10 NDIS Registration Mistakes That Delay Approval
In our experience at the NDIS company we operated and with Provider Scale clients, the same ten mistakes appear in nearly every weak registration. None of them are complex. All of them are preventable. Here's what to avoid.
Mistake 1: Incomplete Worker Screening Evidence
You list a worker in your registration but can't produce a police check, working with children check, or referee contact record. Auditors flag this as a major non-conformity. Proof of screening must be in your files before you register. State requirements vary - NSW DCJ checks, QLD Blue Cards, VIC Working with Children Checks, disability worker checks in some states. We maintain a worker screening register for every person in our team, cross-checked against state requirements. If you're hiring fast, build a screening process first. Don't register with workers whose screening is 'pending.'
Mistake 2: Vague or Absent Participant Agreements
Your participant files lack written agreements about support, costs, scope, confidentiality, and dispute resolution. Auditors expect every participant to have a documented agreement. We use a standardised template with sections for support schedule, participant consent, privacy, rights, and emergency contacts. If you're delivering supports without written agreement, you'll fail your audit. Create your agreement template before you register.
Mistake 3: No Documented Safety Systems or Risk Register
You have incident logs but no risk register. You've had a safety concern but no corrective action plan. Auditors want evidence that you've thought through your risks and responded. We maintain both - a risk register (what could go wrong and our mitigation) and an incident log (what did go wrong and how we fixed it). Document everything.
Mistake 4: Incomplete Policy Set for NDIS Practice Standards Modules 1-4
You have a recruitment policy but no governance charter. You have service delivery documentation but no person-centred planning template. You have worker employment contracts but no disability worker management policy. NDIS Practice Standards Modules 1-4 require specific policies. We created a policy index mapped to every Module requirement. Start there before you register. Policy gaps are easy to close but expensive if you find them during audit.
Mistake 5: Weak Incident Logging (or No Incident Log at All)
You've had incidents but they're scattered across emails or meeting notes, not in a formal log. Auditors expect to see every incident documented: date, participants involved, what happened, how you responded, lessons learned. We log incidents in ShiftCare the day they occur, with follow-up actions assigned. If you don't have an incident log system, create one now. A tool like ShiftCare ($159/month) or even a spreadsheet beats scattered documentation.