NDIS Plan Review Preparation: What You Need to Know
NDIS plans typically run for 12 to 36 months, after which they're reviewed and renewed. Your plan review — or "reassessment" — is your opportunity to demonstrate that your current funding meets your needs, and to request adjustments if your circumstances have changed. Preparation is everything. A well-prepared review can mean the difference between a plan that keeps up with your needs and one that leaves you scrambling.
NDIS Plan Review Types: Scheduled, Unscheduled, and Change of Circumstances
Not all reviews are the same. Understanding which type you're facing helps you prepare appropriately:
- Scheduled review (reassessment): This happens near the end of your current plan. The NDIA will contact you to schedule it — usually 1–3 months before your plan expires. This is the most comprehensive review type and typically results in a new plan. (Plans sometimes get extended or rolled over if a review is delayed.)
- Unscheduled review (plan variation): You can request this at any time if your circumstances change significantly — for example, a change in your disability, living situation, or informal supports. This is sometimes called a "light-touch" review and can adjust funding without replacing the entire plan.
- Change of circumstances review: Triggered by specific events like a change in your primary disability, a significant change in functional capacity, or a change in your informal support network. These require evidence of the change.
NDIS Plan Review Evidence: What Documents You Need
NDIS decisions are evidence-driven. The quality and relevance of your evidence directly influences funding decisions. For a scheduled review, gather:
- Therapy reports: Updated reports from your allied health professionals — occupational therapists, speech pathologists, physiotherapists, psychologists — describing your current functional capacity, progress toward previous goals, and recommendations for ongoing supports.
- Goal updates: A clear statement of your goals for the next plan period. Be specific: "I want to increase my community participation from one outing per week to three" is stronger than "I want to get out more."
- Spending data: Your plan manager can provide a comprehensive summary of your spending across all support categories throughout your current plan. This shows the NDIA what you actually used — and what you may need more of.
- Provider letters: If you need an increase in specific supports, letters from your providers explaining why — with clinical reasoning — carry significant weight.
- Personal statement: Your own description of how your disability affects your daily life, what's working well with your current supports, and what gaps remain. This is your story — make it heard.
💡 How your plan manager helps: Your plan manager can produce a detailed spending report showing exactly how you've used your funding — which categories are on track, which are underspent, and which ran out early. This data is powerful evidence for maintaining or increasing specific budget lines. Ask for this report at least 4–6 weeks before your review.
NDIS Plan Review Preparation Timeline: When to Start
Don't leave preparation until the week before your review. A practical timeline:
- 3–4 months before plan end: Request updated therapy reports from all your allied health providers. Therapists often have long waiting lists for report-writing — early requests are essential.
- 2–3 months before: Request your spending summary from your plan manager. Review it yourself: where did you overspend? Where was there money left over? What does this tell you about your needs?
- 4–6 weeks before: Draft your personal statement and updated goals. Review everything with your support coordinator, plan manager, or a trusted family member.
- 2 weeks before: Compile all documents into a single, organised package. If the review is by phone or in person, have everything ready to reference.
NDIS Plan Review Appeals: What to Do If Your Plan Is Cut
You have rights. If the NDIA's decision doesn't reflect your needs, you can request an internal review (s100 review) within 3 months of receiving your new plan. If the internal review doesn't resolve the issue, you can escalate to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). This path exists for a reason — use it if you need to.
For help understanding your plan's financial picture ahead of a review, see our guide to what plan management is and how plan management fees work.