Find deaf-blindness support in Australia
Compare verified providers and the support types that usually matter for deaf-blindness across Australia. Skip the generic directory listings, get a real shortlist.
For deaf-blindness
- 21844 verified providers across Australia
- Matched to the support types that fit deaf-blindness
- Free quotes, no obligation
It only takes one minute and it's free.
What support people with Deaf-Blindness usually need
Deaf-blindness is a combined vision and hearing impairment that significantly affects communication, mobility, and access to information, regardless of whether each individual loss is total or partial. NDIS recognises deaf-blindness as a disability requiring highly specialised supports including interveners, orientation and mobility training, and communication support. Participants with dual sensory impairment typically require customised plans that address both conditions together. The right mix of support depends on age, goals, living situation, and how much day-to-day impact deaf-blindness has.
Communication and orientation support
People usually compare providers for Auslan or other communication support, orientation and mobility training, assistive technology setup, and workers who can reduce communication fatigue rather than adding to it.
Specialist sensory services
The best starting points are usually audiology, orientation and mobility, assistive technology assessment, and OT focused on home, travel, and communication access. Generic support is often less useful than practical sensory-specific expertise.
Choosing the right fit
Sensory conditions require providers whose staff can actually communicate and guide effectively. Look for workers with Auslan, tactile communication, orientation and mobility, or real experience supporting people with vision or dual sensory loss in everyday environments.
Services and providers to compare first for Deaf-Blindness
For sensory conditions, compare communication support, orientation and mobility, assistive technology, and sensory-capable support workers first. The strongest providers improve practical access to travel, appointments, community life, and home routines rather than offering generic support hours with little sensory expertise.
What usually separates a strong provider from a generic one
- • Staff with practical skills in the right communication methods (Auslan, tactile signing, visual aids)
- • Experience with sensory-specific assistive technology, not just generic AT providers
- • Whether support workers understand orientation, mobility, and environmental adaptation
- • Connections to specialist sensory services like Guide Dogs, Deaf Australia, or Vision Australia
Best Deaf-Blindness Support providers near me
Showing 10 of 10 providers·How we rank
Clover Leaf Sanctuary Pty Ltd
St Albans, VIC and 63 othersAlso servesAirport West, VIC · Albion, VIC · Altona North, VIC · Ardeer, VIC · Ascot Vale, VIC · Bentleigh East, VIC · Broadmeadows, VIC · Brooklyn, VIC · Brunswick, VIC · Bundoora, VIC · Burnside, VIC · Cairnlea, VIC · +51 more
Specialises in Personal care · Therapy · Domestic assistance
They are committed to empowering NDIS participants with essential life skills and community integration.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
Altido Consulting Services
Parramatta, NSW and 10 othersAlso servesAuburn, NSW · Bankstown, NSW · Blacktown, NSW · Canowindra, NSW · Forbes, NSW · Gosford, NSW · Harris Park, NSW · Hornsby, NSW · TOONGABBIE, NSW · Woy Woy, NSW
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Transport
Altido Consulting Services is a dedicated NDIS provider committed to delivering exceptional disability support to the vibrant community of Parramatta, NSW. Understanding the unique needs of individuals with disabilities in this area, Altido Consulting Services offers a comprehensive suite of services designed to foster independence, promote community engagement, and enhance overall quality of life for participants.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Approved Aged Care provider (Department of Health)
- Business address confirmed
- Team includes Disability Support Worker
Living Life Limitless Pty Ltd
Seacombe Heights, SA and 76 othersAlso servesAberfoyle Park, SA · Adelaide, SA · Aldinga Beach, SA · Andrews, SA · Andrews Farm, SA · Balaklava, SA · Barmera, SA · Blackwood, SA · Blakeview, SA · Brighton, SA · Brompton, SA · Brooklyn Park, SA · +64 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Transport
Living Life Limitless Pty Ltd is a dedicated, registered NDIS provider proudly serving Seacombe Heights and the wider South Australian community. They are committed to empowering NDIS participants with a comprehensive range of high-quality disability support services.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
Not finding the right match?
Leave your details and we'll connect you with deaf-blindness support providers in Australia — no wait list.
No login. No spam. We text or email when a match is ready.
Miracle Health Services
Craigieburn, VIC and 10 othersAlso servesBallarat North, VIC · Ferntree Gully, VIC · Geelong, VIC · Kilmore, VIC · Melbourne, VIC · Melton, VIC · Mernda, VIC · Sunbury, VIC · Sunshine North, VIC · Wallan, VIC
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Transport
Miracle Health Services is a trusted NDIS provider dedicated to supporting individuals in Craigieburn, VIC, and the surrounding areas. As a registered NDIS provider, they offer a comprehensive range of services designed to enhance the lives of participants.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Approved Aged Care provider (Department of Health)
- Business address confirmed
- Team includes Cleaner, Disability Support Worker, Registered Nurse
Heart For Care Disability Services
Fig Tree Pocket, QLD and 53 othersAlso servesAlderley, QLD · Ashmore, QLD · Avoca, QLD · Banks Creek, QLD · Beenleigh, QLD · Benowa, QLD · Brisbane City, QLD · Browns Plains, QLD · Bundaberg West, QLD · Bunya, QLD · Burpengary, QLD · Caboolture South, QLD · +41 more
Specialises in Personal care · Social support · Support coordination
They are committed to delivering high-quality, person-centered disability support to empower NDIS participants.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
NitPlans Care Services
Casula, NSW and 52 othersAlso servesArtarmon, NSW · Ballarat Central, VIC · Balmain, NSW · Bankstown, NSW · Baulkham Hills, NSW · Belmore, NSW · Bentleigh East, VIC · Blacktown, NSW · Blakehurst, NSW · Camden, NSW · Campbelltown, NSW · Canterbury, VIC · +40 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Support coordination
NitPlans Care Services is dedicated to providing exceptional NDIS support to the vibrant community of Casula, NSW. As a compassionate provider, they focus on delivering personalised care solutions designed to meet the unique needs of individuals living with disabilities. Their commitment extends to fostering independence and enhancing the quality of life for Casula residents.
Carers Quality Community Services
Cranbourne, VIC and 20 othersAlso servesBallarat North, VIC · Bendigo, VIC · Bentleigh East, VIC · Berwick, VIC · Clayton, VIC · Clyde North, VIC · Coburg North, VIC · Cranbourne West, VIC · Diamond Creek, VIC · Footscray, VIC · Frankston, VIC · Geelong, VIC · +8 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Therapy
They are committed to delivering high-quality disability support services tailored to the unique needs of NDIS participants.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
Haven Care Australia
Chapman, ACT and 24 othersAlso servesBelconnen, ACT · Coombs, ACT · Evatt, ACT · Florey, ACT · Forest Lake, QLD · Garran, ACT · Gungahlin, ACT · Harrison, ACT · Jerrabomberra, NSW · Kambah, ACT · Melba, ACT · Mount Gravatt, QLD · +12 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Transport
Haven Care is a dedicated NDIS provider committed to delivering exceptional disability support services to the residents of Chapman. Understanding the unique needs of the local community, Haven Care strives to empower participants in Chapman with the independence and choice they deserve, fostering a more inclusive and accessible environment.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
Care Steps Australia
Punchbowl, NSW and 51 othersAlso servesArtarmon, NSW · Ashfield, NSW · Auburn, NSW · Austral, NSW · Belmore, NSW · Blacktown, NSW · Cabramatta, NSW · Campbelltown, NSW · Campsie, NSW · Caringbah, NSW · Carlton, VIC · Casula, NSW · +39 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Meal preparation
They are committed to delivering high-quality disability support services tailored to the unique needs of NDIS participants in the local area.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
Helping Solutions WA
South Perth, WA and 23 othersAlso servesArmadale, WA · Balga, WA · Bibra Lake, WA · Bunbury, WA · Busselton, WA · Canning Vale, WA · Cannington, WA · Clarkson, WA · Cockburn Central, WA · Collie, WA · Ellenbrook, WA · Fremantle, WA · +11 more
Specialises in Personal care · Domestic assistance · Meal preparation
They offer a comprehensive range of NDIS services designed to empower participants and enhance their quality of life.
How we verified this provider
- Registered with the NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission
- Business address confirmed
- Team includes Disability Support Worker, Registered Nurse
How we rank providers
Rankings in Australia are based on real outcomes between providers and families on our platform. They are recalculated daily and cannot be purchased or influenced by advertising.
- Outcomes with families. We measure what happens after a family contacts a provider. Providers where families report positive outcomes rank higher. Multiple signals are weighted across a rolling window.
- Service match. Providers are ranked by how closely their registered services and capabilities match what you are searching for.
- Registration and compliance. NDIS registered and government-approved aged care providers are weighted for meeting quality and safeguards standards.
- Local presence. Providers confirmed in Australia rank above those covering only the broader region.
What does "Trusted" mean? The Trusted badge is awarded to providers with a consistent record of positive outcomes with families on our platform. It is based on multiple behavioural signals and family feedback, and it cannot be purchased.
26,261
providers in Australia
Where deaf-blindness support is available
Providers listed
26,261
States with coverage
4
How providers are verified
Every provider listed is cross-checked against the official Australian registers before appearing here. This is separate from the Trusted badge, which reflects platform outcomes.
NDIS register cross-check
Every NDIS-registered provider listed is verified against the NDIS Commission register. Registration numbers and approved support groups are pulled from the official register, not self-declared.
Source: NDIS Quality and Safeguards CommissionAged care approval status
Aged care approved status reflects the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care approved provider list, including service types and category groups.
Source: Department of Health and Aged CareABN verification
Every listing includes an Australian Business Number. Providers without a valid, active ABN do not appear in our directory.
Source: Australian Business RegisterComplaints process
If you have a concern about any provider, you can lodge a complaint with the NDIS Commission or the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission at any time. We also accept complaints via our own channel.
Source: NDIS Commission / Aged Care CommissionWhat happens after you request support
The next step is usually to narrow the services that matter most, shortlist two or three realistic providers, and ask practical questions about fit, availability, staff continuity, and how support will work in real life.
1. Clarify the communication need
Work out whether the main barrier is hearing, vision, or both, and what communication methods or assistive technology the person already uses or wants to learn.
2. Compare sensory-specialist providers
Look for providers whose staff have direct experience with the relevant sensory condition. Compare AT assessment capability, communication skills, and connections to specialist organisations.
3. Test practical fit
Ask whether support workers can communicate in the person's preferred method, how AT setup and training is handled, and whether the provider has worked with similar sensory profiles before.
For NDIS participants with sensory conditions, confirm whether the provider can supply workers with the right communication skills (Auslan, tactile signing), coordinate AT assessments, and connect with specialist sensory organisations.
Understanding Combined Vision and Hearing Impairment (Deaf-Blindness)
Deaf-blindness (also called dual sensory loss) is a combined vision and hearing impairment that significantly limits access to information, communication, and mobility. It affects an estimated 30,000-40,000 Australians, though many cases are undiagnosed. Deaf-blindness does not necessarily mean total loss of both senses; most people have some residual vision or hearing. Causes include Usher syndrome (the most common genetic cause), CHARGE syndrome, rubella, premature birth, and age-related conditions. The impact of combined sensory loss is greater than the sum of its parts: a person who is blind can compensate with hearing, and a person who is deaf can compensate with vision, but when both are affected, the compensatory strategies that work for single sensory loss are no longer available. Communication, orientation, mobility, and access to information all require specialised support approaches that are different from those used for either hearing or vision impairment alone.
How deaf-blindness affects daily life
Deaf-blindness affects every aspect of daily life. Communication may require tactile signing (signing into the person's hands), print on palm, or other specialised methods. Moving around unfamiliar environments is extremely difficult without a trained intervenor or guide. Accessing written and spoken information requires adaptive technology or human assistance. Social isolation is a major risk because the two primary channels for human connection are both compromised. Daily tasks like shopping, cooking, and managing appointments require more time, planning, and support than for people with a single sensory loss. The shortage of practitioners trained in deaf-blindness means finding appropriate support is itself a significant challenge.
What to look for in a provider
Good deaf-blindness providers have staff trained specifically in dual sensory loss, not just deafness or blindness separately. Ask whether their workers can use the person's preferred communication method (tactile Auslan, haptic communication, print on palm), whether they understand the concept of intervenor support (providing environmental information through the person's available senses), and whether they have connections with Able Australia or Senses Australia. Red flags include providers who have no deaf-blind-specific training, who assume the person needs the same support as someone who is only deaf or only blind, or who do not understand the communication fatigue that dual sensory loss creates.
How to access funding
Deaf-blindness is on the NDIS List A when it involves significant combined sensory loss. Diagnostic evidence from an ophthalmologist and audiologist documenting both impairments is the standard pathway. Plans typically include communication support (intervenor services), assistive technology for both senses, daily living support, and community access. Plans are reviewed annually. Specialist support coordination is recommended due to the very specific skill set required and the limited number of providers with genuine deaf-blindness expertise.
Funding and costs for deaf-blindness support
Lower
$20,000
per year
Typical
$70,000
per year
Higher
$200,000+
per year
Plan size depends on the severity of both sensory impairments, the person's communication method and support needs, and whether daily intervenor support is required. People with total deaf-blindness needing full-time intervenor support will have plans at the higher end.
Common funding categories
Intervenor support workers require specialist training and may cost more than standard support worker rates. Braille displays cost $3,000-$10,000+. Tactile communication aids and adapted technology have varying costs.
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.
Check the Eligibility
Take our quick assessment to find out if you or your loved one qualifies.
Need help comparing the right support providers?
We can help you narrow the right service mix, compare likely-fit providers, and avoid wasting time on generic options for deaf-blindness.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does deaf-blindness qualify for NDIS in Australia?
What is an intervener and can NDIS fund one for deaf-blindness in Australia?
What communication supports can NDIS fund for people with deaf-blindness in Australia?
Can NDIS fund orientation and mobility training for deaf-blindness in Australia?
How does NDIS support social participation for people with deaf-blindness in Australia?
Popular local support pages for Deaf-Blindness
Use these pages to compare local providers, check which services are most relevant in each area, and widen your shortlist if the first suburb does not have the right fit.
Find deaf-blindness providers near you
Top suburbs by number of available providers.