
Writing an NDIS business plan is less about fancy words and more about proving one thing: you can deliver supports safely, consistently, and profitably. So instead of a generic “startup plan,” your NDIS plan should clearly explain services, compliance, staffing, operations, and how you’ll get clients.
Below is a simple, detailed structure you can copy and fill in.
1) Business Summary for an NDIS business plan
Start with a short overview (5–8 lines). Keep it clear.
Include:
- Business name + location(s) you’ll serve
- What supports you’ll offer (e.g., in-home supports, community access, support coordination)
- Registered vs unregistered (and your timeline if registering)
- Your target participants (who you help best)
- What makes your service model different (without hype)
If you’re building your NDIS business plan for registration readiness, visit our NDIS Registration page to see the documents and evidence you’ll need.
2) Services and registration scope in your NDIS business plan
Next, list your core services and how you’ll deliver them.
Write:
- Primary supports (your main money-makers)
- Secondary supports (nice-to-have)
- Service boundaries (what you will NOT do this reduces risk)
- Your operating hours and response times
If registering: add your registration groups and why you chose them.
However, don’t pick groups just to “look bigger” pick what you can actually deliver.
3) Market and demand (your local reality)
This part should be practical, not academic.
Cover:
- Your service area (suburbs/region)
- Demand signals (support coordinator feedback, local shortages, waitlists)
- Competitor snapshot (who’s strong, who’s weak, where gaps exist)
- Your niche (e.g., psychosocial, complex care, culturally matched staff)
4) Compliance and quality system in an NDIS business plan
This is the section many new providers skip and it bites them later.
Explain your plan for:
- Incident management (how you record, respond, review)
- Complaints handling (timeframes, escalation, outcomes)
- Risk management (risk register + controls)
- Privacy and record keeping (secure storage, access control)
- Continuous improvement (how you learn and update)
Additionally, mention your approach to:
- Staff screening (NDIS Worker Screening, WWCC where relevant)
- Training plan (induction, refreshers, supervision)
5) Operations plan for an NDIS business plan ( day-to-day delivery )
Now explain your workflow from enquiry to service delivery.
Include:
- Enquiry → intake → suitability check → service agreement
- Scheduling/rostering approach
- Support worker shift process (notes, handover, escalations)
- Progress notes standards and file management
- Participant reviews and plan review support (if applicable)
Transition words: Therefore, as a result, finally
6) Team and staffing plan
Be honest here. Auditors and partners can tell when it’s unrealistic.
Cover:
- Roles you need now vs later (owner/operator, support workers, coordinator, admin)
- Recruitment plan (where you’ll hire)
- Onboarding checklist (screening, induction, training, buddy shifts)
- Supervision and performance process
If you’re starting solo, say so—and explain how you’ll manage coverage and risk.
7) marketing and referrals in an NDIS business plan
Keep this grounded.
Include:
- Referral sources (support coordinators, plan managers, community orgs)
- Your website + enquiry process (qualification questions reduce spam)
- Meta/Google strategy (location targeting, lead forms, filtering)
- Conversion process (how you respond, timeframes, follow-ups)
In other words: don’t just say “we’ll run ads” explain what happens after a lead comes in.
8) Financial plan section of an NDIS business plan
You don’t need a 40-tab spreadsheet, but you do need believable numbers.
Include:
- Pricing approach (NDIS price limits apply)
- Expected hours per week/month (realistic ramp-up)
- Key costs: wages, super, insurance, software, travel, admin, auditor fees (if registering)
- Break-even estimate: “How many billable hours do we need to cover costs?”
Quick tip: cashflow matters more than “profit on paper,” especially if you’re paying staff weekly.
9) Risks and controls
This is where you show maturity.
List 8–12 realistic risks, like:
- Staff shortages
- Incident escalation
- Documentation gaps
- Cancellations and no-shows
- Complaint/reputation issues
- Burnout and rostering failures
Then add controls (training, supervision, rostering rules, checklists, audits).
10) Implementation timeline for an NDIS business plan (30–90 days)
End with a simple timeline so your plan feels actionable.
Example:
- Weeks 1–2: policies, registers, onboarding pack, website intake
- Weeks 3–4: recruitment + screening + initial referrals
- Month 2: onboarding participants + stabilise service delivery
- Month 3: review systems + tighten compliance evidence + expand marketing
NDIS business plan template you can copy and use
Use this as your headings:
- Business Summary
- Services & Registration Scope
- Target Market & Demand
- Compliance & Quality System
- Operations Workflow
- Staffing & Training Plan
- Marketing & Referrals Plan
- Financial Plan & Pricing
- Risks & Controls
- 90-Day Implementation Timeline
For official guidance, refer to the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission and review the NDIS Practice Standards relevant to your services.