The Australian landscape for early childhood support is undergoing its most significant transformation in a decade. Following a landmark agreement in February 2026, Health Minister Mark Butler has officially released the operational plan for the ‘Thriving Kids’ initiative. This massive policy shift is designed to move children with mild to moderate developmental delays off the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) and into a new system of mainstream "foundational supports."
For years, the NDIS has been the primary lifeboat for Australian families seeking support for developmental delays. However, the scheme was originally designed for permanent and significant disability. With nearly half of new NDIS participants being children under nine, the government identified a sustainability crisis. The ‘Thriving Kids’ initiative, announced initially in late 2025, represents a joint investment between the Commonwealth and state territories to address this. The primary goal is to ensure the financial sustainability of the NDIS while providing earlier, more accessible care for thousands of Australian children who may not require lifelong disability support.
Under the new model, children under the age of nine with non-permanent or mild developmental concerns—such as mild autism or speech delays—will no longer be the primary target for NDIS individualised packages. Instead, they will be supported through services integrated directly into schools, childcare centres, and maternal health clinics.
The initiative is built on four key pillars released by the advisory group this week:
While originally slated for July, the rollout has been pushed to October 1, 2026, to give states more time to prepare. The government anticipates the program will be operating at full scale by January 1, 2028. The federal government has committed an initial $2 billion, matched by states and territories, creating a $4 billion funding pool to establish these services.
"This is about getting the NDIS back on track," Minister Butler stated, emphasising that the scheme was never intended to be the sole solution for every developmental challenge. For Australian families and taxpayers, ‘Thriving Kids’ marks a pivotal return to community-based care.