Intellectual disability is a commonly eligible category under the NDIS, assessed on its functional impact on learning, communication and daily living. Funded supports typically build capacity for independence, help with everyday tasks, and enable community participation, with access decided individually by the NDIA based on permanent and significant impact.
Intellectual disability involves limitations in intellectual functioning and adaptive behaviour that affect everyday skills such as learning, reasoning, communication and managing daily life. It usually emerges in childhood.
The NDIS looks at the functional impact rather than a number alone, considering how the disability affects the person across home, learning and community settings.
Supports are organised around independence and participation, and are tailored to each person’s goals.
For many people with intellectual disability, the goal is to build lasting skills rather than simply provide ongoing help. Capacity-building supports teach and practise everyday abilities, which can increase independence and reduce reliance on paid support over time.
Supports work best when they are consistent, patient and matched to the person’s pace.
Intellectual disability is a commonly recognised category, but access still depends on individual assessment by the NDIA of a permanent and significant disability with substantial functional impact. Evidence from treating professionals about adaptive functioning supports the request. We cannot promise an outcome.
From daily living to building independence, our supports are shaped around your goals.
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