
Use this NDIS registration checklist to organise your documents, policies, and evidence before your audit.
Registering an NDIS business in Australia isn’t just “submit an application and wait.” It’s a compliance process run by the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, and you’ll be assessed on whether your business can deliver supports safely, consistently, and with proper governance.
The good part is: once you understand the steps and prepare your evidence properly, registration becomes much smoother. So let’s break it down in a practical, real-world way.
What does “NDIS registered provider” actually mean?
An NDIS registered provider is a business approved by the NDIS Commission to deliver certain supports under specific registration groups. Registration is especially important if you want to work with:
- Plan-managed and agency-managed participants (in many situations)
- Supports that require registration (often higher risk supports)
- Referral pathways that prefer registered providers (many coordinators do)
However, registration also means you must meet the NDIS Practice Standards and pass an audit.
For hands-on help preparing your NDIS registration checklist, visit our NDIS Registration page and see what documents and evidence we can help you organise.
Step 1: NDIS Registration checklist – Choose supports and registration groups
First, get clear on what you are actually providing (support coordination, in-home supports, community participation, SIL, behaviour support, etc.). Then choose the correct registration groups that match your services.
This matters because your registration groups affect:
- The type of audit you’ll need (verification or certification)
- The policies, procedures, and evidence you must prepare
- Ongoing compliance expectations
So don’t guess here selecting the wrong registration group is one of the biggest causes of delays.
Step 2: NDIS registration checklist – understand verification vs cerfication audit
Your registration groups generally determine whether you’ll need:
- Verification audit (typically for lower-risk supports), or
- Certification audit (typically for higher-risk supports)
Meanwhile, certification audits are usually more detailed because they assess broader systems like governance, incident management, HR controls, and service delivery quality.
The key point: your audit outcome depends on your systems and evidence, not your intentions.
Step 3: Business essentials to tick off before submitting your NDIS registration
Before you even start the application, make sure your core business basics are in place:
- ABN and business structure (company/sole trader as relevant)
- Insurance (public liability, professional indemnity, workers comp if employing)
- HR process for recruitment and screening
- A secure system for storing participant records
In addition, you should have a simple “how we operate” workflow. Auditors look for practical implementation not just nice documents.
Step 4: documents and register you will need in your NDIS registration checklist
This is where most providers either win or struggle.
You’ll typically need policies/procedures and proof of implementation for areas like:
Governance and risk
- Risk management policy + risk register
- Incident management policy + incident register
- Complaints management policy + complaints register
- Privacy/confidentiality and record management
- Continuous improvement policy + improvement log
People and HR
- Recruitment & selection policy
- Worker screening checks process
- Induction and training plan + training register
- Code of conduct acknowledgement
- Supervision/performance process
Service delivery
- Intake and onboarding process
- Service agreements
- Consent and participant rights
- Progress notes / case notes standards
- Feedback and review process
However, documents alone won’t pass an audit if you can’t show evidence that you actually use them. Therefore, you want real templates, registers, and examples ready to show.
Step 5: Submit your NDIS provider registration application
Once your foundations are ready, you submit your application via the NDIS Commission portal.
During the application, you’ll generally:
- Provide business and contact details
- Select registration groups
- Confirm your state/territory operations
- Agree to compliance obligations
- Prepare for the audit stage
At this point, your application becomes much easier if your evidence folders are already organised.
Step 6: Engage an approved quality auditor
Next, you must engage an approved quality auditor (through an auditing body) to complete your verification or certification audit.
A smart move here is to:
- Ask the auditor what evidence they expect upfront
- Confirm timelines and audit format (remote/on-site/hybrid)
- Make sure your policies align with the NDIS Practice Standards you’ll be audited against
Meanwhile, don’t wait until the last minute auditor availability can vary.
Step 7: Complete the audit (and respond to any gaps)
During the audit, you’ll be assessed against relevant parts of the NDIS Practice Standards.
Auditors will usually review:
- Your policies/procedures
- Your registers (incidents, complaints, risk, training)
- Staff records (screening, induction, role descriptions)
- Participant-related templates (service agreement, consent forms, notes)
- How you manage quality and continuous improvement
If there are gaps, you may receive non-conformities and be required to complete corrective actions. In other words, you’ll need to fix specific issues and provide evidence of the fix.
Therefore, keep your corrective actions simple, clear, and well-documented.
Step 8: Auditor submits report → NDIS Commission decision
After your audit is completed and any corrective actions are closed, the auditor submits the audit report. Then the NDIS Commission reviews the outcome and makes a decision on your registration.
Finally, if approved, you’ll become a registered provider for the requested registration groups, and your details may appear in the provider listings as applicable.
What evidence makes registration smoother?
If you want the process to go smoothly, focus on evidence that shows your system is active. For example:
- Completed registers (even if new, with sample scenarios and clear processes)
- Staff onboarding checklist + training register entries
- A sample participant file pack (intake, consent, agreement, notes template)
- Continuous improvement log with at least a few entries
- Risk register with realistic risks and controls
In addition, name your folders clearly (e.g., “Incident Management,” “Complaints,” “HR,” “Service Delivery”) so auditors can find evidence fast.
Final takeaway
The NDIS business registration process in Australia is very doable, but it rewards preparation. If you build your compliance system early, organise evidence properly, and follow the audit pathway step-by-step, your registration journey becomes far less stressful and your business becomes genuinely ready to deliver supports.
For official guidance, refer to the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission website and review the NDIS Practice Standards before you apply.