Support Network has been a highly efficient way to organise home care support services for my 86 year old father
We help you find a home that's right for you
Great Value
Local NDIS Provider
Culturally Matched Support Workers
Nurse On-Call
Call Today 1300 671 931 and Save.
Great Value
Local NDIS Provider
Culturally Matched Support Workers
Nurse On-Call
Housework, organising transport, gardening, meal prep, chores, activities.
Showering, hoist transfer, exercise assistance, palliative care, 24 hr support, complex support
Wound care, medication management, respite support, 24 hr care, complex care.
Occupational therapy, psychology, physiotherapy and speech therapy.
Support for complex needs, behaviours and conditions
Tailored support & clinical support for complex health needs.
Create a team to support with all your requirements
Support to achieve positive solutions & change
Plan Management
Behavior Support
Specialised Disability Accommodation
Support Coordination
We have a rigorous approval process for all the care and support workers on our database
All workers on our site must have police and Working With Children Checks
Please get in touch if you have any questions or concerns
We provide liability insurance for Support Workers. Click here for more info.
Only release payment when the task is completed to your satisfaction.
Choose from a range of speciality services.
We save you money, so you get more care
We strive to provide leading Clinicians
To start, set up your own profile following our simple steps.
Search through our curated database of quality support and care workers.
Get in touch with support workers directly and hire the person who is right for you.
Our system handles the payment process and admin, making things easier for you.
We make it easy for you to connect with the right care and support worker for your family. Start looking for someone today.
Support Network has been a highly efficient way to organise home care support services for my 86 year old father
The customer support team is incredibly responsive. They helped me navigate the platform and answered all my questions quickly.
My support worker goes above and beyond every single day. I never thought finding such dedicated help could be this easy
The fact that Support Network works seamlessly with NDIS is a huge plus. It’s made accessing support services so much more straightforward
It’s refreshing to find a platform that priorities both safety and quality. I wouldn’t go anywhere else for support services
Support Network connected me with a support worker who assists with everything from personal care to community engagement, making my daily life much more manageable.
Knowing that all support workers have undergone police and Working With Children Checks provided me with peace of mind when selecting care for my loved one.
Highly recommend, made finding the right support workers easy
I've been using support network for 3 years to help me find skilled and reliable support workers. Tanish and his team have developed an excellent database that makes finding and contracting workers simple and due to thier vetting process and recruitment style, I've been able to make sustainable working relationships with thier staff which give my clients continuity and allows them to really feel a part of my team! .... cannot praise support network, Tanish and his team high enough!
Support network helps my business to find quality support staff
Support Network isn’t a company that hands people a list of services and walks away. In Ingleburn, we take the time to understand what’s going on in someone’s daily life. Not the surface-level stuff, but the parts that keep piling up. Things that don’t look like much to others but can weigh down a person over time. That’s what we help with so people can get on with life without feeling overwhelmed.
Each person comes with their own pace, habits, and ways of doing things. We don’t try to change that. We shape the support around it. The homes we offer aren’t about filling rooms, they're about creating a place where people feel like they can just be, without having to explain everything over and over. It’s not a service, it's a place where stress gets softer, where pressure fades a little, and where support becomes part of daily life without standing out too much.
We stay close to what’s real. If someone needs help getting ready, or reminders to take their medication, or a way to get to their appointment on time without rushing or stress, we take care of it. Quietly. Steadily. And it’s not just one-off help it’s built into how the day flows. The living arrangements are made to reduce strain. Everything from meals to cleaning to personal care gets managed in a way that feels calm, not clinical.
That’s what makes us a trusted NDIS provider in Ingleburn. We don’t just talk about personalised support, we deliver it, every day, without fanfare. We use the support plan to build care that fits, not care that forces people to fit. And that’s how people start to feel settled again. That’s how home becomes more than a roof over the head; it becomes a place where you can start again.
When someone moves into a Supported Independent Living home, it’s not about adding more services into their life it’s about removing what’s been getting in the way. At Support Network, the kind of support we provide isn’t loud or obvious. It’s the kind that slips into the background and quietly makes each day smoother.
Our SIL homes in Ingleburn are built around the idea that people do better when they’re not stuck managing everything alone. Some things feel small, like planning meals or doing laundry. Others are heavier keeping track of medication, making it to health checkups, trying to stay on top of the NDIS plan. All these pieces are taken care of with a calm, steady hand. It’s not a checklist. It’s daily life, handled side by side.
Here’s what we support inside these homes:
These aren’t services you’ll see listed on a fridge. These are the quiet things that make life easier, things that let a person relax, take control, and live without everything feeling like a struggle. Our SIL homes in Ingleburn are built on that idea. Support that blends in, never overwhelms, but always makes a difference.
It’s not about big systems or fixed plans. It’s just about making life a bit easier when it’s been hard for too long. If someone has a mental health condition or lives with a functional impairment, daily life can get stuck. Not because they’re not trying, but because too much has built up. Supported Independent Living is that steady kind of help that doesn’t feel loud or obvious. It’s just there, quietly filling the gaps, keeping things steady.
Some people need help remembering things. Others just need someone nearby in case the day turns heavy. Maybe it’s just support with basic routines, meals, hygiene, appointments. Nothing over the top. Just regular help that doesn’t draw attention. And over time, that quiet support turns into confidence. It makes a person feel like they’ve got a bit more say again. That they don’t have to stay stuck.
It can happen in a shared place, or in their own apartment, or even somewhere in between. It’s not about location, it’s about what feels manageable. It fits into life slowly. It doesn’t demand change. It just shows up, keeps pace, and lets the person decide what comes next. That’s what it is. That’s all it needs to be.
Not everyone wants the same thing. Some want quiet. Others want company. Some need lots of help. Others just need someone nearby. That’s why we don’t hand people one option. We show them what’s out there and figure it out together. No push. Just space to choose.
In Ingleburn, these aren’t just housing options. These are ways people start again. Not from scratch, but from where they are right now. We’re not here to push them forward. We’re here to steady the ground so they can take the next step on their own terms. That’s it. That’s the point.
Trust isn’t built through long talks or polished reports. It comes from what people see when they stay close for long enough. Families in Ingleburn come to us unsure, sometimes a bit tired, often protective. And slowly, through small things, they start letting go not because we ask, but because they see what happens when someone’s finally in the right hands.
They see support workers who don’t just follow a plan, but notice when something’s changed. They see care that adjusts without being told to. They see us remember small details that were only mentioned once. It’s not one big moment that builds trust, it's a string of quiet ones. When the routine holds, when a bad day doesn’t throw everything off, when the person starts smiling more, talking more, doing more, that's when families know.
What trust looks like in real life:
This is why families trust us. Not because we say the right thing but because we do the right thing when no one’s watching.
Most people who reach out to us don’t have it all figured out. They’re not sure what SIL covers, or how funding works, or who even makes the decisions. That’s okay. No one is expected to know all the answers before they begin. We’ve worked with people who were just starting the process, and others who’ve been through it before. Either way, our job is to stand beside them not ahead, not behind just close enough to keep things steady.
There are a few things that usually come up. To apply for SIL, someone needs to have a functional impairment or mental health needs that make daily living harder without support. An Occupational Therapist is often involved in doing assessments, and the NDIS looks at that to decide what kind of support funding might be approved. If it’s a shared home, there’s usually a residential tenancy agreement involved too, but we help walk through that when the time comes.
It can sound like a lot, and sometimes it is. But no one walks it alone. We help with paperwork. We sit in on meetings. We explain things more than once if needed. This isn’t about ticking boxes, it's about building something that holds together long-term. We’ve done it many times. We’ll do it with you too.
We don’t match people with houses. That’s not how it works here. What we do is spend time listening to how a person moves through the day. What makes them feel calm. What kind of space gives them room to breathe. Whether they like noise or quiet. Whether the sunlight in the kitchen matters or if a garden makes things better.
Sometimes someone needs outdoor space where they can sit alone. Others need a layout that’s easy to move through. Maybe it’s about being close to family. Maybe it’s about being far from a loud road. These aren’t big things on a form, but they change how a person feels when they wake up every morning. We work with property managers, but not to just fill a room we work with them so we can shape the space around the person, not the other way around.
What we look for isn’t just a housing opportunity. It’s a place where someone can build a rhythm. Not just a roof. Something that actually fits. If that takes time, we wait. If it means saying no to a house that looks fine on paper, we say no. We’d rather get it right than get it done fast. That’s how the right home becomes more than a home. It becomes part of the support itself.
It mostly depends on the kind of support someone needs day to day. If basic tasks like cooking, getting dressed, or managing appointments are becoming harder because of disability or health conditions, SIL might help. These support services are not just about doing things for someone, they're about working with them to build steady routines. Allied Health Professionals often help figure out what kind of support is needed, and care plans are shaped around what works best at home, not what’s on paper.
Yes, SIL isn’t just personal activities or home care. It’s also about emotional and social support. Things like helping someone stay involved in the community, joining local groups, or just having someone to talk to. Social and emotional wellbeing matters too. It’s all part of building a balanced life, not just getting through the day. Support Coordination makes sure everything is linked, the plan, the people, and the support behind it.
That’s fine. SIL works alongside other services. The National Disability Insurance Scheme covers different kinds of support SIL is just one part. Plan management can help keep everything in order so funding is used the right way. If you’re already getting support at home, we look at what’s working, what’s missing, and how SIL can fill the gaps without repeating what you already have.
Yes. That’s something we hold close. Personalised care isn’t just about what someone needs, it's also about how they live, what matters to them, what they believe in. Culture, routine, family ties, even food preferences we try to shape the support around all of it. It’s not always perfect from day one, but we keep listening and adjusting. Support should feel familiar, not foreign.
It’s not just one group. There’s a mix of Support Coordinators, Allied Health Professionals, community workers. Everyone brings something different. Some focus on mobility needs. Others help with mental health or social connections. It’s a kind of collaborative learning between the team and the person we’re supporting. We believe in social justice, but not in theory in the way we treat people and how we work with them every day.
Read more