Why Due Diligence Matters When Buying an NDIS Business
Buying an NDIS-related business can be a serious step for investors, operators, or existing providers. The sector offers important services to people with disability, but it also comes with compliance obligations, staff responsibilities, participant care expectations, and operational risk.
When reviewing an NDIS registered business for sale, buyers should not rely only on the asking price or advertised revenue. Registration may be important, but it does not automatically mean the business is the right purchase.
A buyer should check whether the business is actively trading, what services it provides, how many participants it supports, and whether the financial records are recent and reliable. Staff, systems, policies, audit history, complaints, and seller handover support should also be reviewed carefully.
Working with an NDIS business broker can help buyers focus on relevant opportunities in the disability services sector instead of searching through general business directories. A specialist platform can make it easier to compare businesses, understand the market, and begin the enquiry process with better information.
Important questions include:
What exactly is included in the sale?
Is the business profitable and actively operating?
Are participants and service agreements transferable?
Are staff and contractors included?
Are there compliance or audit concerns?
What systems and policies are already in place?
What support will the seller provide after settlement?
An NDIS business can be a strong opportunity, but only when the buyer understands both the commercial side and the service responsibilities. Proper due diligence and professional advice are essential before signing any agreement.


















