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Payments Explained

What Do NDIS Support Workers Actually Earn?

Last reviewed 1 July 2026 · 7 min read · By Sarah M., Support Coordinator
In short

A support worker's wage is generally set by the SCHADS Award, which defines minimum hourly pay by classification level plus penalty and casual loadings. That wage is separate from the NDIS price cap, which is the maximum a provider can charge a participant. The cap also covers super, insurance, training and overheads, so it is higher than take-home pay.

The wage: the SCHADS Award

Most disability support workers are paid under the Social, Community, Home Care and Disability Services Industry Award, commonly called the SCHADS Award. It sets minimum hourly rates based on a worker’s classification level, which broadly reflects experience and responsibility.

On top of the base rate, the award adds loadings. Casual employees receive a casual loading, and penalty rates apply to evenings, weekends, public holidays and overnight or sleepover shifts. So two workers doing the same task can earn different amounts depending on their level and when they work.

Pay element
What it reflects
Base hourly rate
Classification level under the SCHADS Award
Casual loading
Added for casual employees in place of leave entitlements
Penalty rates
Evenings, weekends and public holidays
Shift allowances
Overnight, sleepover and broken-shift conditions

The price cap: what a provider charges

The NDIS price cap is a different figure entirely. Set out in the NDIS Pricing Arrangements and Price Limits, it is the maximum a provider can charge a participant for a support item, varying by day, time and region.

That charged amount is not the worker’s wage. It also has to cover superannuation, workers’ insurance, leave, supervision, training, screening checks and general business overheads. This is why the price limit sits well above the hourly wage a worker actually takes home.

Why the two figures differ

It is common to assume the price limit equals the worker’s pay, but they answer different questions. The award answers “what is the worker legally owed?” while the price cap answers “what is the most a provider may bill the participant?”

Understanding the gap helps explain why a provider’s charge is higher than a worker’s wage, and why a platform that pays workers directly may present its costs differently. The wage is governed by industrial law; the charge is governed by NDIS pricing rules.

Worker wage = SCHADS Award rate, loadings and penalties
Provider charge = NDIS price limit for the support item
The charge funds super, insurance, leave, training and overheads
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SM
Sarah M., Support CoordinatorReviewed by TQN.Care's NDIS support team · 8+ years in disability support coordination.
Common questions

Questions, answered.

What award covers NDIS support workers? +
Most disability support workers are paid under the SCHADS Award (Social, Community, Home Care and Disability Services Industry Award), which sets minimum hourly rates by classification level plus loadings and penalty rates.
Is the NDIS price cap the same as a worker's wage? +
No. The wage follows the SCHADS Award. The NDIS price cap is the maximum a provider can charge a participant and also covers super, insurance, training and overheads, so it is higher than take-home pay.
Why do support workers earn different amounts? +
Pay varies with classification level, whether the worker is casual, and when they work. Evenings, weekends, public holidays and overnight shifts attract penalty rates on top of the base rate.
Where does the rest of the charged amount go? +
Beyond the worker's wage, the charged amount funds superannuation, workers' insurance, paid leave, supervision, training, screening checks and the provider's running costs.
Do platforms pay differently from providers? +
Platforms structure pay in different ways, and some engage workers as employees while others use independent contractors. In all cases, NDIS-funded charges must stay within the relevant price limit.
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