Introduction
NDIS Occupational Therapy can help you do everyday things – known as everyday activities – more safely, more independently, and with more confidence.
This article provides a comprehensive overview of NDIS Occupational Therapy, including what it covers, who it is for (NDIS participants, families, support coordinators), and why understanding NDIS Occupational Therapy matters. Whether you are an NDIS participant, a family member, or a support coordinator, understanding how Occupational Therapy works under the NDIS can help you make informed decisions and achieve better outcomes.
What Can NDIS Occupational Therapy Help With? (Daily Living, Independence & Confidence)
NDIS Occupational Therapy can help people living with disability to develop or maintain their independence and improve their daily living skills. That might mean getting dressed with less effort, cooking with fewer risks, managing sensory overload, building a routine that actually sticks, or making your home easier to move around in. Occupational therapists use effective strategies to help clients manage daily life and sensory influences, supporting participation in home, school, work, or community settings. Occupational Therapy is usually practical and goal-led, combining skill-building, strategies, and (when needed) recommendations for assistive technology and home modifications so daily life works better. Through early intervention and holistic care, OT supports overall well-being, helping individuals achieve a better quality of life and greater independence.
The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) funds and supports occupational therapy services, providing tailored and flexible assistance to improve independence and quality of life for people with disabilities. Occupational therapists work closely with NDIS participants to assess their individual needs, create customised intervention plans, and assist them in achieving their goals. Collaboration with other healthcare professionals is a key feature of Occupational Therapy, ensuring holistic and integrated care. Eligibility for OT services under the NDIS is defined by the NDIS Act, which outlines the conditions and criteria for access to supports.
What NDIS Occupational Therapy is (in plain language)
NDIS Occupational Therapy refers to Occupational Therapy services that are funded under the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in Australia.
Occupational Therapy is about helping you participate in the activities that matter in your life, at home, at school, at work, and in the community. The NDIS system plays a crucial role in supporting access to occupational therapy services, ensuring participants receive the right support to achieve their goals.
NDIS Occupational Therapy can help people living with disability to develop or maintain their independence and improve their daily living skills.
Under the NDIS, a comprehensive range of Occupational Therapy services is available, including assessments, intervention planning, equipment prescription, and skill development. These Occupational Therapy services provide personalised support, with experienced therapists tailoring interventions to each individual’s specific needs. NDIS occupational therapy services are services tailored to meet the unique needs of each participant, focusing on building or maintaining skills and independence. All supports are evidence-based and delivered by qualified allied health professionals.
Which part of your NDIS plan usually funds Occupational Therapy?
Most Occupational Therapy support is funded through specific NDIS support categories, most commonly Capacity Building, often under Improved Daily Living, which includes assessment, training, or therapy to increase skills, independence, and community participation. Occupational therapy services should be closely aligned with the participant’s plan and tailored to help achieve the participant’s NDIS goals, ensuring interventions are personalised and outcomes-focused. NDIS funding supports participants in accessing and financing occupational therapy services that improve independence and quality of life.
Two common related areas (where an Occupational Therapist may assess and provide evidence) are:
- Assistive Technology (equipment that helps you do something more easily or safely, or makes something possible)
- Home Modifications (changes to the home’s structure, layout, or fittings to improve safety and access)
A practical note: some plans also treat therapy as a stated support, meaning the funding is allocated specifically for therapy rather than being flexible across categories.
What can an NDIS Occupational Therapist help with?
Think of Occupational Therapy as a “daily life performance” service. It targets the real-world things that quietly drain time, energy, confidence, and independence.
Occupational therapy helps participants perform everyday tasks, develop essential life skills, and focus on skill development to enhance independence and quality of life. Through targeted interventions, OT supports overcoming challenges in daily life by addressing personal and environmental obstacles. Building meaningful connections with clients is also a key part of the OT process, ensuring holistic support and empowering individuals to achieve their goals.
Here are the most common areas.
1) Daily living skills (self-care, home tasks, routines)
Occupational Therapy can help with the building blocks of everyday independence, including:
- Personal care such as showering, toileting, dressing, grooming, and sleep routines
- Meal planning and preparation, kitchen safety, and pacing
- Using public transport or building travel confidence step-by-step
- Setting up routines for mornings, afternoons, and transitions
- Household tasks, simplified systems, and reducing reliance on others
Occupational therapists support NDIS participants to manage daily routines, helping them develop strategies to perform everyday tasks and improve their independence. Daily routines are essential for building independence and enhancing overall quality of life. Functional capacity assessments play a key role in the NDIS planning process by identifying support needs and guiding the right interventions to meet individual goals. Many people think of this as “skills”, but it is also strategy. A well-designed routine can remove daily friction and reduce stress across the whole household.
Practical example
If mornings are chaotic, an Occupational Therapist might map the routine, identify the pinch-points (sensory triggers, time blindness, low motivation, unsafe bathroom setup), then build a simple sequence using effective strategies such as visuals, timers, environmental tweaks, and practice over time. These strategies are designed to help clients manage everyday activities like getting dressed, preparing breakfast, or personal hygiene, making daily routines smoother and more independent.
2) Independence and confidence in the community
Independence is not only what happens inside the home. Occupational Therapy often focuses on participation in meaningful activities and building meaningful connections within the community, supporting individuals to engage in daily lives that are rich and rewarding. These supports help people achieve more fulfilling lives by improving their ability to participate in everyday tasks and social interactions.
- Getting to appointments independently
- Building shopping and money handling routines
- Navigating social settings and transitions
- Developing systems that support study, work, or volunteering
- Practising real-life scenarios in a graded way
This is where “confidence” becomes measurable: fewer avoided activities, more successful outings, and more predictable routines.
3) Sensory processing, emotional regulation, and “everyday overwhelm”
For many children, teens, and adults, daily living is limited by sensory overload, anxiety, or fatigue rather than “ability”. Occupational therapy not only addresses these challenges but also supports mental health and provides mental health support as part of a holistic approach. Holistic care is essential in supporting emotional and sensory regulation, focusing on overall well-being to help individuals lead more fulfilling and independent lives.
Occupational Therapy support may include:
- sensory profiles (what helps, what hurts, and what to adjust)
- regulation strategies you can actually use in real moments
- environmental adjustments (home, classroom, workplace)
- habit-building that reduces overwhelm and improves functioning
This work is often the bridge between “I know what to do” and “I can actually do it consistently”.
4) Mobility, safety, transfers, and injury prevention
Occupational Therapy can help reduce falls risk and increase safe independence:
- safer transfers (bed, shower, car)
- energy conservation and pacing
- home set-up to reduce hazards
- environmental modifications to support independence and accessibility
- vehicle modifications to enhance mobility and safety
- strategies to reduce manual handling strain for carers
Home and vehicle modifications involve assessing environments to recommend structural changes for safety and accessibility, such as ramps and grab rails.
The goal is not perfection. The goal is safer daily function, with less risk and less reliance.
5) Assistive Technology (AT) recommendations and evidence
Assistive technology can include anything from simple daily living aids to more complex equipment, such as assistive technology designed to enhance independence and safety in daily activities. Allied health providers play a key role in helping participants select the right assistive technology and providing evidence when required. These tools and devices support participants to perform tasks independently, improving their ability to manage daily routines and functional living.
An Occupational Therapist may help with:
- choosing the right item (fit-for-purpose, safe, usable), including adaptive equipment
- trials and training
- documenting functional impact and why it is reasonable and necessary
- matching the recommendation to your goals and home context
6) Home Modifications (access, safety, usability)
Home modifications can range from minor changes to more complex works. The NDIA needs evidence to decide what is reasonable and necessary, safe, legal, and value for money. Allied health providers assess needs and provide evidence to support the request.
An Occupational Therapist may support:
- bathroom safety modifications
- access changes (steps, doorways, ramps)
- kitchen modifications for reach, safety, and independence
- recommendations aligned to functional needs and long-term use
7) School, learning support, and child development (when relevant)
Occupational Therapy can support children and teens with:
- skill development to enhance abilities needed for daily activities and participation
- fine motor skills for writing, cutting, and classroom tasks
- play skills and participation
- self-care routines that reduce stress at home and school
- sensory strategies for attention and regulation
These skills help improve everyday life at home and school, making it easier for children and teens to manage daily routines and essential tasks.
This work often overlaps with routines and participation goals, especially when school days are exhausting and recovery is hard.
When should you consider NDIS Occupational Therapy?
Occupational Therapy is worth considering when daily life is “possible” but costly, fragile, or unsafe. NDIS occupational therapy is available to individuals who have a significant disability or a permanent and significant disability, as these are key eligibility criteria for accessing support and funding through the scheme. Participants can access occupational therapy by meeting the NDIS eligibility requirements and working collaboratively to develop a plan that aligns with their personal goals. The NDIS adopts a lifetime approach, investing in people with disability early to improve their long-term outcomes.
A simple checklist
You might benefit from Occupational Therapy if:
- everyday tasks take far longer than they should, or require constant prompting
- the home setup increases risk (falls, unsafe bathroom, unsafe kitchen, poor access)
- sensory overload or anxiety regularly derails routines
- you rely on carers for tasks you want to do more independently
- you need equipment or home changes, but you are not sure what is right
- confidence is the limiting factor, not motivation
What an Occupational Therapy process usually looks like
Most NDIS Occupational Therapy support follows a pattern and is delivered as part of comprehensive occupational therapy services designed to meet the unique needs of each participant:
- Initial conversation and goal setting (what matters, what is hard, what you want to change) – Occupational therapists work closely with participants to understand their needs, set realistic and achievable goals, and develop personalised plans to address these goals. A thorough initial assessment is critical for developing a personalised therapy plan that aligns with the participant’s goals.
- Assessment (home, school, work, community, and functional performance) – Occupational therapists work as part of the NDIS framework to assess individual needs and identify areas for intervention.
- Plan (a practical program with priorities, strategies, and supports) – The plan is tailored to support functional independence and improve quality of life, with input from the participant and, where appropriate, their support network.
- Implementation (practice, habit-building, trials, training, environmental changes) – Occupational therapists often collaborate with other health professionals to provide a multidisciplinary approach, ensuring holistic care and better outcomes for NDIS participants.
- Review and reporting (progress against goals, recommendations for next steps) – Ongoing collaboration and review help ensure the participant continues to make progress and receives the most effective supports.
Allied health providers often produce assessments and reports that inform planning decisions, and can support plan reassessment with appropriate evidence.
How to get Occupational Therapy funded (without wasting months)
If you want NDIS Occupational Therapy to be funded and effective, anchor it to function and goals. OT services, including NDIS occupational therapy services, are funded under the NDIS to support individuals with disabilities in achieving greater independence and improved quality of life. When seeking funding, it’s important to clearly link your needs to daily living activities and functional outcomes.
Choosing an NDIS occupational therapy provider requires understanding their experience and expertise in the NDIS framework. Look for a provider who offers a client-centered approach, tailoring services to your individual needs and goals. Additionally, ensure the occupational therapists have the necessary qualifications and certifications to deliver high-quality care.
Steps that usually work
- Write goals that reflect daily impact, not only diagnoses (for example: “increase independence with showering”, “build routines to attend community activities”).
- Link support to Capacity Building, often Improved Daily Living, because it is designed for therapy, training, and skills.
- Collect evidence that shows functional impact and why Occupational Therapy is needed (current challenges, risks, assistance required, what happens without support).
- Ask for a plan that includes assessment plus implementation, not only a one-off report.
Questions to ask an Occupational Therapist before you start
You want clarity early, especially with plan budgets and time.
- What will success look like in 8 to 12 weeks?
- How will you measure progress?
- Will you visit home, school, or community settings if needed?
- Do you provide assistive technology and home modification recommendations if relevant?
- What reporting do you provide for plan reviews or reassessments?
- How will sessions balance strategy, practice, and carry-over into daily life?
Referrer box
- Who to refer:
- Participants
- Parents/carers
- Support people
- Support Coordinators
- GPs
- Paediatricians
- Schools
- SIL providers
- Community teams where daily function, safety, or participation goals are blocked
What to include in the referral:
- Participant details and NDIS number
- Plan dates, funding type (self-managed, plan-managed, NDIA-managed)
- Current goals and the “daily life problem” to solve
- Relevant diagnoses and functional impact summary
- Risks (falls, choking, absconding, unsafe behaviours, carer strain)
- Current supports and what is not working
- Preferred service setting (home, community, clinic, school)
- Consent and key contacts
FAQs
Is Occupational Therapy funded through Core or Capacity Building?
It is commonly funded through Capacity Building, often under Improved Daily Living (assessment, training, or therapy to build skills and independence).
Do I need a GP referral for NDIS Occupational Therapy?
Usually no. Many people start via self-referral, parent referral, or Support Coordinator referral. Some providers may still ask for background information.
Can Occupational Therapy happen at home, school, or via telehealth?
Often yes, depending on goals and provider capability. The most useful setting is usually the one where the difficulty actually happens.
Can an Occupational Therapist recommend assistive technology or home modifications?
Yes. Allied health providers help assess needs and provide evidence for assistive technology and home modifications, where required.
What is a Functional Capacity Assessment?
It is an assessment that describes how a disability impacts daily function across key life domains, often used to support planning or plan reassessment decisions.
How many sessions should I plan for?
It depends on goals. Skills and habit-building usually require a block of support plus practice time, rather than one or two sessions.
Can Occupational Therapy help with confidence?
Yes, when confidence is linked to function. Occupational Therapy often builds independence through graded practice, routines, environmental changes, and strategy development that reduces failure loops.
How do I make sure the support stays “NDIS-aligned”?
Keep the focus on functional capacity, independence, and participation goals, with evidence-based therapy delivered by qualified professionals.
How Bloom Healthcare can help
Bloom Healthcare’s Occupational Therapy team supports children, teens, and adults to build practical daily living skills, increase independence, and improve confidence in real-life settings. When needed, Bloom’s Occupational Therapists can also support evidence and recommendations for assistive technology and home modifications aligned to NDIS requirements.




