
If you want to start an NDIS business in Australia, you need the right services, compliance systems, and a clear registration plan from day one.
Starting an NDIS business can be a solid move but it’s not like starting a “normal” service business. You’re stepping into a regulated space where systems, documentation, and quality matter as much as marketing. The good news is: if you build it properly from day one, you’ll avoid the most common reasons providers get stuck (or fail audits) later.
Below is a practical, step-by-step guide you can follow.
Step 1: choose the right NDIS business model to start
First, get clear on what supports you will deliver. Examples include:
- Support coordination
- Daily personal activities (in-home supports)
- Community participation
- Supported Independent Living (SIL)
- Specialist supports (behaviour support, nursing, therapy, etc.)
Then decide: will you be registered or unregistered?
If you’re planning to register, explore our NDIS Registration page for the required documents, evidence, and audit preparation steps.
Registered provider
You must meet NDIS Practice Standards and usually complete a certification/verification audit (depending on what you provide). However, you can access more referral pathways and often look more “trusted” to many participants and stakeholders.
Unregistered provider
You can start faster in some cases, and there’s no NDIS Commission audit at the beginning. However, you still must follow the NDIS Code of Conduct, and you’ll need strong compliance because issues can still be reported to the Commission.
Rule of thumb: If you plan to deliver higher-risk supports (or want to work with certain participants and referral channels), registration is usually the smarter long-term play.
Step 2: research demand for your NDIS business in australia
Next, don’t try to serve everyone. Pick a clear niche such as:
- A location focus (e.g., Western Sydney, Melbourne’s west)
- A specific cohort (psychosocial disability, complex care, ABI, aged 18–35, etc.)
- A service model (fast onboarding, culturally matched support workers, after-hours support)
Meanwhile, do basic demand checks:
- Talk to 5–10 support coordinators (ask what they struggle to find)
- Review local provider competition
- Confirm what support types are most requested in your area
This step saves you months of guessing.
Step 3: Set up your NDIS business structure ( ABN, GST, Banking)
Before you touch registration, get your basics correct:
- Choose a structure (sole trader, company, trust)
- Register your ABN (and business name if needed)
- Set up GST if applicable
- Open a business bank account
- Set up bookkeeping (Xero/MYOB or an accountant)
In addition, plan your service delivery costs early — because NDIS pricing has limits, and your margin depends on rostering, travel time, cancellations, and admin.
Step 4: Learn the rules you’ll be measured against
This is where many new providers get sloppy.
At minimum, understand:
- NDIS Code of Conduct (this applies to everyone registered or not)
- NDIS Practice Standards (especially if registering)
- NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits
- Complaints + incident obligations
- Record keeping expectations
Therefore, treat compliance like your operating system not “paperwork you’ll do later.”
Step 5: NDIS compliance documents and systems you must set up
If you want a smooth registration (and fewer headaches later), build your core system pack early. Most providers need policies/procedures around:
Governance and risk
- Risk management framework + risk register
- Incident management system
- Complaints management
- Privacy and confidentiality
- Continuous improvement
People and HR
- Recruitment and screening process
- Induction + training plan
- Worker Code of Conduct acknowledgment
- Performance and supervision process
Service delivery
- Intake, assessment, and service agreements
- Participant rights and consent
- Progress notes + case notes standards
- Medication support (if relevant)
- Restrictive practices (only if applicable and it’s strict)
However, documents alone would not pass audits if they do not match reality. You need simple workflows your staff can actually follow.
Step 6: NDIS worker screening and safely requirementsddddddddddddddd
Before you onboard clients, your workforce compliance must be tight:
- NDIS Worker Screening Check (required for most roles in most states)
- Working With Children Check (if relevant)
- Police checks (often used as additional screening depending on role/state requirements)
- Staff training (manual handling, infection control, incident reporting, medication if needed)
Also set up:
- Staff onboarding checklist
- Orientation records
- Training register
Auditors love evidence that your system is “alive,” not just written.
Step 7: Get the right insurances
At a minimum (varies by state/services), many providers hold:
- Public liability
- Professional indemnity
- Workers compensation (if you employ staff)
- Vehicle insurance (if transporting participants)
- Cyber/privacy cover (optional but increasingly sensible)
So, don’t skip this it’s one of the first things clients and partners ask about.
Step 8: NDIS provider registration steps to start in NDIS business
If you’re registering with the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, the flow is usually:
- Create account and submit application
- Choose registration groups (based on your supports)
- Complete the self-assessment / evidence preparation
- Engage an approved quality auditor
- Undergo the audit (verification or certification)
- Fix any non-conformities (corrective actions)
- Final decision by the Commission
Tip: Your audit outcome depends heavily on your evidence. For example:
- Incident register + incident forms (even sample scenarios if brand new)
- Complaints register
- Staff files showing screening + training
- Service agreements, intake forms, consent forms
- Risk assessments
- Continuous improvement log
Finally, keep everything organised in folders (by standard + evidence type). It makes audits faster and less stressful.
Step 9: Set up systems to run your NDIS business (not just register)
Registration is the start. Running an NDIS business needs systems that don’t fall apart when you get busy.
Useful basics:
- CRM (even a simple one)
- Rostering + timesheets
- Secure storage for participant records
- Incident/complaints tracking
- Templates for progress notes and service delivery reports
If you can’t show clean records, you’ll struggle during complaints, audits, or plan review support.
Step 10: Get clients for you NDIS business without junk lead
Once you’re ready to deliver supports, build referral pathways:
- List on the NDIS Provider Finder (if registered)
- Build relationships with support coordinators and plan managers
- Network with local community organisations
- Use a clear website with a simple enquiry form
However, avoid “wide open” marketing that invites spam. Use:
- Location targeting (Australia only)
- Qualification questions on forms (state, suburb, service needed)
- A business email-based intake rather than public WhatsApp number everywhere
Common mistakes that slow new NDIS providers down
- Picking registration groups without understanding what they require
- Writing policies that don’t match real operations
- No training evidence, no staff files, no registers
- Weak incident/complaints systems
- Doing marketing before being service-ready
- Relying on WhatsApp as the main intake channel (spam nightmare)
Quick checklist to start your NDIS business
- Services + niche decided
- Registered vs unregistered decided
- ABN + business setup complete
- Core compliance policies + registers created
- Worker screening + onboarding system ready
- Insurances in place
- (If registering) audit pathway planned and evidence organised
- Systems for rostering, notes, records ready
- Website + intake process set up (with anti-spam questions)
For official guidance, refer to the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission website and the current NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits.