Behaviour support training in Tasmania
Compare behaviour support training providers across Tasmania (TAS). 130 families in Tasmania have used Carevo to find a provider.
For behaviour support training
- 33 providers across Tasmania
- Funded via Self-funded
- One request, providers respond to you
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Best Behaviour Support Training providers in Tasmania
Showing 10 of 33 providers·How we chose these
- Specialises in Therapy, Behaviour Support
Aspirations Therapy Services is an NDIS registered provider serving Somerset, Tasmania.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
North Hobart, TAS and 2 othersAlso servesHobart, TAS · Margate, TAS
- Specialises in Allied Health, Psychology, Therapy
Rainbow Paws Psychology and Animal Assisted Therapy is an NDIS registered provider in North Hobart, Tasmania.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Psychology, Behaviour Support
Client First Consulting is an NDIS registered provider serving Margate, Tasmania.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
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Launceston, TAS and 3 othersAlso servesDevonport, TAS · Hobart, TAS · Surfers Paradise, QLD
- Specialises in Therapy, Allied Health, Psychology
Based in Launceston, Tasmania, Bridge to Understanding is an NDIS registered provider. Active on Carevo in the past week.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Therapy, Allied Health, Behaviour Support
Little Big Steps Health Group is an NDIS registered provider in Waverley, Tasmania.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Therapy, Allied Health, Behaviour Support
Based in Woodbridge, Tasmania, Logan, Kylie is an NDIS registered provider.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Behaviour Support, Personal Care, Respite Care
Amity Assist works across 14 NDIS support categories in Dynnyrne, Tasmania.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Therapy, Allied Health, Behaviour Support
Based in Rokeby, Tasmania, Meraki Social Services is an NDIS registered provider.
How this listing is sourced
- Specialises in Social Support, Respite Care, Support Workers
Knights of the Shed is an NDIS registered provider in Hobart, Tasmania. Registered across 8 NDIS support categories, including Innovative Community Participation, community participation and Therapeutic Supports.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Specialises in Support Workers, Therapy, Allied Health
Based in New Norfolk, Tasmania, DJ Shepherd Psychology is an NDIS registered provider, with a psychologist on its team.
How this listing is sourced
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address on file
- Team includes Psychologist
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 Specialist Behaviour Support and Therapeutic Supports, or offer behaviour support, 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.
33
providers in Tasmania
32,006
providers nationally
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 CommissionAged 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 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 CommissionBehaviour Support Training at a Glance
Funding
Self-funded, employer-funded, or government VET subsidies
Availability
By appointment
Wait Time
2-4 weeks for initial assessment
Cost
Course fees vary by training provider; some qualifications attract government VET subsidies
Hours
Weekdays with some evening availability
Median Response
1 hour
Behaviour Support Training in Tasmania (TAS): what to know
Carevo lists 33 behaviour support training providers with active coverage in Tasmania, concentrated around Hobart, Launceston, Devonport and Burnie but reaching regional TAS as well. Families in TAS made 89 support requests through Carevo in the last 90 days.
33
Providers in TAS
153
NDIS registered
12
Active in last 30 days
89
Requests, last 90 days
50%
Connected within 1 hour
Coverage by region in Tasmania
| Region | Providers | Busiest area |
|---|---|---|
| Hobart | 59 | Hobart |
| Launceston | 48 | Launceston |
| Clarence | 28 | Bellerive |
| Glenorchy | 20 | Glenorchy |
| Devonport | 18 | Devonport |
| West Tamar | 12 | Riverside |
| Burnie | 12 | Burnie |
| Kingborough | 8 | Kingston Beach |
| Derwent Valley | 6 | Claremont |
| Central Coast | 6 | Ulverstone |
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. 153 of the 156 behaviour support training 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 training cost in Tasmania?
Behaviour Support Training in Tasmania typically costs Course fees vary by training provider; some qualifications attract government VET subsidies. Actual rates vary by provider, funding type, and the level of support required.
How to pay for behaviour support training
Funding options include Self-funded. Eligibility depends on your assessment and plan.
Behaviour Support Training by suburb in Tasmania
Browse providers in the busiest areas, or use any suburb page to see who services your postcode.
What training do you need to become an NDIS behaviour support practitioner?
There is no single mandatory course. To practise, you must be assessed as suitable by the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission against its Positive Behaviour Support Capability Framework (2019), through either a self-assessment or the entry-level pathway for new practitioners. Training courses build those capabilities, but it is the Commission’s suitability decision, not a certificate, that permits you to deliver NDIS behaviour support.
Why demand for this training keeps growing
The NDIS supports more than 700,000 participants (NDIA quarterly data, 2025), and under the NDIS (Restrictive Practices and Behaviour Support) Rules 2018 every behaviour support plan must be written by a practitioner the Commission has assessed as suitable. The sector has a persistent shortage of qualified practitioners, particularly at the Proficient level. Carevo lists 28,004 NDIS providers nationally, and behaviour support is consistently among the hardest services to source.
What does a behaviour support practitioner do?
A behaviour support practitioner assesses why a participant shows behaviours of concern, then writes and reviews a behaviour support plan grounded in positive behaviour support. That means conducting functional behaviour assessments, interviewing the participant’s support network, and documenting proactive strategies. Where a plan includes any of the five regulated restrictive practices (chemical, environmental, mechanical or physical restraint, and seclusion), the practitioner must meet the authorisation requirements in the NDIS (Restrictive Practices and Behaviour Support) Rules 2018 and work to reduce those practices. Practitioners also train the support workers who carry out the plan.
How do I register as a behaviour support practitioner with the NDIS Commission?
You apply to the NDIS Commission for a suitability assessment, usually through the registered behaviour support provider you work for. New practitioners use the entry-level pathway and must work under a practitioner assessed at Proficient level or above. Experienced applicants complete a self-assessment against the Capability Framework (2019) with supporting evidence. The Commission decides “suitable”, “not suitable” or “unable to make a decision”. Until you are considered suitable, you cannot conduct functional behaviour assessments or write plans, even under supervision.
Can I become a behaviour support practitioner without a degree?
Yes. The Capability Framework (2019) assesses capabilities, not named qualifications, so a degree in psychology or social work is one pathway rather than a requirement. Vocational qualifications in disability, community services or allied health assistance, combined with work experience and evidence against the framework, can satisfy the Proficient level. Advanced and Specialist levels generally do call for further qualifications, so without a degree, plan around the Core to Proficient progression first.
How long does it take to become a behaviour support practitioner?
It depends on your starting point, because the Commission assesses capability rather than time served. Someone with a relevant qualification can lodge a self-assessment as soon as they can evidence the framework capabilities. A new entrant applies through the entry-level pathway, which the framework (2019) describes as covering practitioners with under six months of experience, then works under supervision toward Proficient. Course length varies by provider, and accredited programs add placement hours on top of coursework, so ask for a documented timeline.
What is the difference between core, proficient and advanced behaviour support practitioners?
The Positive Behaviour Support Capability Framework (2019) sets four practitioner levels. Core describes an entry-level practitioner who works under the supervision of someone assessed at Proficient or above. Proficient practitioners can develop plans for participants with low to moderate complexity. Advanced practitioners take on higher-complexity participants and supervise others. A fourth level, Specialist, covers the most complex presentations and generally requires postgraduate qualifications. Most courses target the Core to Proficient progression, since that is where the workforce gap sits.
How to compare training courses on your shortlist
The providers ranked above were ordered using the methodology explained earlier on this page; these criteria help you compare the courses themselves. First, ask whether the curriculum is explicitly mapped to the Positive Behaviour Support Capability Framework rather than covering positive behaviour support in general terms, because graduates still face the Commission’s documentation expectations. Second, check the provider on the NDIS Commission’s public register, including its registration groups. Third, look at who teaches: trainers with current practitioner caseloads keep content matched to real Commission processes. Fourth, weigh placement quality, meaning documented supervised hours with genuine participant contact, not observation only. Finally, compare pricing transparency and responsiveness. Across the Carevo platform, 93 per cent of provider responses arrive within 24 hours; a trainer that takes a week to answer an enquiry will be slow on supervision questions too.
Questions to ask a training provider before signing a service agreement
- Is every module mapped to a framework capability? A good answer names specific capability domains, not just “PBS principles”.
- Are you a registered NDIS provider, and for which registration groups? Verify this on the NDIS Commission’s public provider register before paying.
- Do your trainers currently practise? A good answer states their assessed level and caseload.
- How many placement hours are included, and who supervises them? Look for a Proficient or Advanced supervisor with hours documented in writing.
- What support do you give with the suitability application itself? A good answer covers evidence portfolio help, not just a certificate.
- What is the total fee, and are reassessments or extensions charged extra? A good answer is itemised in writing before you sign.
Where providers are available
Carevo lists providers across 4,782 suburbs in every state and territory, with the deepest coverage in NSW, where 8,844 NDIS providers are on the platform. Capital cities carry the most training options: compare providers in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth. If you need a practitioner rather than training, see the national behaviour support page.
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 training providers are there in Tasmania?
There are 33 behaviour support training 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 training cost in Tasmania?
Behaviour Support Training in Tasmania typically costs Course fees vary by training provider; some qualifications attract government VET subsidies. 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, and 50% 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 training providers?
By local government area, coverage on Carevo is deepest in Hobart (59 providers), Launceston (48 providers), Clarence (28 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 training 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. 153 of the 156 behaviour support training providers listed in TAS on Carevo are NDIS registered.


