Fewer younger Australians are entering aged care.
That much is clear.
So why are so many still dying there?
A new report from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shows an 83% drop in people under 65 living in residential aged care since 2019.
It’s the kind of number that signals progress. The kind that suggests reform is working.
But it doesn’t tell you what happens next.
Entry into aged care has fallen sharply. Just 28 people under 65 entered residential aged care in a three-month period in 2025, down from 395 in 2019.
That’s a system getting better at stopping people at the front door.
What it isn’t doing, at least not yet, is helping them find a way out.
Around 68% of younger people who leave aged care do so because they die there, not because they move into more appropriate housing or support.
It’s a statistic that shifts the narrative. Less about how many people enter, more about what happens once they’re inside.
The National Disability Insurance Scheme was meant to change this. To provide a genuine alternative to aged care.
In practice, it often arrives after the decision has already been made.
More than three in four younger people accessed aged care services before receiving an NDIS plan.
For many, the sequence is the same. Aged care first. NDIS second.
By then, the pathway is harder to unwind. Systems settle. Placements become long-term.
There is funding in the system. On paper, the supports are there.
One in five younger people in aged care who are NDIS participants have funding for Specialist Disability Accommodation, intended to support more appropriate living arrangements.
But funding doesn’t always translate into reality.
Only 30% actually use that funding.
The constraint is not willingness. It’s supply. The housing simply isn’t available at the scale required.
Not everyone in aged care is part of the NDIS.
Around one-third of younger people are not participants. Their pathway looks different, and often more limited.
They are more likely to enter later, frequently with complex health needs such as cancer, and more likely to die in care.
They sit between systems. Too complex for one. Not eligible for another. And rarely the focus of reform.
Aged care was never designed for younger people. That has been acknowledged for years.
And yet, it continues to be used when other parts of the system fall short.
When housing isn’t available. When disability supports can’t be accessed. When hospitals need somewhere to discharge patients safely.
In those moments, aged care becomes the fallback. Not because it fits, but because it exists.
The numbers suggest improvement, and in some ways, that’s true.
Fewer younger people are entering aged care than before.
But for those already there, the outcome hasn’t fundamentally shifted.
Many remain for years. Some for decades. Too many never leave.
The system hasn’t solved the problem.
It has reduced it, contained it, and made it less visible.