♿ NDIS Property Maintenance in Sunshine Coast
Compare 1 ndis property maintenance operators across Sunshine Coast. NDIS-funded gardening, cleaning and minor home maintenance for participants.
Funded from Core Support (Assistance with Daily Living): Hourly, plan-funded
If keeping the garden and home in order is hard because of disability, the NDIS can fund routine help — lawn mowing, gardening, house cleaning and minor maintenance — from a participant's Core Support budget under Assistance with Daily Living. The support has to be disability-related and meet the reasonable-and-necessary test, and it covers ongoing domestic help rather than one-off projects. Licensed specialist work like electrical and plumbing, and structural changes, are funded separately, and home modifications are a different pathway assessed by an occupational therapist.
For plan managers & support coordinators
These are tradies, not carers. Every operator is ABN-checked and insurance-verified, works to a clear service agreement, and invoices plan managers direct with NDIS-ready line items — no carer-platform shoehorn, just reliable maintenance you can refer with confidence.
NDIS Property Maintenance operators in Sunshine Coast
Verified operators ranked first. Listed entries are sourced from public records and may not yet be claimed by the operator.
Dylan's Mowing
Listed📍 Buderim
Regular lawn mowing and garden maintenance for plan-managed NDIS participants, with weekly, fortnightly or monthly scheduling.
📅 When to book
Most NDIS maintenance is recurring — fortnightly or monthly lawn and garden care, or regular cleaning — set up as an ongoing support rather than a single job. Allow time to confirm funding and provider details before the first visit. Self-managed and plan-managed participants can usually arrange providers directly.
📋 License & verification
Workers entering a participant's home in a risk-assessed role for a registered provider must hold a valid NDIS worker screening clearance before they start ('no card, no start'). Unregistered sole traders aren't legally required to hold one, but the NDIS Commission recommends it and many participants ask for it — so it's the key trust signal to confirm. Public liability insurance is standard.
⚠️ Common mistakes
- •Assuming the NDIS pays for one-off projects — it funds ongoing disability-related help, not a single garden makeover or rubbish clear-out
- •Expecting specialist or structural work from this budget — electrical, plumbing and home modifications are funded through separate NDIS pathways
- •Skipping the worker-screening check — for anyone working inside the home it's the single most important credential to confirm before the first visit
Frequently asked questions
Does the NDIS pay for gardening and lawn mowing?
Yes, when it's disability-related and reasonable and necessary. Routine lawn mowing, gardening, edge trimming and basic yard upkeep can be funded from the Core Support budget under Assistance with Daily Living — usually as an ongoing fortnightly or monthly support rather than a one-off job.
What home maintenance is NOT covered?
This budget covers routine domestic help — cleaning, gardening, minor maintenance. It does not cover licensed specialist trades (an electrician rewiring, a plumber fixing pipes), structural work, or building materials. Home modifications like ramps and accessible bathrooms are funded through a separate pathway assessed by an occupational therapist.
Does my gardener or cleaner need an NDIS worker screening check?
For a registered provider, workers in a risk-assessed role — more than incidental contact with the participant — must hold a valid NDIS worker screening clearance before they start. Unregistered sole traders aren't legally required to, but the NDIS Commission recommends it and many participants make it a condition, so it's the credential worth confirming first.
Can I choose my own gardener or cleaner?
If you're self-managed or plan-managed, yes — you can engage providers directly, including local sole traders, as long as the support is in your plan and meets the reasonable-and-necessary test. Agency-managed participants use NDIS-registered providers.