Safety & Screening

Red Flags to Watch For When Hiring NDIS Support Workers

The warning signs every self-managing family should watch for when screening NDIS support workers, and how to avoid a costly bad hire.

Kim Matthews
Founder, Sparks Flow
7 min read

A bad hire is expensive and stressful, and at worst it can put the person you support at risk. The good news is that most bad hires show warning signs early. Here are the red flags to watch for when screening NDIS support workers, and how to avoid them.

⚠️Warning

These mistakes are costly and can be unsafe. Spotting them early protects the person you support and your budget.

The warning signs

These are the signs worth taking seriously during screening:

🚩1. No Specific Disability Experience

If they can't discuss specific strategies for the disability of the person you support, that's a major red flag.

What to ask: "Can you describe how you've worked with people with [specific condition] before?"

🚩2. Reluctant to Provide References

Quality support workers have references and are eager to share them.

Red flag: "I don't have references available" or "My previous employers are hard to reach"

🚩3. Unclear About Availability

Vague answers about scheduling often lead to last-minute cancellations.

Warning signs: "I'm pretty flexible" without specific days/times

🚩4. No Questions About the Person They Would Support

Good support workers ask detailed questions about needs, preferences, and routines.

Concerning: Shows no curiosity about the specific needs of the person you support

🚩5. Unprofessional Communication

Poor grammar, late responses, or unprofessional language indicates future problems.

Examples: Text speak in emails, hours-long response delays, casual language

What a bad hire can cost

Getting it wrong is not just stressful, it is expensive. A bad hire can mean paying for emergency replacement care, taking time off work to cover gaps, and recruiting all over again. Careful screening up front is far cheaper than fixing a bad match later.

How to Avoid These Mistakes

Always check references thoroughly

Call at least 2 previous employers and ask specific questions

Start with trial periods

Begin with short shifts to assess reliability and competence

Use specialized platforms

Platforms designed for disability support have better screening

Trust your instincts

If something feels off during interviews, investigate further

Careful screening is worth the time. The safety of the person you support, and your own peace of mind, are worth investing in.

This article is general information only and is not legal advice. Screening and hiring carry legal and privacy obligations, so check the relevant authorities or get advice before acting on your own situation.

Tags:
NDIS red flagsscreeningsafetyhiring mistakes