should monitor this closely.
The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission is reviewing the NDIS Practice Standards. This work may affect all registered providers, particularly in governance, risk management, participant rights, safeguarding and service delivery.
In parallel, dedicated SIL Practice Standards are being introduced for SIL providers from 1 July 2026. SIL providers should prepare now by updating documentation, training workers, strengthening participant-facing records, and mapping evidence against the new SIL requirements.
A redesign of early intervention pathways for children is currently underway. This work is expected to reshape how early supports are accessed and delivered, with implications for providers operating in early childhood and allied health services. Further guidance is expected as the framework is developed.
Mandatory registration for Support Coordination providers has been placed on hold as of 2026 while the Government considers the most appropriate regulatory model. However, Support Coordination remains a priority area for reform, with ongoing focus on conflict of interest, service quality, and accountability. Providers should expect future changes and prepare accordingly.
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