As an NDIS participant, you have both rights and responsibilities, and understanding them helps you make informed decisions with more confidence.
It is normal to feel unsure about your NDIS rights, provider choices, service agreements, or complaints. You should never feel like you have to work it all out alone. Clear information can make a big difference, especially when you are choosing supports, reviewing services, or trying to solve a problem calmly and confidently.
This page explains NDIS participant rights and responsibilities in simple, clear language. It will help you understand your choices, know what respectful and safe support should look like, use your funding properly, and know where to go if something does not feel right.
Your Rights as an NDIS Participant
You have the right to make choices about your supports and how they are delivered.
The NDIS is built around choice and control. That means you can decide what supports you use, who provides them, and whether a service is working for you. You do not have to stay with a provider that is not acting in your best interests.
You also have the right to be treated fairly and with respect. Support should never make you feel pressured, ignored, unsafe, or uncomfortable.
Your key rights include:
- choosing who delivers your supports
- choosing how your supports are delivered
- changing providers if you are not happy
- asking questions before agreeing to a service
- asking about conflicts of interest
- refusing supports or services you do not want or need
- fair and reasonable pricing
- deciding what personal information you want to share
- being treated with dignity and respect
- receiving support in a safe and professional way
What this means in real life
Your NDIS rights are not just general promises. They are there to help protect your safety, privacy, choices, and independence.
You can ask things like:
- Why is this support being recommended?
- Is this the best option for me?
- Are there other choices available?
- What will this cost?
- Do I have to use this provider?
Imagine this: A provider recommends extra services, but you are not sure you really need them. You are allowed to stop, ask questions, and take time before agreeing.
Your Responsibilities Under the NDIS
You are responsible for using your NDIS funding lawfully and in line with your plan.
This does not mean the process should feel stressful. It simply means your funding should be used for supports that fit the rules, match your disability-related needs, and connect to your NDIS plan.
A simple way to think about it is this: before spending NDIS funds, make sure the support is something the NDIS can fund and something your plan is meant to cover.
Your responsibilities include:
- using your NDIS funds lawfully
- making sure supports are related to your disability
- making sure supports align with your NDIS plan
- checking that the support is not funded by another system or organisation
- keeping proper records if you self-manage your funding
If you self-manage, you also need to keep records
If you self-manage your NDIS funding, you need to keep evidence of what you spend. This helps show that your funding has been used correctly.
Records may include:
- service agreements
- invoices
- receipts
- bank statements
- payslips
- payroll records
These records should be kept in an organised way so you can find them if needed. Good record-keeping is an important NDIS responsibility because it protects you and your funding.
Choosing the Right Provider
You have the right to choose a provider that is safe, suitable, and right for your needs.
A provider is a person, business, charity, organisation, or sole trader that delivers NDIS support. Some providers are large organisations, while others may be small local businesses or independent workers.
Finding the right NDIS provider is not only about availability. It is also about trust, communication, qualifications, reliability, and whether the provider respects your goals.
What to look for in a provider?
When considering how to find the right NDIS provider, you must look beyond price.
Consider:
- whether they understand your support needs
- whether they listen to you
- whether they explain things clearly
- whether they respect your choices
- whether they are reliable and professional
- whether their services suit your goals and routine
Registered and unregistered providers
There are two broad types of NDIS providers:
- Registered providers
- Unregistered providers
Registered providers are regulated by the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission, and they must meet the NDIS Practice Standards.
All providers, whether registered or unregistered, must follow the NDIS Code of Conduct.
Your funding type affects your provider choice
Who you can use depends on how your funding is managed.
- If your plan is NDIA-managed, you can only use registered providers.
- If your plan is plan-managed, you can use registered or unregistered providers.
- If your plan is self-managed, you can use registered or unregistered providers.
If you are using an unregistered provider, check things like:
- qualifications
- insurance
- training
- experience
- safety checks
Service Agreements and Clear Expectations
A service agreement helps you and your provider understand exactly what has been agreed. It reduces confusion, prevents misunderstandings, and makes it easier to raise concerns later if something goes wrong.
A service agreement is a written agreement between you and your provider. It should explain what support will be provided, how it will be provided, and what both sides agree to. This is one of the simplest ways to protect yourself early.
A good service agreement should clearly cover:
- what supports will be provided
- how often will support be provided
- how much will the support cost
- how payments will be handled
- how changes can be made
- how either side can end the agreement
- how problems or disputes can be raised
Important things to remember about Service Agreements
A service agreement is not something you have to accept without discussion. You can ask questions, request changes, and take time before agreeing.
You can also ask someone you trust to help you review it, such as:
- a family member
- a friend
- a nominee
- an advocate
- another support person
Imagine this: the provider gives you a long agreement full of terms you do not understand. You do not need to rush. You can ask for a plain-language explanation and get support before signing anything.
To learn more about NDIS agreements, visit the official NDIS Service Agreements page.
Conflicts of Interest and Your Right to Ask Questions
You have the right to ask questions if a provider recommendation does not feel clear, fair, or fully in your best interests.
A conflict of interest may happen when a provider recommends a service, worker, or arrangement that benefits them in some way. This does not always mean something improper has happened, but it does mean you are allowed to ask for transparency.
Questions you can ask
If something feels uncertain, you can ask:
- Do you have a conflict-of-interest policy?
- Are you connected to the service or provider you are recommending?
- Are there other options available?
- Why do you believe this is the best option for me?
- Can I have time to think about it?
If you are concerned, you can:
- speak with the provider directly
- ask for the issue to be explained clearly
- monitor the situation
- raise concerns formally
- change providers if needed
- ask an advocate or trusted person to support you
Imagine this: you are being pushed toward one provider, but no one is explaining the alternatives. That is exactly the kind of situation where asking questions matters. You do not need to stay silent just because the provider sounds confident.
When Something Goes Wrong
You have the right to speak up, make a complaint, and choose a different provider if a service is not safe, respectful, or working properly.
Problems can happen in different ways. Sometimes the issue is obvious, like unsafe care or poor behaviour. Other times it may be more subtle, such as not being listened to, being overcharged, or feeling pressured into services you do not want.
Signs that something may not be right
Common concerns can include:
- poor quality support
- workers not turning up as agreed
- not receiving the service you expected
- unsafe or disrespectful behaviour
- being ignored when you ask for changes
- poor value for money
- faulty supports or equipment
- pressure to choose a provider without other options being discussed
What you can do first
If you feel comfortable, start by raising the issue with the provider. Many problems can be addressed early when expectations are made clear.
You can:
- explain what the issue is
- say what change you want
- ask for a meeting or a response
- bring a trusted person with you
- keep notes about what happened
If the issue is not resolved
If the problem continues or you do not feel safe raising it directly, you can seek outside help.
Depending on the issue, you may contact:
- a family member or trusted support person
- an advocate
- your NDIS planner or Local Area Coordinator
- the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission
The NDIS Commission can help with concerns about:
- provider behaviour
- worker conduct
- safety
- service quality
- unfair pricing
- poor complaint handling
If the issue is urgent
If there is an immediate risk of harm or a serious safety concern, call 000.
If the problem relates to a mainstream service rather than an NDIS-funded support, the concern may need to be raised with the organisation that provided that service.
Safety, Respect and Provider Conduct
As a core part of NDIS participant rights, providers and workers must treat you with respect, protect your safety, and act honestly. Support should not only be available, it should also be safe, competent, respectful, and delivered in a way that protects your dignity.
The NDIS Code of Conduct sets clear expectations for how providers and workers should behave.
Providers and workers should:
- respect your rights
- respect your privacy
- respect your decisions
- support your independence
- communicate honestly and clearly
- provide supports safely and competently
- act with integrity, honesty, and transparency
- respond to concerns that affect quality and safety
- take steps to prevent abuse, neglect, violence, exploitation, and misconduct
Here’s what respectful support should feel like
Good support should make you feel:
- heard
- safe
- respected
- informed
- comfortable asking questions
- confident in your choices
You should never feel like your voice does not matter. You should also never feel threatened, dismissed, or pressured for raising a concern.
Fair pricing matters too.
Respect also includes fair pricing. You should be able to understand what you are being charged for and why. If a price seems high or unclear, it is reasonable to ask for a proper explanation.
What NDIS Funding Can and Cannot Be Used For
NDIS funding can only be used for supports that the NDIS can fund.
This is one of the most important parts of using your plan correctly. Not every useful service or everyday cost can be paid for with NDIS funds. The support must fit within NDIS rules and relate to your disability needs.
NDIS funding should be used for supports that:
- are related to your disability
- connect to your plan and goals
- fit NDIS funding rules
- are considered appropriate under the scheme
NDIS funding cannot be used for things that:
- fall outside NDIS funding rules
- are the responsibility of another service system
- are not approved NDIS supports
This is where many participants get confused, and that is understandable. A support may seem helpful, but that does not always mean it is NDIS-funded.
Replacement supports
In some cases, a participant may ask for a replacement support.
A replacement support:
- is not an extra support
- replaces an existing funded support
- must be approved properly
- cannot just be purchased without following the rules
If you are ever unsure whether something is funded, it is better to check first than assume.
The NDIS and Other Services
The NDIS is only one part of the broader support system for people with disabilities.
People with disabilities may also use other government and community services. This is important because some support services sit outside the NDIS, even if they are still important in daily life.
Other services may include:
- health services
- education services
- employment supports
- justice services
- family and community services
Imagine this: you need support, but it is not clear whether it belongs under the NDIS, the health system, or another service. That confusion is common. Understanding that the NDIS is not the only support system can make these boundaries easier to understand.
Where to Get Help?
If you are unsure about your rights, your funding, a provider, or a complaint, these are places you can turn to for support:
- your NDIS planner
- your Local Area Coordinator
- your early childhood partner, if relevant
- your My NDIS contact
- a trusted family member
- a nominee
- a friend
- an advocate
- the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission
You do not have to manage every issue on your own. Asking for help is not a sign that you are doing something wrong. It is often the smartest step.
A simple guide to who may help with what
For questions about using funds or understanding your plan:
- NDIS planner
- Local Area Coordinator
- My NDIS contact
For concerns about provider quality, worker conduct, or safety:
- NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission
For emotional or practical support during a difficult situation:
- family member
- friend
- nominee
- advocate
- trusted support person
For urgent danger or immediate harm:
- call 000
Final Note
Knowing your rights helps you make safer, stronger, and more informed decisions.
You do not need to memorise every rule to protect yourself. What matters most is knowing that you can ask questions, expect respect, make choices, change providers, and seek help when something does not feel right.
That is the heart of NDIS rights, NDIS participant rights, and the wider human rights framework NDIS participants should expect: choice, dignity, safety, accountability, and support that respects you as a person.
