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How Do I Ask for Respite Funding in My NDIS Plan Review in Sydney?

How Do I Ask for Respite Funding in My NDIS Plan Review in Sydney?

Preparing for an NDIS plan review can feel overwhelming—especially when you’re trying to figure out what supports you can ask for, how to explain your needs, and how to show that those supports are considered reasonable and necessary.

Let’s walk through it in a clear, practical way.

First things first: What is respite funding?

Respite funding (often called Short Term Respite and Assistance in NDIS language) is designed to support both participants and their informal support network.

It might include:

 

It’s not about stepping away from care—it’s about making sure everyone involved can keep going safely and sustainably.

Can you ask for it in your plan review?

Yes—you absolutely can.

A plan review is the right time to raise changes in your situation, especially if

  • Support needs have increased
  • Informal supports are under pressure
  • Current arrangements are becoming difficult to maintain
 

The key is not just asking, but clearly demonstrating why respite is reasonable and necessary under the NDIS criteria.

1. Track your supports and daily challenges

Data collection doesn’t have to be complicated, but it should be consistent.

You can start by keeping simple records of:

  • Daily care tasks and how long they take
  • Frequency of high-support needs (e.g. behavioural episodes, night care, supervision)
  • Times when carers feel overwhelmed or unable to continue
  • Missed activities or disruptions due to lack of support
  • Any escalation in needs over time
 

Even brief notes over a few weeks can clearly show patterns of strain and support gaps.

This kind of tracking helps demonstrate that respite isn’t occasional—it’s necessary for maintaining stability.

2. Include allied health reports and professional documentation

Professional reports carry significant weight in NDIS decision-making.

Useful documentation might include:

  • Occupational therapist assessments
  • Psychologist or behavioural support reports
  • GP or specialist letters
  • Support worker progress notes
  • Functional capacity assessments
 

These reports can:

  • Outline the participant’s level of need
  • Recommend respite as part of a broader support strategy
  • Highlight risks if current supports are not sustained
 

Where possible, ask allied health professionals to explicitly recommend respite and explain why it is needed.

3. Clearly document carer burnout

Carer burnout is a critical factor—but it needs to be clearly articulated and evidenced.

Instead of general statements, try to describe:

  • Physical exhaustion (e.g. lifting, overnight care, constant supervision)
  • Emotional fatigue (stress, anxiety, feeling overwhelmed)
  • Lack of consistent breaks
  • Impact on the carer’s health, work, or wellbeing
 

You might include:

  • Written statements from carers
  • GP letters noting stress or health impacts
  • Observations from support coordinators or therapists
 

For example:

  • “The primary carer is providing daily high-level support without regular breaks, leading to ongoing fatigue and reduced capacity to maintain care safely.”
 

This shifts the conversation from opinion to documented impact.

4. Link respite directly to NDIS goals

To strengthen your case, connect respite to the participant’s goals.

For example:

  • Building independence and social skills through time away from home
  • Maintaining a stable and supportive home environment
  • Supporting long-term sustainability of informal care
  • Improving emotional wellbeing for both participant and carers
 

When respite is clearly tied to outcomes, it becomes easier to justify within the NDIS framework.

5. Explain the risks without respite (using evidence)

This is a crucial—but often overlooked—step.

Use your tracked data and reports to explain potential risks, such as:

  • Carer burnout leading to reduced or withdrawn support
  • Increased behavioural or emotional distress
  • Breakdown of home routines
  • Greater likelihood of crisis or emergency interventions
  • Risk of hospitalisation or more intensive supports
 

Keep it factual and grounded in your documented experience.

How to talk about it in your review

You don’t need perfect wording—just clear, honest communication supported by evidence.

You might say:

  • “We’ve been tracking daily supports, and care needs are increasing beyond what can be sustained without regular breaks.”
  • “Allied health reports recommend structured respite to support both the participant’s development and carer wellbeing.”
  • “Without respite, there is a clear risk of burnout and breakdown in current support arrangements.”
 

This shows both lived experience and supporting evidence.

Getting support in Sydney

You don’t have to prepare this alone. You can work with:

  • Your support coordinator
  • Your Local Area Coordinator (LAC)
  • Allied health professionals
  • Disability advocacy services
 

They can help you gather documentation, organise evidence, and present your case clearly.

Before your plan review: a simple checklist

It may help to prepare:

  • A short record of daily support needs
  • Examples of recent challenges or escalation
  • Allied health reports or letters
  • Notes on carer wellbeing and capacity
  • A clear idea of what respite would look like (frequency, type, duration)
  • Risks if respite is not funded
  • How respite links to participant goals
 

You don’t need perfection—just clarity and consistency.

A Final thought

Requesting respite funding in your NDIS plan review isn’t about asking for more—it’s about demonstrating what’s needed to make care sustainable.

When you combine lived experience with clear data, professional reports, and documented impact, your request becomes much stronger.

Support systems work best when they’re built to last—and that includes making space for rest.