Compare NDIS Providers for Borderline Personality Disorder in Blue Mountains

11 providers compared Reviewed by MD Home Care Team Updated 18 April 2026

Use this page to work out what support usually matters for borderline personality disorder, which local services are worth comparing first, and which providers in Blue Mountains look like genuine shortlist options rather than generic directory listings.

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What people with Borderline Personality Disorder in Blue Mountains usually need help with

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a psychosocial condition characterised by intense emotional responses, unstable relationships, difficulties with self-image, and impulsive behaviours that can significantly affect a person's day-to-day functioning. When BPD causes a permanent and substantial functional impairment, the NDIS may fund supports to assist with daily living, community participation, and building capacity for a more stable and independent life. Accessing the right mix of therapeutic and practical supports can make a meaningful difference for people living with BPD.

For psychosocial conditions, the real local comparison is not just who services the suburb. It is who has workers with genuine mental health experience, can respond when support needs spike, and can rebuild routines without making the participant feel managed or judged.

What people usually compare locally

  • • Whether the provider has psychosocial-specific workers, not just general support staff
  • • Flexibility to increase or decrease support hours based on how things are going
  • • Coordination with local mental health teams, hospitals, or community services
  • • How quickly they can start or scale up support when needed
Psychology Dialectical Behaviour Therapy Psychosocial Recovery Coaching Specialist Support Coordination Support Workers Behaviour Support Life Skills Development

Services and providers to compare first in Blue Mountains

For psychosocial conditions, compare recovery coaching, psychological support, and psychosocial-capable support workers first. The strongest providers can step support up or down, coordinate with the clinical team, and keep the relationship stable during rough periods instead of resetting every time things slip. Use the service links below to pressure-test provider fit, not just to browse every option in the area.

Top 10 Borderline Personality Disorder Support Providers in Blue Mountains

Showing 10 of 11 providers

#ProviderVerified
1Rapport Support Services-
2Bright Eyes Blue Mountains-
3Reflections On Behaviour-
4Moksha Therapy Psychology Practice-
5Physical-
6Creative Therapy Counselling-
7Stardust Counselling-
8Mobile service-
9Move Clinic Pty Ltd-
10Anna Claire Miskovic-Wheatley-

Rapport Support Services is a registered NDIS provider dedicated to empowering individuals in Katoomba, NSW, and the surrounding Blue Mountains region. They offer a comprehensive range of NDIS services designed to enhance independence and participation for participants.

Bright Eyes Blue Mountains is a registered NDIS provider dedicated to supporting individuals in Katoomba, NSW, and the surrounding Blue Mountains region. They offer a comprehensive range of NDIS services designed to empower participants and enhance their quality of life.

Reflections On Behaviour is a registered NDIS provider dedicated to supporting individuals with disabilities in Katoomba, NSW, and the wider Blue Mountains region. They are committed to delivering high-quality, person-centred NDIS services to empower participants.

Moksha Therapy Psychology Practice is a registered NDIS provider dedicated to offering compassionate and effective support in Katoomba, NSW, and the wider Blue Mountains region. They are committed to empowering individuals with disabilities to achieve their goals.

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Katoomba, NSW 2780

Full profile

Physical is a registered NDIS provider dedicated to supporting individuals with disability in Katoomba, NSW, and the surrounding Blue Mountains region. They offer a comprehensive range of NDIS services designed to enhance independence and community participation.

Discover 10 Station Street, a dedicated NDIS provider located in the heart of Katoomba, NSW, serving the Blue Mountains region and surrounding areas. As a registered NDIS provider, they are committed to delivering high-quality disability support tailored to individual needs.

Stardust Counselling is a registered NDIS provider proudly serving Katoomba, NSW, and the surrounding Blue Mountains region. They offer specialised therapeutic support to NDIS participants seeking to achieve their personal goals and enhance their well-being.

Move Clinic Pty Ltd is a trusted, NDIS-registered provider of Exercise Physiology and Therapeutic Supports, proudly serving Katoomba, NSW, and the wider Blue Mountains region. The dedicated team at Move Clinic is committed to empowering individuals with disabilities to achieve their health and wellbeing goals through expert NDIS services.

Anna Claire Miskovic-Wheatley is a dedicated, registered NDIS provider based in Katoomba, NSW, proudly serving individuals with disability in Katoomba and the surrounding Blue Mountains region. They are committed to delivering high-quality, person-centred NDIS services.

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How we rank providers

Our recommendation algorithm analyses multiple quality and relevance signals to surface the most suitable providers for Blue Mountains. Rankings are recalculated regularly and are not influenced by advertising spend.

  • Responsiveness and engagement. Providers who actively respond to participant enquiries and maintain up-to-date profiles rank higher.
  • Service relevance. Providers are matched based on the specific services you are searching for and how closely they align with the provider's capabilities.
  • Registration and compliance. NDIS registered and government-approved aged care providers are weighted for meeting quality and safeguards standards.
  • Local coverage. Providers with a demonstrated presence in your suburb and surrounding areas are prioritised over those with limited local availability.

11+

providers in Blue Mountains

25,000+

providers nationally

Care Services Available in Blue Mountains

Provider counts by service type in Blue Mountains

* Services commonly accessed for this condition

What happens after you request support in Blue Mountains

1. Identify the support pattern

Work out whether you need consistent daily support, flexible step-up/step-down support, therapy-focused sessions, or help re-engaging with community and work.

2. Compare recovery-focused providers

Look for providers whose approach is recovery-oriented rather than purely clinical. Compare how they handle fluctuating needs and coordination with your clinical team.

3. Test the working relationship

Ask about how workers are matched, what happens during a crisis, and whether you can change workers easily if the fit is not right.

For NDIS participants with psychosocial disability, it also helps to confirm how the provider coordinates with your psychiatrist or mental health team, and whether they can adjust support hours when you are going through a more difficult period.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does borderline personality disorder qualify for the NDIS?
BPD can qualify for the NDIS when it is a long-term condition that causes a substantial reduction in the ability to carry out daily activities, maintain employment, or participate socially - and when this impact is not expected to improve without ongoing support. The NDIS considers functional impact rather than diagnosis, so a well-documented history of how BPD affects day-to-day life is essential for a successful access request. MD Home Care connects people in Blue Mountains and across the Central West NSW with experienced NDIS support coordinators who understand personality disorder presentations.
What NDIS supports are available for BPD in Blue Mountains?
NDIS participants with BPD in Blue Mountains may access psychology for evidence-based therapies like Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT), psychosocial recovery coaching, support workers for daily living and emotional regulation support, community access programs, and life skills development. Plans are built around individual goals and may also include behaviour support if there are safety concerns. MD Home Care helps people across the Central West NSW find providers with specific experience supporting people with BPD.
Is DBT therapy for BPD funded under the NDIS?
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT), delivered by a registered psychologist, can be funded through the NDIS under Improved Daily Living when it is linked to functional goals in a participant's plan rather than positioned purely as clinical treatment. The NDIS does not fund therapy for its own sake, so goals need to clearly connect DBT skill-building to improved daily functioning and community participation. MD Home Care connects people in Blue Mountains with NDIS-registered psychologists across the Central West NSW who have DBT training and experience with BPD.
How can support workers help someone with BPD manage daily life in Blue Mountains?
Support workers can assist people with BPD in Blue Mountains by providing consistent, calm, and structured support with daily tasks such as meal preparation, appointments, personal care, and community participation. Consistency in the support worker relationship is particularly important for people with BPD given difficulties with interpersonal relationships and fear of abandonment. MD Home Care connects NDIS participants across the Central West NSW with support workers who have experience working with people with psychosocial disabilities and emotional dysregulation.
Can I get NDIS support for BPD if I also have depression or anxiety?
Yes, many people with BPD also experience co-occurring conditions like depression, anxiety, or trauma, and the NDIS considers the combined functional impact of all conditions when assessing eligibility and planning supports. Having documented evidence from multiple treating clinicians about the overall impact on daily functioning can strengthen an NDIS access request. MD Home Care helps people in Blue Mountains and across the Central West NSW connect with NDIS professionals who understand complex mental health presentations.

Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a mental health condition characterised by difficulties with emotional regulation, unstable relationships, impulsive behaviour, and an unstable sense of self. It affects approximately 1-4% of the Australian population, though many cases go undiagnosed. BPD is strongly associated with childhood trauma and attachment disruption. People with BPD often experience intense emotions that change rapidly, chronic feelings of emptiness, fear of abandonment, self-harm, and suicidal ideation. Despite its severity, BPD is a treatable condition, and many people experience significant improvement with the right therapy. The NDIS funds support for people whose BPD causes permanent and significant psychosocial disability. This is a newer pathway, and some people face initial resistance from NDIS planners who are unfamiliar with BPD as a basis for psychosocial disability access.

How borderline personality disorder affects daily life

BPD affects daily life through emotional instability, relationship difficulties, and impulsive behaviour. Emotions are experienced intensely and change rapidly, making it hard to maintain consistent routines, commitments, and relationships. The fear of abandonment can lead to behaviours that ironically push people away. Impulsivity may affect spending, substance use, eating, and risk-taking. Self-harm and suicidal ideation are common during emotional crises. Maintaining employment, housing, and friendships requires more effort than others realise. The stigma attached to the BPD diagnosis can itself be disabling, affecting how healthcare providers, employers, and others respond to the person.

What to look for in a provider

Good BPD providers use dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) principles in their approach, balancing validation with change strategies. Ask whether their workers have DBT-informed training, how they handle emotional crises, and whether they maintain consistent boundaries while remaining warm and supportive. Red flags include providers who react to emotional intensity by withdrawing, who treat the person as manipulative rather than in distress, or who do not understand the neurological basis of emotional dysregulation in BPD. Consistency of workers and clear expectations are more important for BPD than for most other conditions.

How to access funding

BPD is on the NDIS List B for psychosocial disability, requiring evidence of permanent and significant functional impairment. A psychiatrist's report documenting the diagnosis, treatment history, and residual functional limitations is needed. The NDIS may initially question whether BPD is "permanent" given that improvement is possible with treatment. The key argument is that the condition, even with optimal treatment, causes significant ongoing functional limitations. Plans are reviewed annually. Specialist support coordination is recommended to manage the clinical and support interface.

Need help with NDIS for Borderline Personality Disorder? A support coordinator can help you find the right providers and get the most from your plan. Find support coordinators in Blue Mountains

Funding and costs for borderline personality disorder support in Blue Mountains

Lower

$8,000

per year

Typical

$25,000

per year

Higher

$70,000

per year

Plan size depends on the severity of functional impairment, whether the person needs daily support, and the extent of recovery coaching and support coordination included.

Psychology sessions for DBT cost $193-$234/hr under the NDIS. Psychosocial recovery coaching costs $100-$115/hr. Support worker rates start around $55-$65/hr on weekdays.

Figures are indicative and based on the current NDIS Price Guide and published Home Care Package rates. Actual costs depend on your plan, provider, and location.

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