Aged Care 2025 Regulatory Changes at a Glance

Aged Care 2025 Regulatory Changes at a Glance

The aged care sector in Australia continues to face significant regulatory change, with new compliance requirements reshaping how providers manage their workforce. In 2025, three of the most pressing issues for aged care providers are Fair Work Commission wage increases, the requirement for Registered Nurses (RNs) to be onsite 24/7, and the mandated minimum care minutes. Each of these reforms has major implications for staffing, budgets, and the quality of care.

Fair Work Commission Wage Increases

The Fair Work Commission has continued to prioritise wage growth in the aged care sector following the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety. Recent rulings have increased award wages across key roles, including personal care workers, enrolled nurses, and registered nurses. While this is a positive outcome for staff recognition and retention, providers are grappling with higher payroll costs.

Impact for providers:

  • Increased labour costs impacting operating margins.
  • Greater competition for qualified staff as workers are drawn to higher-paying roles.
  • Pressure to balance wage increases with financial sustainability.

RN 24/7 Requirements

As of July 2023, aged care homes with 60 or more residents are required to have at least one Registered Nurse onsite 24 hours a day, seven days a week. This requirement continues to present challenges in 2025, particularly for regional and rural providers where the RN workforce is already stretched.

Challenges:

  • Difficulty attracting and retaining RNs in a competitive healthcare market.
  • Higher costs associated with ensuring around-the-clock RN coverage.
  • Compliance risk if facilities cannot meet this mandate.

Minimum Care Minutes

From October 2025, aged care facilities must deliver an average of 215 minutes of care per resident per day, with 44 minutes provided by an RN. This increase in mandated care minutes places additional pressure on providers to balance staffing levels with quality care delivery.

Impact:

  • Increased demand for both personal care workers and RNs.
  • Greater complexity in workforce planning and rostering.
  • Risk of sanctions, fines, or reputational damage if compliance targets are not met.

Why This Matters for Providers

The combination of wage increases, RN 24/7 coverage, and care minute requirements means that aged care providers are under unprecedented pressure to deliver safe, high-quality care while managing workforce shortages and financial constraints. Failure to comply not only risks regulatory action but can also damage a provider’s reputation and resident trust.

At Blaze Staffing, we recognise that workforce stability is central to meeting these obligations. We partner with aged care providers to ensure they have access to qualified, reliable staff who can help them remain compliant while delivering the highest standards of care. With our industry expertise and tailored workforce solutions, we support providers in navigating these reforms with confidence.


Final Word

Regulatory changes in aged care are reshaping the way providers manage staffing. Staying informed and proactive is essential. Blaze Staffing is here to help aged care providers navigate these challenges with confidence.

If your organisation is seeking workforce solutions tailored to the aged care sector, contact Blaze Staffing today.


Sources:

  • Fair Work Commission. (2023–2025). Annual Wage Reviews and Aged Care Industry Award Updates. Retrieved from: https://www.fwc.gov.au
  • Department of Health and Aged Care. (2023). Registered Nurse 24/7 Requirements. Retrieved from: https://www.health.gov.au
  • Department of Health and Aged Care. (2025). Aged Care Quality Standards and Care Minute Requirements. Retrieved from: https://www.health.gov.au

Related Blogs

Read news and insights into a variety of industries

Is chasing cheaper labour actually costing you more?

Is chasing cheaper labour actually costing you more? It is tempting, isn’t it? The budget is tight, orders are piling up, and there’s that agency promising they can get you staff at a rate that looks too good to be true. Spoiler alert: it usually is. What looks like a saving on paper often morphs…

Scaling up without slowing down: Workforce planning strategies for peak periods

In Australia’s food, pharmaceutical, and manufacturing industries, demand rarely follows a straight line. Whether it’s the lead-up to Christmas, an unexpected product launch, or fulfilling large-scale export orders, periods of peak production can stretch even the most robust internal teams. Yet without the right workforce planning strategies in place, these surges can become a liability—causing…

Make Sure Your Hiring Practices Aren’t Doing Your Brand Damage.

For businesses operating in fast-paced, high-compliance sectors like manufacturing, food production, and pharmaceuticals, recruitment is often seen as a matter of urgency. You need boots on the ground. You need people yesterday. But here’s the hard truth: if your hiring process is rushed, disjointed, or inconsistent, it’s not just costing you candidates-it’s damaging your brand….

Who Holds the Risk? Why Workforce Management Needs More Than Just ‘Good Enough’ Support

Managing a workforce is no small task. If you’re an Operations Manager, Production Manager, or Business Owner, you already know: when something goes wrong with your staff, the liability ultimately sits with you. In Australia, under Work Health and Safety (WHS) laws, employers (and host businesses using labour hire workers) have significant obligations to ensure…

Want More Shifts? Here’s How to Become a Recruiter’s Go-To Candidate

  If you’re a casual worker looking to pick up more shifts, get first call-ups, or lock in ongoing assignments, here’s some good news: it’s not always about having the most experience. In fact, recruiters often value attitude, reliability, and flexibility just as much- sometimes even more. So, how do you stand out in a…

Meeting FSANZ & GMP Standards starts with the right workforce.

  In highly regulated industries such as food manufacturing, bakery production, and pharmaceuticals, compliance is not just a box-ticking exercise -it’s an operational imperative. Whether you’re producing baked goods for retail shelves or compounding medicines in sterile facilities, strict adherence to food and safety standards is essential. In Australia, these standards are governed primarily by…