Find dyspraxia support in Round Corner, NSW
Compare local providers and the support types that usually matter for dyspraxia. Skip the generic directory listings, get a real shortlist.
For dyspraxia
- Matched to the support types that fit dyspraxia
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What people with Dyspraxia in Round Corner usually need help with
Dyspraxia, also known as developmental coordination disorder (DCD), is a neurological condition that affects motor planning and coordination, making everyday physical tasks more difficult. NDIS participants with dyspraxia often benefit from occupational therapy and physiotherapy to develop motor skills, build self-care independence, and participate in school and community activities. Early identification and tailored support can greatly improve outcomes for children and adults with DCD.
For developmental conditions, the strongest local pages are the ones that help families compare actual fit: who understands sensory needs, who can support school or childcare transitions, and who can work on the same goals across therapy and day-to-day support rather than offering isolated sessions.
What people usually compare locally
- • Whether therapists have experience with developmental and neurodivergent conditions locally
- • Availability of early intervention or specialist programs in the area
- • Staff continuity and how well workers adapt to communication differences
- • Wait times for key therapies like speech, OT, and behaviour support
Services and providers to compare first in Round Corner
For developmental conditions, compare the services that remove the biggest daily bottlenecks first: communication, regulation, behaviour, routines, and participation. The strongest providers usually coordinate across therapy and support work instead of leaving families to stitch everything together. Use the service links below to pressure-test provider fit, not just to browse every option in the area.
Best Dyspraxia Support provider near me
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They are committed to delivering high-quality NDIS services tailored to meet the unique needs of each participant.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
How we rank providers
Rankings in Round Corner are based on real outcomes between providers and families on our platform. They are recalculated daily and cannot be purchased or influenced by advertising.
- How this list is built. Providers shown here offer therapy, allied health, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, psychology, support work, and social and community support, the support types most relevant to dyspraxia. They are then ranked by demonstrated experience with dyspraxia, providers who have actively claimed and supported dyspraxia referrals rank above those who only list it as a capability.
- Outcomes with families. We measure what happens after a family contacts a provider. Providers where families report positive outcomes rank higher. Multiple signals are weighted across a rolling window.
- Condition-specific track record. Providers who have accepted and worked with dyspraxia referrals on Carevo rank above those who only list the condition as a capability. We weight providers using their demonstrated experience with this cohort, not self-declared specialisations.
- Service match. Providers are ranked by how closely their registered services and capabilities match what you are searching for.
- Registration and compliance. NDIS registered and government-approved aged care providers are weighted for meeting quality and safeguards standards.
- Local presence. Providers confirmed in Round Corner rank above those covering only the broader region.
What does "Trusted" mean? The Trusted badge is awarded to providers with a consistent record of positive outcomes with families on our platform. It is based on multiple behavioural signals and family feedback, and it cannot be purchased.
1
providers in Round Corner
26,738
providers nationally
The Dyspraxia provider network on Carevo
11 providers on Carevo have supported people with dyspraxia through real matched requests.10 are registered NDIS providers. Matching is based on real provider history, not self-described claims.
Supports they provide
- • Support workers
- • Social and community support
- • Therapy
- • Allied health
Where providers are
Providers experienced with dyspraxia are listed in more than 60 suburbs across Western Australia, New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria, and other states.
Often supported alongside
Providers who support dyspraxia most often also have experience with Psychosocial Disability, Amputation, Intellectual Disability, Autism, and Vision Impairment.
About Round Corner, NSW
Providers listed
1
How providers are verified
Every provider listed is cross-checked against the official Australian registers before appearing here. This is separate from the Trusted badge, which reflects platform outcomes.
NDIS register cross-check
Every NDIS-registered provider listed is verified against the NDIS Commission register. Registration numbers and approved support groups are pulled from the official register, not self-declared.
Source: NDIS Quality and Safeguards CommissionAged care approval status
Aged care approved status reflects the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care approved provider list, including service types and category groups.
Source: Department of Health and Aged CareABN verification
Every listing includes an Australian Business Number. Providers without a valid, active ABN do not appear in our directory.
Source: Australian Business RegisterComplaints process
If you have a concern about any provider, you can lodge a complaint with the NDIS Commission or the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission at any time. We also accept complaints via our own channel.
Source: NDIS Commission / Aged Care CommissionCare Services Available in Round Corner
Provider counts by service type in Round Corner
* Services commonly accessed for this condition
What happens after you request support in Round Corner
1. Map current barriers
Identify whether the main gaps are in communication, daily routines, behaviour, social participation, or independence at home.
2. Compare therapy and support options
Look at providers who offer the right therapy mix and support workers who understand how to work with developmental conditions in practice.
3. Check rapport and consistency
Ask about staff continuity, how therapists adapt to the person's communication style, and whether you can trial before committing.
For NDIS participants with developmental conditions, it also helps to confirm whether the provider can coordinate across therapies (e.g. OT and speech working together on the same goals) and whether support workers are trained in the specific condition.
Round Corner at a glance
From Castle Hill to Kellyville, our Hills District team serves this rapidly growing family-oriented area with reliable, consistent care.
Public transport
Sydney Metro Northwest provides excellent connections, supplemented by bus services.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can occupational therapy through the NDIS help children with dyspraxia in Round Corner?
Does dyspraxia qualify for NDIS funding in Round Corner?
What occupational therapy can help children with dyspraxia in Round Corner?
What early intervention is available for children with DCD in Round Corner?
How can support workers help adults with dyspraxia in Round Corner?
Understanding Dyspraxia / Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD)
Dyspraxia (developmental coordination disorder, or DCD) is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting motor planning, coordination, and execution of movement. It affects approximately 5-6% of school-age children in Australia, making it one of the more common developmental conditions, though it remains under-recognised. Dyspraxia affects both gross motor skills (running, jumping, balance) and fine motor skills (handwriting, buttons, using cutlery). It is not caused by muscle weakness or intellectual disability, but by the brain's difficulty planning and coordinating movements. Dyspraxia often co-occurs with ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and anxiety. Many children are not diagnosed until school, when the demands for motor coordination increase. Adults with dyspraxia may continue to experience difficulties with driving, cooking, organisation, and tasks requiring manual dexterity. The NDIS funds support for people whose dyspraxia causes permanent and significant functional impairment.
How dyspraxia affects daily life
Dyspraxia affects daily life through clumsiness, poor coordination, difficulty learning new motor skills, and problems with planning and organisation. Children struggle with handwriting, using scissors, tying shoelaces, catching balls, and participating in sport. Daily routines like getting dressed, eating neatly, and packing a school bag take longer and require more effort. Adults may find driving, cooking, and manual tasks at work challenging. The executive function component means that organisation, time management, and planning are also affected. The hidden nature of dyspraxia means people are often told they are clumsy, lazy, or not trying hard enough, which damages self-esteem over time.
What to look for in a provider
Good dyspraxia providers use task-specific training and cognitive approaches rather than generic motor exercises. Ask whether their OTs use evidence-based approaches like Cognitive Orientation to daily Occupational Performance (CO-OP), how they work with schools to support the child, and whether they can address the organisational and planning aspects alongside motor skills. Red flags include providers who focus only on gym-based exercises without connecting to real-life tasks, who do not coordinate with teachers, or who dismiss dyspraxia as something the child will grow out of.
How to access funding
Dyspraxia is on the NDIS List D, requiring evidence of permanent and significant functional impairment. A paediatrician, neurologist, or developmental assessment team provides the diagnosis, typically using the DSM-5 criteria for developmental coordination disorder. Functional assessments from OTs and psychologists document the daily living impact. Many children access the NDIS through the Early Childhood approach. Plans are reviewed annually. For children with mild dyspraxia, Medicare-funded therapy through a GP mental health plan may be a more accessible first step.
Need help with NDIS for Dyspraxia? A support coordinator can help you find the right providers and get the most from your plan. Find support coordinators in Round Corner
Funding and costs for dyspraxia support in Round Corner
Lower
$5,000
per year
Typical
$15,000
per year
Higher
$35,000
per year
Plan size depends on the severity of motor and executive function difficulties, co-occurring conditions, and whether the child or adult needs support worker hours in addition to therapy. Most dyspraxia plans are therapy-focused.
OT sessions cost $193-$234/hr under the NDIS. Physiotherapy sessions are billed at similar rates. Many families use a combination of NDIS-funded therapy and school-based support.
Figures are indicative and based on the current NDIS Price Guide and published Home Care Package rates. Actual costs depend on your plan, provider, and location.
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