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5 Things You Didn’t Know About the NDIS

5 Things You Didn’t Know About the NDIS
5 Things You Didn’t Know About the NDIS

Written by: Rona Castañeda

Clinically reviewed by: Qualified members of the Therapy Near Me clinical team

Last updated: 06/11/2026

This clinical information has been written by Rona Castañeda to support accuracy, clarity, and alignment with contemporary psychological practice. Content is reviewed in accordance with our Editorial Policy and is intended as general information only. It does not replace individual assessment, diagnosis, or treatment.


1. Psychosocial Supports Extend Beyond Funding

While the NDIS is primarily known for funding services, it also provides linkage to mainstream and community supports—including public mental health networks—even if you’re not eligible for full NDIS plans (NDIS, 2023) (). This integration ensures access to psychosocial supports that encourage social inclusion and life participation.


2. Half of Participants See a Psychologist

Approximately 25% of NDIS participants access psychological services, and more broadly, over half the scheme’s participants engage with a psychologist at some point—highlighting how essential mental health support is under the NDIS (APS/NDIS Guide, 2024)  . This emphasizes the scheme’s role in psychological treatment and functional recovery.


3. Autism Is the Most Common Primary Disability

Around 30% of NDIS participants list autism as their main disability—the largest category in the scheme. More than half of all participants are under 25, meaning the NDIS plays a crucial part in early intervention and youth development (Home Care Experts, 2025)  .


4. Prisoners Face Almost No Access to NDIS

NDIS legislation is restrictive for incarcerated individuals. Only transition-to-community supports are funded, and applying while in prison is “exceedingly difficult”—a situation linked to poorer outcomes and increased recidivism (Wikipedia – Prison Healthcare)  . This gap raises equity and rehabilitation concerns.


5. Major Reforms Rolling Out in 2025

A new legislative package passed in 2024 aims to improve cost transparency, eligibility clarity, and evidence-based funding mechanisms  . Simultaneously, the Grattan Institute’s June 2025 report calls for additional “foundational” supports outside the scheme to help those who fall through NDIS gaps—especially children in early intervention and individuals with psychosocial disabilities  .


Why These Insights Matter for Mental Health

  • Holistic Mental Health: Linkage to psychosocial services indicates the NDIS isn’t just for physical disabilities—it plays a broader role in mental health recovery.
  • Adolescent Support: With youth and autism cases prevalent, early therapeutic interventions have long-term impacts.
  • Justice System Inequity: Prisoners’ limited access highlights a policy blind spot affecting vulnerable individuals.
  • Sustainable Reform: Recent changes reflect a necessary evolution toward clearer, evidence-based practices and community safety nets.

References

  • NDIS (2023). Accessing mental health supports. Available at NDIS website.
  • NDIS (2023). Psychosocial disability access factsheet. NDIS Media.
  • Australian Psychological Society & NDIS (2024). APS–NDIS Community Resource.
  • Home Care Experts (2025). Interesting facts about the NDIS.
  • Wikipedia contributors (2025). Prison healthcare in Australia.
  • Wikipedia contributors (5 days ago). National Disability Insurance Scheme.
  • The Guardian (2025). Four key changes could save the NDIS….
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