The Short Answer
No one is turned away from aged care because they cannot pay. The Australian aged care system is designed so that fees are proportional to the person’s income and assets. People with fewer resources pay less. Government subsidies cover the gap.
If your parent has very limited income and assets, they will likely pay only the basic daily fee ($61.96/day), with the government subsidising their care and accommodation costs. Financial hardship provisions exist for situations where even the assessed fees are unaffordable.
No One Is Turned Away
This is the most important principle to understand: approved aged care providers cannot refuse a resident solely because of their financial circumstances.The system works as follows:
- The government pays a care subsidy directly to the facility for every resident (the amount varies based on care needs, assessed by the ACAT).
- The government pays an accommodation supplement for low-means residents who cannot afford a full RAD or DAP.
- The basic daily fee is the only fee that every resident must pay, regardless of means.
- The means-tested care fee is calculated based on ability to pay — it can be $0 for people with low income and assets.
Low-Means Residents
If the Services Australia financial assessment determines that a resident has assets below approximately $76,000 (for a single person, 2025–26), they are classified as a low-means resident. This provides significant protection:
Accommodation
- The resident does not need to pay a Refundable Accommodation Deposit (RAD). Instead, the facility receives a government accommodation supplement.
- The resident may be asked to pay a small daily accommodation contribution, calculated by Services Australia based on their means. This is significantly less than a standard DAP.
- For residents with very low assets (below approximately $55,000), the daily accommodation contribution may be $0.
Care fees
- The basic daily fee still applies ($61.96/day).
- The means-tested care fee is calculated normally, but for someone with low income and assets, it will be very small or $0.
Example: minimum-cost scenario
A single person receiving the full Age Pension ($28,514/year) with $30,000 in savings and no home (or an exempt home):
- Basic daily fee: $22,615/year
- Means-tested care fee: $0 (income below threshold, assets below $55,000)
- Accommodation: Government-subsidised (small or no daily contribution)
- Total: approximately $22,615/year
This is covered almost entirely by the Age Pension, leaving a small amount for personal expenses.
Financial Hardship Provisions
If a resident has been assessed as needing to pay a means-tested care fee but genuinely cannot afford it, they (or their representative) can apply to Services Australia for financial hardship assistance.
Financial hardship may apply when:
- The person’s income is insufficient to cover their assessed fees and basic living expenses
- Assets exist on paper but are not accessible (e.g., jointly owned property that cannot be sold, assets frozen in a legal dispute)
- Unexpected changes in circumstances have reduced the person’s ability to pay (loss of income, investment losses, partner entering care)
If hardship is approved, Services Australia may:
- Reduce the means-tested care fee for a specified period
- Waive the means-tested care fee entirely for a period
- Adjust the accommodation payment requirements
Accommodation Payment Options
The accommodation payment is often the most daunting cost. Understanding your options can reduce the financial pressure:
- You don’t have to pay a lump-sum RAD. You can choose to pay entirely via DAP (daily payments). This avoids needing a large upfront sum.
- You can pay a combination. Pay whatever lump sum you can afford as a partial RAD, and pay the remainder as DAP. For example, on a $350,000 RAD, you could pay $100,000 upfront and the remaining $250,000 as DAP ($57.12/day at 8.34% MPIR).
- You have 28 days to decide. After admission, you have 28 days to choose your payment method. Use this time to complete the financial assessment and understand your options.
- The RAD is refundable. If you do pay a RAD, remember it is returned when the resident leaves or passes away. It is not lost money — it comes back to the estate.
Ways to Reduce Your Fees
Several legitimate strategies can reduce aged care costs:
- Complete the financial assessment. Without a financial assessment, you are charged the maximum means-tested care fee and maximum accommodation cost. The assessment almost always results in lower fees.
- Understand the family home exemption. If the home is occupied by a partner or left vacant (not rented), it may be exempt from the asset test. This can dramatically reduce the means-tested care fee. See our Family Home guide.
- Apply for the illness-separated pension rate. If one partner enters care and the other stays home, each may receive the higher single pension rate instead of the lower couple rate — an increase of about $14,014/year combined.
- Check the lifetime cap. The means-tested care fee has a lifetime cap ($78,526 under pre-November 2025 rules). Once reached, the fee stops. If your parent has been in care for several years, check whether they have reached or are approaching this cap.
- Compare facilities. RAD prices vary significantly between facilities and regions. Choosing a facility with a lower RAD (or opting for a shared room) reduces the accommodation cost.
- Get specialist advice. An aged care financial adviser can identify strategies specific to your situation — the fee for a consultation ($300–$500) can save thousands in correctly structured arrangements.
Family Contributions
Families are not legally required to pay for a parent’s aged care fees. The fees are the responsibility of the person receiving care. However, many families choose to contribute:
- Topping up personal spending: Providing pocket money for hairdressing, outings, phone bills, and personal items beyond what the pension covers.
- Contributing to the RAD: Family members sometimes contribute to or lend money for the RAD. This should be documented clearly (gift vs loan) as it may have Centrelink and tax implications.
- Managing the family home: Covering maintenance, rates, and insurance on a vacant home to preserve the asset test exemption.
Home Care as a Lower-Cost Alternative
If residential care costs are a concern, home care may be a more affordable option — provided the person’s care needs can be safely met at home.
| Home care | Residential care | |
|---|---|---|
| Basic daily fee | $13.41/day (Level 1) | $61.96/day |
| Accommodation | None (you stay in your home) | $200,000–$550,000+ (RAD) or equivalent DAP |
| Means-tested fee | Income-tested only | Income + asset tested |
| Care level | Support services only | 24/7 nursing and personal care |
Home care is not suitable for everyone — people with advanced dementia, high nursing needs, or significant fall risk may need the 24/7 support of residential care. But for people with moderate care needs, a Home Care Package can provide meaningful support at a fraction of the cost.
Learn more in our Home Care Packages guide.
Getting Help
| Contact | What they help with | Details |
|---|---|---|
| My Aged Care | Assessment, finding providers, navigating the system | 1800 200 422 |
| Services Australia | Financial assessment, hardship provisions, pension changes | 1800 227 475 |
| Older Persons Advocacy Network | Free advocacy for people receiving or seeking aged care | 1800 700 600 |
| Financial Information Service (FIS) | Free government financial guidance (not financial advice) | 132 300 |
| COTA Australia | Advocacy, information, and support for older Australians | cota.org.au |