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NDIS Guide

What Is NDIS Respite Accommodation and How Does It Work?

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

NDIS respite accommodation lets a participant stay somewhere away from home for a short period while their usual carer takes a break. It is funded under Short Term Accommodation and Assistance (STA) in the Core budget, which bundles accommodation, food, personal support and activities, generally up to 28 days a year.

What does respite accommodation actually cover?

Respite accommodation is a stay outside the participant’s own home, often in purpose-built short-term accommodation, a host family setting or a shared house. The everyday word is respite, but in an NDIS plan it appears as Short Term Accommodation and Assistance (STA).

STA is a bundled support. A single rate covers the accommodation itself, meals, day-to-day personal support and group or individual activities while the participant is away. This packaging is what separates it from in-home arrangements, where support comes to the person instead.

A place to stay away from the family home
Meals and everyday living costs during the stay
Personal care and supervision as needed
Activities and community outings

How much can you use and how is it funded?

STA is typically available for up to 28 days across a plan year, which families often use as occasional weekends or a longer block. It is drawn from the flexible Core budget rather than a line item literally labelled respite, so the language in your plan may differ from how you describe it day to day.

The NDIS sets maximum prices for STA that vary by region and by the level of support a person needs. Prices are reviewed each year on 1 July. For current figures, check the NDIS price guide rather than relying on older numbers.

Who is respite accommodation best suited to?

It suits situations where a change of environment helps, or where the home cannot be safely staffed for a period, for example when a carer travels, is unwell, or simply needs an extended rest. Younger participants sometimes use it to build independence away from family before any move to longer-term living.

Planned breaks

Booked weekends or holiday blocks so a carer can rest or travel with notice.

Skill building

Time away from home that helps a participant practise living more independently.

Bridging periods

Short stays when the home cannot be staffed, such as during a carer's illness.

How do you arrange an STA stay?

Confirm you have Core funding flexible enough to cover STA, then talk to a provider about availability, the support level required and what a typical day looks like. A support coordinator can help you compare options and book. Always check that the booking is documented as STA so it is recorded against the right part of your budget.

Explore short-term accommodation options

Learn how respite and short-term stays can give carers a break while supports continue.

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

Questions, answered.

Is respite the same as STA? +
In plain language, yes. Respite is the everyday term; Short Term Accommodation and Assistance (STA) is the formal Core support that funds short stays away from home, including accommodation, meals, support and activities.
How many days of respite accommodation can I use? +
STA is generally available for up to 28 days per plan year. You can use these flexibly as weekends or longer blocks, subject to your plan budget and provider availability.
Does STA cover the cost of food and activities? +
Yes. STA is a bundled support, so the rate covers accommodation, meals, personal support and activities during the stay rather than charging each separately.
Will using respite affect the rest of my plan? +
STA is drawn from your flexible Core budget, so spending on it reduces what remains for other Core supports. A support coordinator can help you plan usage across the year.
Can I choose where I stay? +
You can choose among available providers and accommodation types, including purpose-built facilities, host arrangements or shared homes, depending on what is offered in your region and your support needs.
Keep reading

Related guides.

TYPE D · Resource/Guide · /resources/respite-options/