Reading time: 10 minutes | Updated: April 2026 | Written by: TEAH Allied Health Team
If you have noticed that finding an NDIS occupational therapist is harder than it used to be, that wait times are longer, that some providers have stopped taking new clients, that your previous OT has left the sector, or that a provider you relied on has closed, you are not imagining it. Something structural has changed, and it has a clear cause.
The NDIS price freeze. Seven years without an increase to the hourly rate that occupational therapists can charge NDIS participants. Seven years in which the cost of running an OT practice has risen by more than 25%. Seven years of the most significant social insurance scheme in Australian history underpricing the allied health profession that is central to its clinical credibility.
This article explains what the price freeze is, how it works, why it is causing an OT shortage that affects your access to care, and what you can do practically to protect your access to the OT services your plan is meant to fund.
In this article
- What is the NDIS price freeze?
- The numbers — what has actually happened to OT rates
- Why providers are leaving — the business case explained
- What you see as a participant — longer waits, fewer choices
- Who is being hit hardest
- What the sector is doing — OTA’s campaign
- What you can do as a participant or support coordinator
- The plan management advantage — accessing the unregistered market
- Frequently asked questions
What Is the NDIS Price Freeze?
Every year, the NDIA publishes the Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits (PAPL) the document that sets the maximum hourly rates that NDIS-registered providers can charge for each support category. For occupational therapy, the PAPL rate determines what any registered OT can bill an agency-managed participant: they cannot charge more, and they cannot negotiate a premium regardless of their qualifications, experience, or the complexity of the work.
For 2025–26, that rate is $193.99 per hour on weekdays. That is exactly the same figure it was in 2019 – 20. In six consecutive annual pricing decisions through a period that included two significant inflation spikes, a global pandemic, rising wages, escalating rent, and compounding operational costs the NDIA did not raise the OT therapy supports rate by a single cent.
Occupational Therapy Australia’s peak body describes this as a seven-year effective price reduction, because every year of flat rates against rising costs is a year in which the real value of each OT hour billed declines. By 2026, with cumulative CPI growth exceeding 25% since 2019, an OT billing $193.99 per hour is recovering roughly what $154 would have bought them in 2019.
The Numbers – What Has Actually Happened to OT Rates
To understand why the price freeze is producing an access crisis, you need to understand what a flat rate means in the context of real-world practice costs.
The real economics of an OT practice in 2025–26
Revenue per billable hour
$193.99
$193.99
~$154
What costs have done since 2019
+18–22%
+25–35%
+20–30%
The consequence is straightforward arithmetic: an OT practice billing exclusively at NDIS rates in 2025 – 26 is recovering significantly less per clinical hour in real terms than the same practice was in 2019. Every year the rate stays flat and costs rise, the margin between revenue and operating expense narrows. When that margin disappears, the business is no longer viable. And when the business is no longer viable, the OT leaves the NDIS market.
This is not speculation. OTA’s 2025 provider survey of more than 600 NDIS OT businesses found:
- 55% failed to make a profit in the 2024–25 financial year
- 14% were already planning to close
- 50% were actively considering exiting the NDIS within three years
- 92% had already cut back on travel and outreach to regional and remote participants
This is not a hypothetical future risk – it is happening now. OTA estimates that if pricing is not addressed, Australia could face a deficit of 12,000 occupational therapists against projected demand by 2030. Fourteen per cent of NDIS OT businesses were already planning to close when surveyed in 2025. If you have been told by a provider that they are no longer taking new NDIS clients, this is why.
Why Providers Are Leaving – The Business Case Explained
To understand why the price freeze produces provider exits rather than just squeezed margins, it helps to understand how OT practice economics actually work.
Not all hours are billable
An OT working a 38-hour week does not bill 38 hours to NDIS clients. Typically, a highly efficient OT can bill 25–28 hours per week — the rest is taken up by non-billable administration (NDIS paperwork, AHPRA compliance, NDIS registration audits, email, scheduling), travel time between clients (now compensated at only 50% of the hourly rate), report writing beyond what the PAPL non-face-to-face billing allows, and continuing professional development.
At $193.99 per hour for 26 billable hours per week, an OT generates approximately $260,800 per year in gross revenue. Against this, a practice must fund the OT’s salary (typically $80,000–$110,000 for an experienced NDIS OT), payroll tax, superannuation, leave entitlements, professional insurance, NDIS registration audit costs, administrative support, software, clinical supplies, and commercial rent or vehicle costs.
The margins were workable in 2019. By 2026, after 25%+ cost inflation against a flat revenue line, many practices are breaking even at best and losing money at worst.
Specialist and mobile work is hardest hit
Not all OT work is equally affected. Clinic-based work – where the OT sees multiple clients in a fixed location and travel costs are minimal – is more sustainable at the frozen rate than mobile work. An OT who drives to five different homes across a metropolitan area in a single day, or who flies to a remote community for assessment visits, has far more non-billable overhead per clinical hour than one who sees clients at a fixed clinic.
The result: the work that is most valuable for NDIS participants – in-home assessment, community-based therapy, remote outreach – is the work that is financially least sustainable for providers. This is precisely backwards from what the NDIS is trying to achieve.
What You See as a Participant – Longer Waits, Fewer Choices
The economics described above produce observable consequences for participants that most families experience without knowing the cause:
Wait times have grown significantly
Where FCA wait times in metropolitan areas were typically 6 – 10 weeks two years ago, many providers are now running at 12 – 20 weeks for new referrals. In outer suburbs and regional areas, waits of 4 – 6 months are increasingly common. For participants approaching a plan review with an FCA deadline, this is not an inconvenience it is a plan funding risk.
Fewer providers are taking new NDIS clients
Some practices that previously operated as primarily NDIS providers are now accepting only a limited number of NDIS clients alongside private-pay or other insurance-funded work where rates are not capped by a government pricing schedule. The NDIS clients remaining on their books are retained; new NDIS referrals may be declined or waitlisted indefinitely.
Experienced OTs are moving to private-pay work
Senior OTs with deep NDIS expertise the practitioners most capable of producing the complex FCAs, SIL assessments, and AT prescriptions that drive the best plan outcomes are disproportionately exiting the registered NDIS market. The PAPL cap makes it impossible to charge a premium for specialist expertise, so experienced practitioners who can command higher rates in the private market or with non-NDIS insurance schemes are exercising that option.
Home visiting is being quietly discontinued
Perhaps the most clinically significant consequence: providers are withdrawing from in-home assessment and shifting clients to clinic-based appointments that are more efficient for the practice. Many families are not told why they are simply offered a different appointment format. As covered in our detailed article on in-home vs clinic OT, this shift has direct consequences for the quality of assessments particularly FCAs, home modification assessments, and SIL reports.
You have the right to choose a provider who still does home visits. If your current OT provider has moved to clinic-only delivery and you need an in-home assessment for an FCA, home modification assessment, or SIL assessment you are not obliged to accept a clinic-based alternative. You can change providers. The provider’s business decision to stop home visiting does not override your entitlement to the type of assessment that produces clinically valid NDIS evidence.
Who Is Being Hit Hardest
The OT access reduction from the price freeze is not evenly distributed. Three participant groups are bearing disproportionate impact:
Regional and remote participants
The combination of the price freeze and the 2025 travel reimbursement cut (reducing travel time billing to 50% of the hourly rate) has made regional and remote outreach particularly unviable. OT businesses that were previously willing to absorb the travel overhead as a cost of service delivery can no longer do so profitably. OTA’s 2025 survey found 92% of providers had cut back on travel and outreach. In remote communities particularly across the Top End, the Kimberley, and remote Queensland some communities that had intermittent OT access now have none.
Participants needing complex assessments
SIL assessments, complex AT prescriptions for powered mobility or AAC, and comprehensive FCAs for participants with multiple co-occurring conditions are time-intensive work that requires experienced clinicians. These are the assessments where the PAPL cap is most biting because the time required to do them well exceeds what can be efficiently recovered at $193.99/hr against current business costs. Senior OTs who previously specialised in this work are moving to less constrained markets.
Participants with agency-managed plans
Agency-managed participants are most exposed to the price freeze effects because their plans restrict them to registered providers — precisely the cohort most affected by the freeze, and most likely to exit. Plan-managed participants have access to the broader (registered and unregistered) OT market, which includes practitioners who have chosen not to pursue NDIS registration and are therefore not bound by PAPL rates. See the next section for more on this.
What the Sector Is Doing – OTA’s Campaign
Occupational Therapy Australia has been publicly and consistently campaigning for pricing reform since 2022. In 2025, following the NDIA’s decision to once again freeze rates, OTA launched a national campaign including:
- A petition calling on the Federal Government to immediately increase OT pricing by at least 7%
- An email-your-MP tool directing OTA members and NDIS participants to contact their federal representatives
- Formal submissions to the NDIA pricing review, the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA), and the Senate Committee on NDIS sustainability
- Public statements from OTA’s Chief Occupational Therapist describing the situation as “market failure” and calling on the NDIA to act before provider exits become irreversible
Deloitte’s economic modelling, commissioned by the Ability Roundtable and provided to the NDIA — found that real provider costs significantly exceeded the current PAPL maximum for the past three consecutive review cycles. This evidence was acknowledged but not acted on in the 2025–26 pricing decision.
As of April 2026, no rate increase has been implemented. The campaign continues. Participants and families who want to add their voice can do so through OTA’s advocacy resources at otaus.com.au.
NDIS Registered — WA · NT · QLD · VIC
TEAH remains open for NDIS OT referrals
Despite the market pressures, TEAH maintains in-home delivery, below-average wait times, and NDIA-quality reports across Darwin (NT), Perth (WA), Brisbane (QLD), and Victoria. Refer now — don’t leave it until your plan review deadline is imminent.
What You Can Do as a Participant or Support Coordinator
The price freeze is a systemic policy problem not something individual participants can fix. But there are practical steps you can take right now to protect your access to OT in a market that is getting harder to navigate.
1. Refer earlier than ever
The single most effective action is simply acting sooner. Refer for your OT assessment at least 4–5 months before your plan review date — not 8 weeks. In the current market, 8 weeks will frequently not be enough time to secure an appointment, complete the assessment, and have the report in hand for your planning meeting.
2. Do not wait for your plan review to be imminent
If you know your plan review is in the second half of 2026, refer in the first quarter of 2026. If you already have an NDIS plan and Capacity Building — Improved Daily Living funding, you do not need to wait for a plan review trigger to commission an OT assessment. An FCA can be commissioned at any time within a plan year — its findings can be held in readiness for when the review is scheduled.
3. Consider requesting plan management
Agency-managed participants are most constrained by the price freeze — because they can only access NDIS-registered providers, who are exactly the cohort most affected by the freeze. Moving to plan management opens access to unregistered OT providers who are not bound by PAPL rates and who may have more availability. Plan management is funded separately by the NDIA and does not reduce your support budget. See the next section for more detail.
4. Ask directly about availability before committing
Before committing to an OT provider, ask directly: “What is your current wait time for a new FCA? Can you confirm that the report will be ready by [specific date]?” A provider who cannot confirm their capacity to meet your timeline before you sign a service agreement is a provider you may want to reconsider in favour of one who can give you a clear commitment.
5. Build the OT relationship before you urgently need it
Participants who have an ongoing OT relationship — even a light-touch one involving occasional therapy sessions or check-ins — are better positioned when a plan review or SIL assessment becomes urgent. A provider who already knows your participant’s situation can move to assessment mode more quickly than one starting from scratch with a new client. If your participant is currently between assessments, consider maintaining a light OT engagement so you are not starting cold when the next review approaches.
The Plan Management Advantage – Accessing the Unregistered Market
One of the most practical and underutilised responses to the OT access squeeze is plan management. Here is why it matters specifically in the context of the price freeze.
NDIS-registered OT providers are bound by the PAPL rate ceiling. As that ceiling has failed to keep pace with costs, many excellent OTs have made the deliberate decision not to pursue or renew NDIS registration — allowing them to charge above-PAPL rates and therefore to maintain sustainable practices. These OTs are effectively invisible to agency-managed participants, who cannot use unregistered providers regardless of quality.
Plan-managed and self-managed participants can access both registered and unregistered OT providers. This means they have access to a substantially larger pool of available OTs — including experienced specialist practitioners who have exited the registered market but are still practising in the NDIS context for plan-managed clients.
Plan management is funded by the NDIA as a separate budget line — it does not reduce your Capacity Building or Core Supports allocation. For agency-managed participants who are struggling to find available registered OTs, requesting a move to plan management is a fast, free way to significantly expand your provider options.
To change from agency management to plan management mid-plan, contact the NDIA directly (1800 800 110) or raise it with your support coordinator. You do not need to wait for your plan review — this change can be made at any time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why has the NDIA not increased OT rates despite OTA’s advocacy?
The NDIA has framed the price freeze as a cost-control measure — arguing that the scheme must remain financially sustainable and that price increases would increase scheme costs. OTA and disability sector advocates argue that the sustainability risk runs in the other direction: if providers exit the market, participants cannot access supports their plan funds, and plan utilisation falls — which paradoxically reduces scheme outcomes without reducing costs. As of April 2026, the political and policy debate continues without resolution.
Can I complain to the NDIA about not being able to find an OT?
Yes — and you should. Contact the NDIA on 1800 800 110 to report that you are having difficulty accessing OT services. Separately, contact your federal MP’s office to raise the access issue as a constituent concern — the OTA campaign has specifically called on participants and families to do this. The more documented evidence the NDIA and the Government receive of real-world access failures, the stronger the case for pricing reform. Your personal account is a data point in a systemic problem.
My OT told me they are leaving the NDIS. What do I do?
Ask your OT for a referral summary and progress notes before they leave — this documentation provides the starting point for your next provider. If you have a plan review approaching, act immediately rather than waiting for the new provider to be settled. Contact TEAH to discuss availability in your area, and if you are agency-managed and finding it hard to find another registered OT, consider requesting plan management to access the wider provider market.
Does the price freeze affect plan-managed participants differently from agency-managed ones?
Yes. Agency-managed participants can only use NDIS-registered OTs — the cohort most severely affected by the price freeze, where provider exits are most concentrated. Plan-managed participants can use both registered and unregistered OTs, giving them access to practitioners who have left the registered market but continue practising at market rates. Plan-managed participants have materially more OT provider options in the current environment.
Will the NDIS price freeze affect the quality of my OT reports?
Potentially, indirectly. Some providers are responding to margin pressure by increasing throughput — seeing more clients more quickly, producing more standardised (templated) reports, and reducing the time invested in each case. Participants should look for providers who offer draft report review, use named standardised assessment tools, and produce individualised rather than templated documentation. These are the markers of quality that a price-pressured market is most likely to erode first.
How do I find out if TEAH has availability in my area?
Contact TEAH’s intake team directly — by phone on 0484 705 911, by email at referrals@topendalliedhealth.com.au, or via our online referral form at topendalliedhealth.com.au/referral. We will confirm current availability in your location, provide an indicative wait time, and check your NDIS funding before confirming any commitment. We operate across Darwin (NT), Perth (WA), Brisbane (QLD), and Victoria.
Summary
The difficulty many NDIS participants and families are experiencing in finding occupational therapy is not random or temporary — it is the predictable, documented consequence of seven years of frozen pricing against rising costs. The NDIS price freeze has reduced the financial viability of OT practice, driven provider exits, lengthened wait times, withdrawn home visiting from many areas, and hit regional and remote communities hardest of all.
The systemic solution is a rate increase — which OTA is actively campaigning for and which the evidence strongly supports. The individual response in the meantime is practical: refer earlier, consider plan management to access the broader OT market, do not accept a clinic-based appointment where an in-home assessment is clinically indicated, and choose providers who have maintained quality standards under the financial pressure rather than responding by cutting corners on report quality.
TEAH continues to operate across Darwin, Perth, Brisbane, and Victoria — with in-home delivery, below-average wait times, and the clinical standards that the NDIS framework requires.
TEAH — taking new NDIS OT referrals now
Darwin (NT) · Perth (WA) · Brisbane (QLD) · Victoria
Related articles
- NDIS changes 2025–26 — what they mean for your OT funding
- In-home vs clinic-based OT — which is better for NDIS participants?
- Agency vs plan-managed vs self-managed — how it affects your OT choices
- How to choose an NDIS occupational therapist — 8 questions to ask
- Our Occupational Therapy Services — Darwin, Perth, Brisbane & Victoria
TEAH Allied Health Team
Top End Allied Health (TEAH) is an NDIS-registered allied health provider delivering occupational therapy, speech pathology, physiotherapy, and supported accommodation across WA, NT, QLD, and Victoria. Referrals: referrals@topendalliedhealth.com.au | 0484 705 911



