Once in a generation aged care reforms

ANTHONY ALBANESE MP
PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA

JIM CHALMERS MP
TREASURER

ANIKA WELLS MP
MINISTER FOR AGED CARE

 

The Albanese Government will deliver historic aged care reforms to ensure the viability and quality of aged care, and support growing numbers of older Australians choosing to retain their independence and remain in their homes as they age.
 
Around 1.4 million Australians will benefit from a new Support at Home program by 2035, helping them remain independent, in their home and their community for longer.
 
$5.6 billion will be invested in a reform package which represents the greatest improvement to aged care in 30 years, and includes these major changes: 

  • A $4.3 billion investment in Support at Home, to come into effect on 1 July 2025.
  • Essential changes to improve the funding, viability, and quality of residential aged care. 
    • A no worse off principle will provide certainty to people already in aged care and they won't make a greater contribution to their care.
    • The treatment of the family home won't change.
  • New laws to protect older Australians in aged care, with stronger powers to investigate bad behaviour and civil penalties for breaching standards

The net impact of the changes is a $930 million spend over four years and a $12.6 billion save over the next 11 years.
 
The reforms respond to the recommendations of the Aged Care Taskforce, which brought together older Australians, experts and residential aged care providers and recommended that Australians make a reasonable means tested contribution to the cost of their care.
 
The reforms have bipartisan support.
 
Better support for Australians to age at home
 
Older Australians increasingly want the freedom, support and choice to remain in the home and community they love. In the past 10 years, the number of Australians in home care has increased fourfold.
 
To cater to the changing preferences of older Australians, the Albanese Government will invest $4.3 billion in a new system of home care, called Support at Home, which will come into effect on 1 July 2025, and will help Australians remain independent, in their home and their community for longer.
 
By 2035, Support at Home will help around 1.4 million people stay in their homes as they age.
 
Support at Home will provide support for: 

  1. Clinical care (e.g. nursing care, occupational therapy)
  2. Independence (e.g. help with showering, getting dressed or taking medications)
  3. Everyday living (e.g. cleaning, gardening, shopping or meal preparation)

The Government will pay 100 per cent of clinical care services, with individual contributions going towards independence and everyday living costs.

Government contributions

How much someone contributes will be based on the Age Pension means test and highly dependent on their personal circumstances, from the level of support they are assessed to need, to their combination of income and assets.
 
Click here to see how different Australians would contribute to Support at Home.
 
A lifetime contribution cap will apply across the aged care system and means no one will contribute more than $130,000 to their non-clinical care costs – whatever their means or duration of care – with every Support at Home contribution counted towards the cap.
 
Some of the benefits of Support at Home include: 

  • Support for 300,000 more participants in the next 10 years.
  • Shorter average wait times from assessment to receive support.
  • More tailored support, with 8 ongoing classifications all the way up to around $78,000 a year.
  • Support for home modifications, with up to $15,000 to make homes safer.
  • Fast access to assistive technology, like walkers and wheelchairs, including a new equipment loan scheme.

Support at Home participants will also have expanded access to restorative support to get back on their feet after an illness or injury, through a 12 week program that works with a team of allied health and other professionals.
 
According to the Productivity Commission, up to 70 per cent of Australians would prefer to die in the comfort of their own home, but fewer than 10 per cent actually do. Support at Home participants will be eligible for up to $25,000 in additional support to spend their final 3 months at home, so they can be surrounded by loved ones in an environment they cherish, instead of rushing precious moments into hospital visiting hours.
 
Click here to learn more about Support at Home.
 
Essential changes to improve the funding, viability, and quality of residential care 
 
As the Aged Care Taskforce Report made clear, by 2050 the residential aged care sector will need $56 billion in capital funding to upgrade existing aged care rooms and build the additional rooms that growing numbers of older Australians will need.
 
In the next 40 years, the number of Australians aged over 65 is expected to more than double, with those aged over 85 to more than triple.
 
Current funding arrangements are not sufficient: in 2022-23, 46 per cent of providers made a loss from accommodation.
 
A range of reforms will help ensure residential aged care providers can attract the investment they need to keep current facilities open, improve quality, and build new facilities.
 
As recommended by the Aged Care Taskforce, these measures include: 

  • Larger means-tested contributions from new entrants.
  • A higher maximum room price that is indexed over time.
  • The retention of a small portion of refundable accommodation deposits by providers.

The treatment of the family home won't change.
 
Half of new residents will not contribute more under the new consumer contributions: 

  • All “fully supported” residents will not contribute more.
  • 7 in 10 full pensioners will not contribute more.
  • 1 in 4 part pensioners will not contribute more.

For every $1 an older Australian contributes to their residential aged care, the Government will contribute an average of $3.30.
 
Read more about how accommodation reform and resident contributions will ensure the growth and viability of residential aged care.
 
Click here to see how different Australians would contribute to their residential care.
 
No worse off principle for Australians already in aged care
 
A no worse off principle will provide certainty to people already in aged care and they won't make a greater contribution to their care. 
 
Support at Home
 
When Home Care participants transition to Support at Home, from 1 July 2025, they will maintain the same level of funding and retain any unspent funds.
 
Everyone who, as of 12 September 2024, is receiving a Home Care Package (a package), on the National Priority System, or assessed as eligible for a package, will make the same contributions, or lower, as they would have under Home Care arrangements. They will stay on the existing contribution arrangements when they move to residential care, unless they opt to move to the new program
 
Residential aged care
 
The new contributions and accommodation arrangements will only apply to new entrants to residential aged care from 1 July 2025. Everyone in residential care on 30 June 2025 will maintain their current arrangements until they leave care.
 
Budget impact
 
Aged care is one of the biggest pressures on the Budget and, without action, spending is expected to more than double as a share of GDP over the next 40 years.
 
The Government currently pays 76 per cent of residential care costs and 95 per cent of home care costs.
 
This package improves aged care and strengthens the Budget at the same time. It is a combination of new investments and new contributions but with generous transitional arrangements.
 
The net impact of the changes is a $930 million spend over four years and a $12.6 billion save over the next eleven years.
 
As a result of the reforms, by 2034-35: 

  • Annual growth in spending on aged care is expected to moderate. Average annual growth over the decade to 2034-35 was 5.7 per cent at Budget and will come down to 5.2 per cent.
  • Aged care spending as a share of GDP is projected to moderate, from 1.5 per cent of GDP to 1.4 per cent, even as the number of participants and the quality of care increase.

Government investment in aged care will continue to grow, year on year, every year, growing more sustainably over time.
 
Under the reforms, the Government will pay: 

  • 100 per cent of clinical care costs, regardless of individual means, and
  • The majority of aged care costs overall, including: 
    • 73 per cent of residential care costs and
    • 89 per cent of Support at Home costs.

For every $1 an older Australian contributes, the Government will contribute an average of $3.30 to residential care, and $7.80 to Support at Home.
 
New laws to protect the rights of older Australians.
 
The new Aged Care Act legislation, which will enable the reforms, will soon be introduced to Parliament. It includes: 

  • A Statement of Rights for older Australians in aged care, with a positive duty for providers to uphold those rights.
  • New duties to hold providers and people in positions of leadership accountable, along with a compensation pathway.
  • New Quality Standards to drive continuous improvement and high quality care.
  • Stronger regulatory powers to protect people from harm.
  • New whistleblower protections.
  • A regulator with stronger investigative powers.
  • A new, independent statutory Complaints Commissioner.

As at 12 September 2024.