Aged Care Means Test Calculator 2025-26
Estimate your residential means-tested care fee and basic daily fee using current 2025-26 settings before your formal Services Australia assessment. This applies to residents who entered care before 1 November 2025.
Basic Daily Fee
$66.80/day
Residential, paid by everyone
Means-Test Cap
$370.39/day
Maximum daily fee
Annual Cap
$35,910
Means-tested fees
Lifetime Cap
$86,185
Means-tested fees
How to Use This Calculator
- 1. Select relationship status and care type.
- 2. Enter annual income and assessable assets.
- 3. Review estimated means-tested and total fees.
Reference Settings (2025-26)
Basic daily fee: $66.80/day
Means-tested fee cap: $370.39/day
Annual cap: $35,910.43
Lifetime cap: $86,185.23
Home value cap: $214,884
Disclaimer: This estimate is a guide only and not financial advice. Final fees are determined by Services Australia and your provider.
Basic Daily Fee
$66.80/day
Means-Tested Care Fee
$0.00/day
Means-Tested Fee (annual)
$0/yr
What the Means Test Includes
The aged care means test is the formal financial assessment used to decide whether you pay only the basic daily fee or additional means-tested amounts. In practice, Services Australia assesses two broad areas: your assessable income and your assessable assets. Assessable income can include pension income, superannuation income streams, deemed income from financial investments, rental income, and some other regular earnings.
Assessable assets can include cash, bank balances, shares, managed funds, investment properties, and other non-exempt holdings. Some assets are treated differently depending on your circumstances, especially the former family home. Because each household has a different structure, this test is less about one number and more about your full financial profile at the time of assessment.
How the Means-Tested Care Fee Is Built
Means-tested care fees are generally built from an income component and an asset component. Once your income or assets move above the relevant thresholds, your estimated daily contribution begins to rise. The fee can increase progressively as your financial capacity increases, but daily and policy caps are designed to prevent unlimited exposure.
The most important planning point is that “more assets” or “more income” does not always translate to a simple linear increase in what you pay. Interactions between thresholds, taper rules, exemptions, and caps can materially change outcomes. This is why families often see a large difference between rough assumptions and formal assessment results.
This calculator is best used as a structured estimate before paperwork is finalised. Your legally binding result still comes from official assessment outcomes and provider-issued fee schedules.
Residential Care vs Support at Home
This calculator covers residential aged care for people who entered before 1 November 2025. In-home support now runs under the Support at Home program, which started on 1 November 2025 and replaced Home Care Packages. Support at Home has no basic daily fee and no income-tested fee. Instead you contribute by service category, with clinical care fully government funded and tapered contributions for independence and everyday living services. To estimate those costs, use the Support at Home calculator.
In residential care, accommodation is charged separately from care fees. It may be paid as a refundable lump sum (RAD), a daily payment (DAP), or a combination, depending on provider terms and your circumstances. Two people with similar means-test results can still face different out-of-pocket costs if their accommodation structure differs, so review the means-tested care fee alongside accommodation, not in isolation.
Using the Estimate Before Formal Assessment
Use this estimate to prepare better questions before you sign agreements or choose between providers. A practical approach is to run multiple scenarios: your current income/assets, a conservative higher-cost case, and a lower-cost case where exemptions apply. This gives you a range rather than one optimistic figure.
When reviewing results, focus on affordability over time: daily fee pressure, expected annual outflow, and whether accommodation choices could affect liquidity for 12-24 months. Bringing these scenario outputs to an aged care financial adviser or support coordinator can speed up decisions and reduce the chance of costly surprises after entry into care.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the aged care means test?
The aged care means test is an assessment of your income and assets used to determine how much you'll contribute toward your aged care fees. Services Australia conducts this test to calculate your means-tested care fee and accommodation contribution. The test considers your assessable income, financial assets, and property value to determine your fee category.
How much is the basic daily fee for residential aged care in 2025-26?
The basic daily fee for residential aged care in 2025-26 is $66.80 per day ($467.60 per week, about $24,382 per year). Everyone in residential care pays this fee regardless of income or assets. It is set at 85% of the single basic Age Pension and covers everyday living costs like meals, cleaning, and laundry. Support at Home, the in-home program, has no basic daily fee.
What is the means-tested care fee?
The means-tested care fee is an additional residential aged care fee for people who entered care before 1 November 2025, based on assessed income and assets. It combines an income-tested amount (50% of income above the income free area) and an asset-tested amount (a tapered share of assessable assets above the free area), up to a maximum of $370.39 per day. An annual cap of $35,910.43 and a lifetime cap of $86,185.23 apply. People entering care from 1 November 2025 pay a Non-Clinical Care Contribution and Hotelling Contribution instead.
How are assets assessed for aged care?
For aged care means testing, assessable assets include cash, bank accounts, shares, managed funds, investment properties, and business assets. Your principal home is exempt if a protected person such as a partner still lives there; otherwise the home is counted up to a cap of $214,884. Assets above the free area contribute to the asset-tested amount on a tapered basis, which adds to your means-tested care fee.
What is the income threshold for aged care fees?
Income above the income free area contributes 50% to the income-tested part of your means-tested care fee. For couples, each member is assessed on half of the couple's combined income. Assessable income includes pensions, superannuation income streams, deemed income from financial assets, and rental income. Use the calculator above for an estimate; Services Australia sets your exact fee.
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