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NDIS Guide

What is psychosocial disability under the NDIS?

Last reviewed 1 July 2026 · 6 min read · By Sarah M., Support Coordinator
In short

Psychosocial disability is the term the NDIS uses for disability arising from a mental health condition. It can be episodic, meaning support needs vary over time. The NDIS takes a recovery-oriented approach and funds supports such as Psychosocial Recovery Coaches, with access assessed individually by the NDIA.

What does psychosocial disability mean?

Psychosocial disability describes the functional impact that can result from a mental health condition. It is not the diagnosis itself but the way the condition affects everyday activities such as self-care, relationships, work and managing daily routines.

A defining feature is that needs can be episodic and fluctuate, so support is designed to flex up and down rather than stay fixed.

What is a recovery-oriented approach?

The NDIS supports a recovery-oriented model that focuses on living a meaningful life, building on a person’s strengths and choices rather than only managing symptoms. Recovery here means progress towards the person’s own goals, which looks different for everyone.

Supports aim to increase independence, confidence and connection, recognising that progress is rarely linear.

What is a Psychosocial Recovery Coach?

A Psychosocial Recovery Coach is a funded NDIS support specific to this disability type. Recovery Coaches have lived experience or training in mental health and help participants build skills, coordinate supports and navigate the system in a recovery-focused way.

They work collaboratively with the participant and their treating team to keep supports aligned with changing needs.

How is access assessed?

Access depends on individual assessment by the NDIA of whether the condition results in a permanent and significant disability affecting daily function. Because needs can be episodic, evidence that captures the impact over time, including during periods of greater difficulty, is valuable. We cannot promise an eligibility outcome.

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SM
Sarah M., Support CoordinatorReviewed by TQN.Care's NDIS support team · 8+ years in disability support coordination.
Common questions

Questions, answered.

Is psychosocial disability the same as a mental illness? +
No. It refers to the functional disability that can arise from a mental health condition, not the condition itself. The focus is on impact on daily life.
What is episodic support? +
It means support designed to vary as needs change. Someone may need more help during difficult periods and less at other times.
What does a Recovery Coach do? +
A Psychosocial Recovery Coach helps you build skills, coordinate supports and navigate the NDIS using a recovery-oriented approach, often drawing on lived experience or mental health training.
How do I show eligibility? +
Access is assessed individually by the NDIA. Evidence describing the permanent and significant functional impact over time, including harder periods, is most useful.
Is recovery the same as being cured? +
No. In this context recovery means living a meaningful life and progressing towards your own goals, regardless of symptoms.
Keep reading

Related guides.

TYPE D · Resource/Guide · /resources/psychosocial-disability/