Skip to content
Disability, Medical Health Aged Care

Proposed NDIS travel allowance cuts, a blow to rural providers and people with a disability

National Rural Health Alliance 2 mins read

The proposed changes to travel allowances for allied health providers under the NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits 2025–26 raise serious concerns for rural, regional and remote communities, severely impacting the delivery of essential support services.

Under the proposed changes, providers will face limits on the travel they can claim when supporting participants in harder-to-reach areas. This poses a major threat to clinicians working in rural Australia assisting people with disability, where long-distance travel is a necessity, not a choice.

“These changes effectively discriminate against people based on their location of work or home, or mobility challenges,” said National Rural Health Alliance (NRHA) Chief Executive Susi Tegen.

“Clinicians will have no choice but to reduce or cease services to rural areas due to the financial disincentives created by these new pricing arrangements. Rural, regional and remote communities are already facing persistent healthcare access challenges, where service access is well and truly below the urban average, especially in MMM 3-7 regions or towns, which have between 100 to 50,000 people.”  

The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) had only begun to make a difference by supporting more equitable access to allied health and disability services in rural areas. The proposed cuts risk undoing that progress.

“We were just beginning to see a positive momentum. Rather than building on the progress, these changes could reverse it. The government’s good work in extending care and equity could be severely undermined,” Ms Tegen said.

Smaller providers, many of them locally owned businesses employing local staff, will be the hardest hit. Small and medium enterprises play a vital role in maintaining the health and economic wellbeing of rural towns. Faced with tighter margins, many may be forced to close or scale back. This would result in no service or make way for larger, city-based providers who operate at scale but with less local connection or understanding of local context. It will be a revolving door of people who fly/drive-in-fly/drive out with little continuity of care.

“This is not just a health issue. It’s a social and economic one too,” said Ms Tegen. “Removing or reducing viable services from rural towns has ripple effects far beyond healthcare, affecting employment, community resilience, and quality of life.”

The NRHA urges the government to reconsider these proposed changes and to consult with rural providers, consumers, and communities to ensure equitable access to disability support, regardless of postcode.


About us:

The National Rural Health Alliance (the Alliance) comprises 54 national organisations committed to improving the health and wellbeing of the over 7 million people in rural and remote Australia. Our diverse membership includes representation from health professional organisations, health service providers, health educators, the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health sector and students.


Contact details:

 

Susi Tegen, Chief Executive, National Rural Health Alliance, [email protected] 0429 100 464

Kathya de Silva, Media and Communications Officer, National Rural Health Alliance, [email protected] 0470 487 608

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/12/2025
  • 10:11
Cosette Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Termination of Proposed Acquisition of Mayne Pharma

BRIDGEWATER, N.J.–BUSINESS WIRE– Cosette Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Cosette), a U.S.-based, fully integrated pharmaceutical company, confirms that on 9 December 2025 it served a notice on…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/12/2025
  • 08:55
Royal Australian College of GPs

Universal Health Coverage Day: RACGP calls out need for better funding for chronic conditions and preventive care

Specialist GPs have marked International Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Day by joining the World Health Organization in highlighting the devastating impact of health costs. The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has stressed that a public health system which forces patients with complex or chronic conditions to pay out of pocket for longer consultations can’t claim to offer universal coverage, and urged governments to protect patients from financial hardship. “Health is a human right,” RACGP President Dr Michael Wright said. “Australia recognises the right of everyone to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and our governments are…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Women
  • 12/12/2025
  • 01:00
Breast Cancer Trials

Simple blood tests could help tailor treatment for aggressive breast cancer

Key Facts: Blood tests detecting circulating tumour DNA could help guide treatment for triple negative breast cancer patients Absence of tumour DNA in blood…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.