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Behaviour Support in Tasmania

Behaviour support providers in Tasmania

Compare behaviour support providers across Tasmania (TAS). 123 families in Tasmania have used Carevo to find a provider.

1 hour 6 min median response · 49% within 1 hour

For behaviour support

  • 60 providers across Tasmania
  • Funded via NDIS Capacity Building
  • One request, providers respond to you

It only takes one minute and it's free.

Best Behaviour Support providers in Tasmania

Showing 10 of 60 providers·How we chose these

1

Laduerdale, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Cullen, Emily Sarah is an NDIS registered provider serving Laduerdale, Tasmania.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
2

Howrah, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Based in Howrah, Tasmania, Prajwal Singh Pradhan is an NDIS registered provider.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
3

Launceston, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Emma-Jane Mccrum is an NDIS registered provider in Launceston, Tasmania.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
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4

Hobart, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health · Psychology

Kilpatrick Family Trust is an NDIS registered provider serving Hobart, Tasmania, with a psychologist on its team.

5

Risdon Vale, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Reconnect Tasmania is an NDIS registered provider serving Risdon Vale, Tasmania. Active on Carevo in the past week.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
6

North Hobart, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Long, Brendan Peter is an NDIS registered provider serving North Hobart, Tasmania.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
7

Battery Point, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

The Quirky Therapist is an NDIS registered provider in Battery Point, Tasmania.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
8

Binalong Bay, TAS and 1 otherAlso servesHobart, TAS · State-wide provider

Specialises in Personal care

Allied Health Rehab Services is an NDIS registered provider serving Binalong Bay, Tasmania. They operate across Tasmania. They are most often contacted for personal care. Most enquiries to them come from families and carers.

Median response time25 minutes
9

Devonport, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Based in Devonport, Tasmania, Lonvara is an NDIS registered provider.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports
10

George Town, TAS

Specialises in Therapy · Allied Health

Health Map is an NDIS registered provider serving George Town, Tasmania.

How this listing is sourced

NDIS coverage1 groupNDIS registration groupsTherapeutic Supports

How we rank providers

Rankings in Tasmania 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 are registered with the NDIS for Therapeutic Supports, or offer therapy and allied health. Generalist providers who only mention this service in passing are excluded, so the list reflects genuine, demonstrated 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.
  • 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 Tasmania rank above those covering only the broader region.

What "Trusted" means. 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.

60

providers in Tasmania

28,928

providers nationally

How we calculate provider numbers

How to check a provider's credentials

Carevo lists the registration details a provider reports and links you to the official Australian registers so you can confirm them yourself. Here is what each listing shows and where to check it. A listing on Carevo is not an endorsement.

NDIS registration

Listings show whether a provider reports being NDIS registered. You can confirm a provider's current registration and approved support types yourself on the NDIS Commission's public provider register.

Source: NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission

Aged care approval

Listings show aged care approval where it is recorded. You can check a provider's current approval and the services they deliver on the Australian Government's My Aged Care find a provider service.

Source: My Aged Care (Department of Health and Aged Care)

ABN you can check

Most listings include the provider's Australian Business Number, shown on the profile. You can look it up on the Australian Business Register to confirm the business is registered and active.

Source: Australian Business Register

Complaints 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 Commission

Behaviour Support at a Glance

Funding

NDIS Capacity Building - Behaviour Support (shown as Improved Relationships on older pre-PACE plans)

Availability

By appointment

Wait Time

2-4 weeks for initial assessment

Cost

$150-$252.99/hour

Hours

Weekdays with some evening availability

Median Response

1 hour 6 min

Behaviour Support in Tasmania (TAS): what to know

Carevo lists 60 behaviour support providers with active coverage in Tasmania, concentrated around Hobart, Launceston, Devonport and Burnie but reaching regional TAS as well. Families in TAS made 83 support requests through Carevo in the last 90 days.

60

Providers in TAS

57

NDIS registered

9

Active in last 30 days

83

Requests, last 90 days

49%

Connected within 1 hour

Coverage by region in Tasmania

RegionProvidersBusiest area
Launceston 22 Launceston
Hobart 22 Hobart
Clarence 10 Howrah
Glenorchy 5 Moonah
West Tamar 4 Legana
Sorell 3 Dodges Ferry
Devonport 3 Devonport
Break O'Day 2 Binalong Bay
Southern Midlands 1 Oatlands
Huon Valley 1 Huonville

Workers delivering NDIS supports in Tasmania need the NDIS worker screening through the Registration to Work with Vulnerable People scheme, administered by the Tasmanian Government. 57 of the 60 behaviour support providers listed in TAS are registered with the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission. Unregistered providers can still deliver many supports if your plan is plan managed or self managed.

NDIS price caps do not change by state: the NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits set the same maximum rates in Tasmania as everywhere else in Australia.

How much does behaviour support cost in Tasmania?

Behaviour Support in Tasmania typically costs $150-$252.99/hour (per current NDIS price guide). Actual rates vary by provider, funding type, and the level of support required.

How to pay for behaviour support

Funding options include NDIS Capacity Building. Eligibility depends on your assessment and plan.

Behaviour Support by suburb in Tasmania

Browse providers in the busiest areas, or use any suburb page to see who services your postcode.

What makes behaviour support different from other NDIS supports

Positive behaviour support (PBS) is more tightly regulated than most NDIS supports: practitioners must be assessed as suitable by the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission under its Positive Behaviour Support Capability Framework (2019), every plan containing a restrictive practice must be lodged with the Commission, and all plans must be reviewed at least every 12 months (NDIS (Restrictive Practices and Behaviour Support) Rules 2018). Practitioner rates are capped in the NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits 2025-26 (see the cost section above).

The approach reduces behaviours of concern by working out what a behaviour communicates, then teaching skills and adjusting environments so the behaviour is no longer needed. Its two stated aims are better quality of life for the participant and fewer restrictive practices.

What is a behaviour support plan and what does it include?

A behaviour support plan is a written document that explains why behaviours of concern happen and sets out the strategies everyone around the person will use in response. It is built on a functional behaviour assessment: the practitioner interviews the family and support team and observes across settings to identify what the behaviour achieves, whether communication, escape, sensory regulation or access to preferred activities. The plan covers proactive strategies, skill teaching, environmental changes and safe reactive strategies. Where a restrictive practice is in use, an interim plan is required within 1 month and a comprehensive plan within 6 months (NDIS (Restrictive Practices and Behaviour Support) Rules 2018).

Which plan budget pays the practitioner

Behaviour support is paid from the Capacity Building part of a plan. On newer PACE plans the category is named Behaviour Support; older plans show the same money as Improved Relationships. This budget funds the practitioner’s work: assessment, plan writing, training and review. It does not fund the support workers who carry the plan out day to day, whose hours come from Core. Improved Daily Living can fund related therapy such as psychology or occupational therapy. The funding block above lists the categories against the 2025-26 caps.

How do I get behaviour support included in my NDIS plan?

Ask for it at your next plan meeting or reassessment, with evidence that behaviours of concern are affecting daily life. No specific diagnosis is required; the support has to meet the reasonable and necessary test and, since 3 October 2024, fit the statutory definition of an NDIS support (NDIS Act changes, 2024). Reports from a psychologist, occupational therapist or teacher describing the behaviours and their impact carry the most weight. If there is immediate risk, tell the NDIA, because an interim plan can be put in place sooner. Once funding is approved you choose the practitioner; typical waiting times are in the quick facts above.

What is a restrictive practice under the NDIS?

A restrictive practice is any action that restricts a person’s rights or freedom of movement to manage their behaviour. The NDIS regulates five types: seclusion, chemical restraint, mechanical restraint, physical restraint and environmental restraint (NDIS (Restrictive Practices and Behaviour Support) Rules 2018). Each must be authorised under state or territory arrangements, included in a lodged behaviour support plan, and reported to the NDIS Commission. Reducing these practices is a core part of the practitioner’s job, and restraint without a lodged plan is a reportable incident. There is a longer explainer in the restrictive practices guide.

Four checks that narrow the shortlist

The rankings above follow the methodology explained at the top of this page.

Registration. Whoever manages your plan, the practitioner must work for a provider registered with the Commission for specialist behaviour support. Confirm this on the NDIS Provider Register before signing anything.

Practitioner level and fit. The Commission grades practitioner suitability at four levels under the Positive Behaviour Support Capability Framework (2019): core, proficient, advanced and specialised. Ask which level the practitioner holds and whether they have worked with the participant’s age group and disability profile. A complex presentation needs more than a core-level practitioner.

Pricing transparency. A good provider hands over a written quote broken down by stage, at or below the 2025-26 caps. Without that breakdown, funding can run out before anyone is trained on the plan.

Response time and intake date. Ask for a firm start date, not “we’ll add you to the list”. Across Carevo, 70 per cent of inquiries get a first provider response within an hour, which quickly shows who has capacity.

Questions to ask a provider before signing a service agreement

  1. Which registration covers your behaviour support work? A good answer is a registration number matching specialist behaviour support on the NDIS Provider Register.
  2. What is the practitioner’s Commission suitability level? A good answer names the level and shows the assessment outcome on request.
  3. How many hours will assessment, plan writing and training take, and at what rate? A good answer is a staged written quote within the 2025-26 price limits, with family and support worker training costed in.
  4. Who handles restrictive practice authorisation and lodgement? A good answer names the state authorisation process and the Commission lodgement step.
  5. When is the plan reviewed and what data will you collect? A good answer is a review at or before 12 months, with behaviour data agreed up front.
  6. Have you been subject to Commission compliance action? A good answer is a straight no, checked against the Commission’s public compliance register.

Where providers are available

Behaviour support sits within the 28,004 NDIS providers Carevo lists across 4,782 suburbs, with supply deepest in the capitals. See the city pages for Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, and the suburb directory below for smaller areas; NSW alone has 8,844 listed NDIS providers. Assessments happen where the person lives and written plan reviews are often done by video, so regional families are not locked out. Where several providers are involved, many families add NDIS specialist support coordination to keep the plan moving.

How this page is compiled

The provider rankings and figures on this page come from Carevo platform records, including provider registrations, measured response times and coverage, together with the cited official sources. Carevo is an Australian platform that connects families with vetted NDIS and aged care providers. Carevo does not deliver care itself.

Helpful NDIS resources for Tasmania

Guides to help you understand your plan, budget, and supports.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many behaviour support providers are there in Tasmania?

There are 60 behaviour support providers with active listings in Tasmania (TAS) on Carevo. Providers are ranked by trust score based on real outcomes with families on our platform, not by who pays for placement.

How much does behaviour support cost in Tasmania?

Behaviour Support in Tasmania typically costs $150-$252.99/hour (per current NDIS price guide). Actual rates vary by provider and the level of support required.

How quickly can I start with a provider in Tasmania?

Providers in Tasmania respond to new requests in a median of 1 hour 6 min, and 49% of families are connected within an hour. Most services can start within 1-2 weeks.

Does Carevo cover regional Tasmania or just the capital?

Both. Carevo lists providers across all of Tasmania, including regional and rural areas. Many providers service wide regions, and some supports (like plan management) are delivered Australia-wide by phone and online portal.

Which areas of Tasmania have the most behaviour support providers?

By local government area, coverage on Carevo is deepest in Launceston (22 providers), Hobart (22 providers), Clarence (10 providers). Regional TAS is covered too: many providers service wide areas beyond their base suburb.

Do I have to use an NDIS registered provider for behaviour support in TAS?

It depends on how your plan is managed. Agency-managed (NDIA-managed) funding can only be spent with registered providers, while plan-managed and self-managed participants can also use unregistered providers. 57 of the 60 behaviour support providers listed in TAS on Carevo are NDIS registered.

Behaviour Support in other states

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