If you have Support Coordination funding in your NDIS plan, you may be wondering what it actually means — and whether it's worth using. Here's a simple, honest explanation.
What Is Support Coordination?
Support Coordination is an NDIS-funded service where a qualified coordinator helps you understand and make the most of your NDIS plan. Think of your support coordinator as a trusted guide who knows the NDIS system inside out — so you don't have to figure it all out alone.
A support coordinator can help you:
- Understand what your NDIS funding can and can't be used for
- Find and connect with the right providers for your needs
- Set up and review your service agreements
- Coordinate supports across multiple providers
- Problem-solve when things change or go wrong
- Prepare for your NDIS plan review
- Build your own skills to manage supports independently over time
Who Needs Support Coordination?
Not everyone has Support Coordination in their NDIS plan, but you may benefit from it if:
- You are new to the NDIS and finding the system confusing
- You have complex support needs across multiple providers
- You are going through a significant life change (new diagnosis, leaving hospital, moving house)
- You feel your current plan isn't working as well as it should
- You want help preparing for an upcoming plan review
Did you know? If you don't currently have Support Coordination funded in your plan, you can request it at your next plan review. A support coordinator or allied health professional can write a letter of support explaining why it would benefit you.
Two Levels of Support Coordination
Support Coordination
Helps you build skills to understand and use your plan effectively. Suitable for most participants who need guidance navigating the NDIS.
Specialist Support Coordination
For participants with complex needs requiring a qualified specialist — such as those with multiple diagnoses, high-risk situations, or complex living arrangements.
What a Support Coordinator Cannot Do
It's important to understand the boundaries. A support coordinator cannot make decisions for you — their role is to support and inform your choices, not replace them. They also cannot manage your funding directly (that's the role of a plan manager) or provide hands-on personal care.
Support Coordination vs Plan Management — What's the Difference?
Support Coordination helps you navigate your plan, connect with providers, and build your capacity to manage your own supports.
Plan Management handles the financial side — paying invoices from your providers and tracking your funding balance. Many participants have both.
Need Support Coordination in Perth?
Mayah Care Australia offers support coordination services across Perth and all of Western Australia. Our coordinators are responsive, experienced, and genuinely invested in your outcomes.