The NSW workers’ compensation reforms coming into effect through 2026 represent one of the most significant shifts to the scheme in more than a decade.
For community, health and not-for-profit employers – particularly those operating in psychosocial, disability, child & family, housing and frontline support services – these changes are likely to shape how workplace injury, psychological safety and return-to-work are managed in the year ahead.
Below is a practical overview of what the reforms mean and what organisations should be considering now.
Why the reforms are happening
The NSW workers’ compensation scheme has been under increasing pressure in recent years, driven largely by:
Rapid growth in psychological injury claims
Longer claim durations
Rising employer premiums
Poor return-to-work outcomes
The reform package aims to stabilise the scheme financially while strengthening recovery and return-to-work pathways.
The most important changes for employers
Higher threshold for long-term compensation
Workers will need a higher level of permanent impairment to access long-term weekly payments beyond 130 weeks.
👉 This means fewer workers will qualify for ongoing benefits
👉 Greater emphasis on recovery and return-to-work within the first 2–3 years
For employers, the practical implication is clear: early intervention and return-to-work capability become even more critical.
Stronger focus on return-to-work outcomes
The reforms introduce an additional structured support period for workers with moderate impairment, designed specifically to facilitate re-entry into employment rather than long-term compensation.
This signals a policy shift toward:
Work participation as recovery
Earlier vocational planning
Employer engagement in RTW pathways
Premium stability (short-term)
Premium increases are expected to be moderated in the short term, which may provide some relief for employers experiencing rising workers’ compensation costs.
However, premium stability is closely tied to scheme sustainability — meaning employer practices around prevention and claims management remain central.
What this means for NFP & community employers
Across the social and community services sector, workforce risk profiles differ from those of many industries:
High emotional labour and vicarious trauma exposure
Behavioural risk environments
Fatigue and workload pressures
Complex client cohorts
Shift and casual workforce structures
These factors already contribute to higher psychological injury risk.
The reforms do not reduce that risk, but they change how claims will progress through the scheme.
This makes prevention and recovery capability more important than ever.
Key considerations for 2026
Psychological safety is now a core workforce strategy
Organisations should review:
Psychosocial hazard management
Supervision and debrief structures
Workload and caseload allocation
Exposure to high-risk client situations
Fatigue and shift patterns
Psychological injury remains the fastest-growing claim category in NSW.
Early intervention capability matters more
Because access to long-term compensation is tighter, the first 12–24 months of a claim become critical.
Employers should assess:
How quickly injuries are identified
Manager confidence in early conversations
RTW planning capability
Suitable duties availability
Engagement with treating practitioners
Return-to-work planning must be proactive
For many NFP roles, suitable duty pathways are limited or unclear.
Consider:
Transitional role design
Cross-team or modified duties
Reduced client exposure roles
Administrative or project tasks
Graduated re-entry models
Organisations that can offer meaningful RTW pathways typically see better outcomes and lower premiums.
Leadership capability in psychosocial risk
Frontline leaders are the biggest determinant of both injury risk and recovery success.
Areas to strengthen:
Managing psychological risk
Responding to distress and burnout
Supportive performance conversations
Work adjustment planning
Escalation pathways
Documentation and WHS alignment
The reforms increase scrutiny on:
Reasonable management action
Workplace causation
Employer prevention efforts
Ensure alignment across:
WHS systems
Psychosocial risk frameworks
Incident reporting
Supervision records
RTW documentation
Practical actions for the year ahead
Community and NFP employers may wish to prioritise:
✔ Review psychosocial risk assessments
✔ Audit RTW processes and capability
✔ Train leaders in early intervention
✔ Map suitable duties pathways
✔ Review supervision structures
✔ Strengthen psychological safety strategies
✔ Analyse claims and injury trends
The bigger shift
The direction of the NSW scheme is clear.
It is moving from:
Long-term compensation → recovery and work participation
For the community sector — where workforce wellbeing directly affects service quality — this reinforces something we already know:
👉 Safe, supported staff are essential to safe, supported clients.
Final reflection
While legislative change can feel technical, the real impact sits in day-to-day workplaces — in supervision conversations, workload decisions, and how organisations support people through injury and recovery.
For NFP and human services employers, the reforms are less about compliance and more about capability.
Organisations that invest in psychological safety, early intervention and return-to-work pathways will be best positioned — both for workforce wellbeing and scheme sustainability.
If your organisation is reviewing workforce wellbeing, RTW capability or psychosocial risk approaches in 2026, our team is always happy to share sector insights and emerging practice.


