Skip to main content
AI-Powered · Support Letter Generator

Your story,
in the right words.

Writing to the NDIA, LAC, or a review tribunal is stressful. Tell us about your disability and what you need — we'll draft a professional support letter using correct NDIS language, ready in seconds.

Correct NDIS language350–500 word letterPlain English — Grade 8Copy or download instantly
Support Letter Generator
Try free

When do you need an NDIS support letter?

A well-written support letter can be the difference between getting the support you need and being declined. Knowing when to use one — and how to write it properly — is one of the most important skills for navigating the NDIS.

30%

of NDIS plan reviews result in reduced funding — a strong letter can help reverse this

7

key elements every effective NDIS support letter must include

48hrs

average time participants spend writing a support letter manually — we do it in seconds

An NDIS support letter is a formal document submitted to the NDIA, a Local Area Coordinator (LAC), a plan manager, or a review tribunal. It explains who you are, how your disability affects your daily life, what supports you are requesting, and why those supports are reasonable and necessary under the NDIS Act.

Participants typically need a support letter during their initial planning meeting, at a plan review when requesting changes, during an internal review after a funding decision, or when taking a case to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). A letter may also be required when requesting a new provider, a change in plan management type, or additional funding mid-plan.

The NDIA uses specific language when assessing requests. Terms like “reasonable and necessary supports”, “functional impact”, and “goals” are defined in the NDIS Act and must be used correctly. A letter that uses everyday language without these terms may not clearly communicate your needs to a planner, even if the underlying need is genuine.

Support Letter Generator uses Claude AI to translate your plain-English description of your disability and needs into a professionally structured letter that uses the correct NDIS terminology. The letter follows the structure that planners and tribunal members expect: greeting, purpose statement, disability and functional impact, supports requested with justification, expected outcomes, and a closing with signature block.

Every letter generated includes a clear disclaimer reminding you to have it reviewed by a qualified Support Coordinator, LAC, or legal representative before submitting. This tool is a starting point, not a substitute for professional advice — especially for tribunal matters.