Specialist Support Coordination referrals for NDIS coordinators
Higher, time-limited coordination for participants in complex situations with significant risk or many services to align — delivered by practitioners with specialist skills.
NDIS registration group: Specialist support coordination
What Specialist SC is under the NDIS
Specialist Support Coordination is the highest of the three levels of support coordination funded under the Capacity Building Supports budget in an NDIS plan. It is a time-limited support delivered by a practitioner with specialist expertise, used where a participant's situation is complex and there is significant or escalating risk, and where standard (Level 2) coordination is not enough to manage it.
The specialist support coordinator works within a specialist framework, often clinical or psychosocial, to reduce complexity and barriers in the participant's support environment, manage risk, and stabilise challenging situations. They coordinate multiple services, respond to crises, and build the participant's capacity so that, over time, they can step down to a lower level of coordination or begin to self-direct their supports.
It sits above Support Connection (Level 1) and Coordination of Supports (Level 2). Because it is funded in Capacity Building rather than Core, the budget is not flexible the way Core is: it can only be spent on the coordination support funded, at the level funded, so a plan needs to name Specialist Support Coordination specifically.
What it covers
- Establishing and stabilising a complex or high-risk support environment
- Coordinating multiple NDIS, mainstream and health services
- Managing significant risk and responding to crisis situations
- Addressing barriers to accessing and maintaining supports
- Applying a specialist clinical or psychosocial lens to coordination
- Liaising with hospitals, justice, housing and other systems
- Reducing complexity so the participant can move to a lower level
- Building participant capacity to coordinate their own supports
- Reporting to the NDIA on outcomes, changes and reassessment
Who it suits
Refer for Specialist Support Coordination when a participant's situation is complex with significant or escalating risk, such as multiple intersecting services, hospital or justice involvement, unstable housing, or a psychosocial crisis, and Level 2 coordination is not sufficient.
It suits participants who need a practitioner with specialist qualifications to stabilise their environment and reduce barriers on a time-limited basis.
Because it is higher-cost and time-limited, it is usually only funded where the NDIA has recognised specific complexity in the participant's plan.
How to refer Specialist SC on Novida
Use Novida to search verified support-coordination providers and shortlist those offering Specialist (Level 3) coordination. Check each provider's registration status against the participant's plan-management type, and confirm they have current capacity to take on a high-intensity, time-limited case and start quickly given the risk involved.
Contact the shortlisted provider directly with a complete referral: the participant's consent to share information, their NDIS number, plan-management type, the relevant support-coordination line items and remaining budget, the goals and risk driving the referral, preferred frequency, and any specialist practitioner requirements. A complete referral lets the provider decide quickly whether they can safely take the case.
Novida is free to use and never sits in the middle of the referral. You contact the provider directly and manage the relationship; Novida only helps you find and compare providers, and does not broker the referral, take a margin, or handle the participant's information.
What to check before you refer
- Confirm the plan funds Specialist Support Coordination (Level 3) specifically, not just Level 2 Coordination of Supports, as the two are funded and priced separately.
- Check the provider can assign a specialist practitioner with qualifications and experience matching the participant's complexity, for example mental health, allied health, social work or nursing.
- Verify the provider's registration status suits the plan-management type, and that they have current capacity to respond quickly to the risk.
Specialist SC — NDIS price limits (2026–27)
- Level 3: Specialist Support Coordination — $190.54 per hour (07_004_0132_8_3)
How it’s priced
Specialist Support Coordination is priced per hour under the NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits (the NDIS Price Guide), at a higher national price limit than Level 2 Coordination of Supports to reflect the specialist practitioner delivering it. Always confirm the current limit and any claimable travel or non-face-to-face rules in the latest published document on ndis.gov.au.
Coordinator FAQs — Specialist SC
- What's the difference between Specialist Support Coordination and regular support coordination?
- Specialist Support Coordination (Level 3) is higher, time-limited coordination delivered by a specialist practitioner for complex situations with significant risk. Level 2 Coordination of Supports handles standard coordination of a participant's services. Level 3 carries a higher price limit and is funded only where the NDIA recognises…
- Does a provider need to be registered to deliver it?
- It depends on how the plan is managed. Agency-managed participants must use NDIS-registered providers, so the provider needs registration in the Support Coordination group. Plan-managed and self-managed participants can use registered or unregistered providers. Support coordination is not a support where registration is legally mandated…
- Is the funding in Core or Capacity Building?
- Capacity Building. Support coordination, including Level 3, sits in the Capacity Building Supports budget under the support coordination category, not Core. That budget is not flexible the way Core is: it can only be spent on the coordination support funded, at the level funded. Confirm the plan shows Specialist Support Coordination…
- How long does Specialist Support Coordination last?
- It is time-limited by design. The NDIA funds it to address a defined period of complexity or crisis, with the goal of stabilising the environment and reducing risk so the participant can move to a lower level of coordination or self-direct. The number of hours is set in the plan. Once the situation stabilises, a plan reassessment usually…
- What qualifications should the specialist support coordinator have?
- A specialist practitioner background relevant to the complexity, commonly mental health, allied health, social work or nursing. The specialist element means the coordinator applies a clinical or psychosocial framework, not just service brokerage. When referring, check the provider can assign someone with the right expertise for the…
- When should I refer for Level 3 rather than Level 2?
- Refer for Level 3 when risk is significant or escalating and Level 2 coordination cannot manage it, such as multiple intersecting services, hospital or justice involvement, unstable housing, or a psychosocial crisis. If the participant's supports are relatively stable and simply need organising, Level 2 Coordination of Supports is the…
- What should a complete referral include?
- Consent to share information, the participant's NDIS number, plan-management type, the relevant support-coordination line items and available budget, the goals and complexity driving the referral, risk information, preferred frequency, and any practitioner requirements. For Level 3 especially, spell out the risk factors and the services…
- Can the same provider deliver both coordination and the participant's other supports?
- It can raise a conflict of interest. Under the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission's conduct rules, providers must identify and manage conflicts and act in the participant's interest. A coordinator arranging services the same organisation also delivers must disclose that and preserve the participant's choice and control. When…
Related NDIS registration groups
How to check a provider’s credentials
- NDIS Commission provider register — NDIS registration
- How worker screening works — Worker screening
- Make a complaint to the NDIS Commission — Complaints & conduct