2025 marks the biggest aged care reforms in almost 30 years — by Noel Whittaker

Noel Whittaker is the author of Wills, Death & Taxes Made Simple and numerous other books on personal finance. Email: [email protected]

Next year, the biggest aged care reforms in almost 30 years will begin. These 'once in a generation' changes will redefine aged care and who pays for it. The fundamental change is that the government will fund clinical care for everyone, regardless of means, but older Australians will pay more towards other services.



Clinical care means those services provided by a nurse or therapist; independence services include help with such things as taking medications, showering and dressing; and everyday living services cover tasks like shopping, gardening and preparing meals.


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Image Credit: Shutterstock



Aged Care Guru Rachel Lane tells me that, while many people think of aged care as being in nursing homes, most services are actually delivered at home; of the $5.6 billion reform package, around $4.3 billion will go to home care.

The new Support at Home program is capped at $78,000/year. It will fund all clinical care costs, and you will pay on a sliding scale towards the other services, based on your assets and income.



Case studies
  • Jill, a full pensioner with $10,000 of assets, will pay $2,467 a year (the government will pay $37,107).
  • Marco, a part-pensioner with a $65,000-a-year income and $200,000 in assets, will pay $11,464 a year (the government will pay $28,110).
  • Robin, a self-funded retiree with a $100,000-a-year income and assets of $500,000, will pay $16,615 a year (the government will pay $22,959).
Those moving into aged care will see the first change to their costs.


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Image Credit: Shutterstock



On 1 January 2025, the cap on refundable accommodation deposits (RADs) – that is, the maximum 'market price' a home can charge without government approval – for new residents will increase from $550,000 to $750,000.



From 1 July 2025, aged care homes will also charge an exit fee of 2% of your RAD per year, for up to 5 years. So if your RAD is $750,000 and you stay for 5 years, $75,000 will be deducted when you leave.

The reforms don’t change who is eligible for support with aged care accommodation costs: people with assets above $206,039 will need to pay the market price. So if most prices go up to $750,000, there will be a $500,000 gap between what people need to pay and what they can afford. It looks as though the future of aged care will be dominated by daily accommodation payments (DAPs).

When it comes to the cost of ongoing aged care services, the government will pay for clinical care. Everyone will pay the basic daily fee (BDF), set at 85% of the age pension. Beyond this you will pay a hotelling supplement to cover services such as cleaning and laundry, a non-clinical care contribution based on your assets and income, and a higher everyday living fee if you choose to get 'extras'.

There is no change to the means testing of the family home: it is included up to a capped value of $206,039 unless a protected person lives there, in which case is exempt.



A 'no worse off' principle will protect those already receiving aged care, or eligible for a home care package but waiting for it to be delivered. This means that your costs will be the same – or less – after the reforms. If you move from home care to an aged care home after 1 July 2025, the changes to accommodation payments will apply, but you will have the choice of staying on the existing contribution arrangements or moving to the new ones. If you are already living in an aged care home, or move in before 1 July 2025, your contributions will not change while you live there.

While the message has been that 'wealthy Australians will pay more for aged care,' the government estimates that 3 in 10 full pensioners and 3 in 4 part pensioners will pay more, and it’s easy to see why. It seems that most Australians will pay more – in some cases, much more.

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About the author: Noel Whittaker, AM, is the author of Wills, death & taxes made simple and numerous other books on personal finance. An international bestselling author, finance and investment expert, radio broadcaster, newspaper columnist and public speaker, Noel Whittaker is one of the world’s foremost authorities on personal finance. Connect via Twitter or email ([email protected]). You can shop his personal finance books here.

Advice given in this article is general in nature and is not intended to influence readers’ decisions about investing or financial products. Always seek professional advice that takes into account your personal circumstances before making any financial decisions.
 

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Just wanted to add l saw a good few of the patients in one room so close together they could have touched each other.l mean who is checking these places.
 
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They make it that convoluted..... it's almost like the game where the are 3 cones and one of them has a coin underneath and the swap the cones around and you have to guess which one
 
[COMPUTER PLAYING UP]
Just wanted to add l saw a good few of the patients in one room so close together they could have touched each other.l mean who is checking these places.
They turn a blind eye to half of what is happening out there
 
It's getting harder to get home care takes ages. Also sometimes you only speak to people on phone they don't seem to want to come out to your house to see what needs to be done for themselves they just ask you what you need , surely they need to see how you cope in your house and what needs to be changed . I've got steps up to my house trying to explain whether they are accessible is hard over the phone on how steep they are and can a ramp be put in
Hi Barbara, yes I have had the same issue steps and uneven path.Shift I was told!!!!
 
My grandson worked in a nursing home in the Blue Mountains he said they gave them hardly any food like two slices of tomato on bread and their continence pads were hardly changed.He eventually left after a fall out with someone. He is a really caring person and did try.l worked as a free-lance cook mostly in homes run by the nuns and the food given was really good but another private home in Chatswood NSW l left the same day not about the food so much although l was told ''mrs so and so won't eat all that''when l dished it out it was when l had to go with my boss to a locked shed in the garden to get all the ingredients l needed to cook with and l mean everything but not only that l had a certain time l couldn't run the water as patients were having showers.The
Dreadful !
 
It all frightens me looking at all the complications of the money side of things and the lack of care in some faculties. I hope that I will not need help or care for sometime yet. All of my family have now passed away and I am the last one left - end of the line. I worry about who will watch out for me if I need to go into care and avoid being ripped off, both financially and in the quality of care that I will need and receive. I have worked hard all of my life and made sure that I would be able to manage in my later life. Now I worry about it all. When my parents needed care in their later years it was there with quality and we as a family were there. Not sure anymore - worry that it is about profit and not about people. Pity help us all.
 
It's getting harder to get home care takes ages. Also sometimes you only speak to people on phone they don't seem to want to come out to your house to see what needs to be done for themselves they just ask you what you need , surely they need to see how you cope in your house and what needs to be changed . I've got steps up to my house trying to explain whether they are accessible is hard over the phone on how steep they are and can a ramp be put in
There is a group called OPAN that may be able to help you. I have put several people in touch with providers called five Good Friends and they have people that come out. You do realise that you can change providers whenever it suits you
 

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