About funding for residential aged care

The Australian Government pays subsidies and supplements to fund residential aged care. If eligible, you get additional supplements and other available funding. 

How we fund residential aged care

The Australian Government funds approved residential care homes through:

  • the Australian National Aged Care Classification (AN-ACC) funding model to subsidise clinical and non-clinical care 
  • supplements to help with the cost of special care needs, fees and accommodation (if eligible), everyday living services and meeting certain obligations  
  • other funding, such as capital grants.

An older person must be assessed and approved for government-funded residential permanent care or respite care. This entitlement is known as their residential care place.

Registered providers submit a monthly claim to Services Australia to receive subsidies and supplements on behalf of each resident to meet their assessed care needs.

Based on their financial circumstances, residents also contribute to their aged care costs. Learn more about charging for residential aged care.

About the AN-ACC funding model

The AN-ACC funding model funds the care component of residential aged care. The model links funding to the:

  • characteristics of residential care homes (including location using the Modified Monash Model (MMM) and specialised status)
  • assessed care needs of residents.

AN-ACC provides equitable funding for registered providers to better match residents’ needs and the costs of:

AN-ACC price and weightings

AN-ACC works by applying National Weighted Activity Units (NWAU) to the National Efficient Price for AN-ACC (the AN-ACC price).

The NWAU is a measure used to determine fixed and variable funding components of the daily basic subsidy. The NWAUs reflect variations in the costs of providing care, based on the characteristics of a home and its individual residents. The AN-ACC price is the price of a unit of care, or 1.00 NWAU.

The government updates the AN-ACC price on 1 October each year, in line with pricing advice from the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority.

See the Schedule of Subsidies and Supplements for the current AN-ACC price and NWAUs.

Supplements

Supplements provide additional funding to help with the cost of:

For some supplements, we automatically check eligibility for you. For others, you need to apply on a resident’s behalf.

Subsidy reductions

Reductions apply if the resident gets a compensation payment or pays means tested fees. This adjusts the subsidy amount you receive to account for these payments.

Independent pricing analysis

The Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority (IHACPA) provides annual recommendations to the government on the:

  • AN-ACC price
  • BCT and AN-ACC classification NWAU values
  • Gap in everyday living funding (hotelling supplement).

IHACPA’s advice is based on their determination of actual costs of delivering care by analysing financial reporting, independent costing studies and other data.

We also adjust care minute allocations in line with any changes to AN-ACC classifications on 1 October each year.

Learn more about IHACPA's pricing advice and consultations.

Current rates

Following IHACPA’s pricing advice, AN-ACC price and NWAU weightings change on 1 October each year and the hotelling supplement is indexed on 20 September each year.

Care-related supplements are indexed on 1 July each year.

Accommodation supplements are indexed on 20 March and 20 September each year, in line with pension increases.

View the current rates in the Schedule of Subsidies and Supplements.

Other funding available

The Australian Government also funds other areas of residential aged care, such as the:

AN-ACC Transition Fund

The AN-ACC Transition Fund is available until 30 September 2026 to support the viability of providers operating homes in specific thin markets.

These include residential care homes with specific characteristics that do not fit into the profile of the current BCT categories, such as:

  • being located in an isolated community
  • being a larger home with higher occupancy in a remote or very remote location.

Reporting

Registered providers must report on residential aged care income and expenses through the annual Aged Care Financial Report and the Quarterly Financial Report.

Learn more about reporting for residential aged care.

Resources

AN-ACC resources

This page contains links to more information and resources about the Australian National Aged Care Classification funding model (AN-ACC) and residential aged care funding reforms.

Contacts

Aged care subsidies and supplements contact

Email us if you have questions about aged care subsidies or supplements for registered providers.

Services Australia aged care providers enquiry line

Call Services Australia for help with aged care claims and payments. This includes supplement claims, approved provider forms and online claiming registrations.
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