A support coordinator helps you manage your NDIS plan, providers, and services. A recovery coach supports participants with psychosocial disability to build recovery, daily living skills, and confidence in managing life alongside a mental health condition.
The main difference is focus. Support coordination is centred on implementing your NDIS plan and coordinating supports. Recovery coaching is centred on psychosocial recovery, mental health navigation, and capacity-building in everyday life.
Because both roles can help connect people with services, participants often confuse a recovery coach vs support coordinator. But within the NDIS, they serve different purposes and may be funded differently depending on your needs.
Support Coordinator | Recovery Coach | |
Who is it for? | Any participant with support coordination funding | Participants with psychosocial disability |
Main focus | NDIS plan setup, providers, service coordination | Recovery, daily living skills, mental health navigation |
Works with | All disability types | Mental health-related disability |
Helps with providers? | Yes | Yes |
Helps with recovery goals? | Sometimes | Core part of the role |
Crisis and wellness planning | Limited coordination role | A major part of the role |
Mental health system expertise | Helpful but not required | Expected part of the role |
Can you have both? | Sometimes, if roles are clearly different | Sometimes, if roles are clearly different |
Support coordination is about making your NDIS plan work. A support coordinator helps you understand what is funded in your plan, finds and connects you with providers, sets up service agreements, coordinates across multiple services, and prepares your documentation for plan review. The focus is on turning your plan into practical, working supports.
A support coordinator may work with participants across many types of disability and help coordinate supports from multiple providers and services.
Recovery coaching is designed for participants whose disability arises mainly from a mental health condition. This is known in the NDIS as psychosocial disability.
A recovery coach may support people living with conditions such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, PTSD, or borderline personality disorder when those conditions create ongoing functional impacts in daily life.
In practice, a recovery coach can help with understanding an NDIS plan and connecting with services, but their role goes beyond coordination. They work on recovery goals, daily routines, wellness strategies, crisis planning, navigation of the mental health system, and building confidence in managing difficult periods.
Many recovery coaches bring lived experience or specialist knowledge of psychosocial recovery, which is one of the features that differentiates the role from standard support coordination.
A support coordinator mainly helps organise and manage your NDIS supports. That includes finding providers, coordinating services, solving practical issues, and preparing for plan reviews.
A recovery coach works more deeply on recovery and everyday capacity building. They may help with routines, navigation of the mental health system, crisis planning, recovery goals, and building confidence in managing difficult periods.
There is some overlap between the roles. Both may help explain your plan or connect you with services. The difference is where most of the work happens: support coordination focuses on plan implementation, while recovery coaching focuses on psychosocial recovery and long-term capacity building.
The best way to see the difference is to look at what each role actually does during a typical week.
Recovery coaching is funded for some participants with psychosocial disability through Capacity Building supports within the NDIS. A diagnosis alone is not enough. The condition must result in functional impacts that affect everyday life.
Yes, it is possible. In some situations where a participant has significant NDIS plan complexity alongside a serious mental health condition, the NDIA may fund both. However, the NDIA is firm on the duplication-of-support rules. Having both funded requires clear justification that the roles are distinct and that one person cannot do both.
An example of where both might be justified: a participant with treatment-resistant schizophrenia and significant housing complexity, where a coordinator is managing SDA applications and multi-provider coordination while a recovery coach is working on daily living capacity and mental health crisis planning. The roles need to be clearly separated in both documentation and practice.
If the roles appear to duplicate each other, the NDIA may choose to fund one support rather than both. If you are building a case for both at plan review, your support coordinator can help document why each role is necessary and how the work differs.
If your current plan includes support coordination but not recovery coaching, and you believe recovery coaching would better suit your situation, you can raise this at your NDIS mental health plan review. Come prepared with:
If your current plan includes a recovery coach and you feel you also need support coordination, the same logic applies. You need to show the NDIA that the coordination work goes beyond what a recovery coach can reasonably take on.
Hyre Support Coordination provides NDIS support coordination for participants across Melbourne, including people navigating psychosocial disability funding, mental health supports, and plan review decisions around recovery coaching and support coordination.
If you are unsure which support setup best matches your situation, we can review your plan, explain your options, and help you understand whether recovery coaching, support coordination, or a combination of both makes sense for your needs.
Support coordination is often enough when the main challenge is managing your NDIS plan. For example, you might need help finding providers, setting up services, dealing with waitlists, coordinating appointments, or preparing for a review.
Recovery coaching may be a better fit when mental health challenges are affecting everyday life in a deeper way. You may want support with routines, confidence, recovery goals, crisis planning, navigating clinical services, or understanding how mental health and NDIS supports work together.
Some participants need both. This usually happens when there is significant plan complexity alongside substantial psychosocial recovery needs. In these cases, the NDIA generally expects clear evidence showing why one role cannot reasonably cover both areas of work.
The roles differ and have distinct practice expectations within the NDIS. Recovery coaching is designed around psychosocial recovery, mental health knowledge, and recovery-oriented support. Some providers may offer both services if they have the relevant expertise and the participant has funding for each role. However, when both supports are funded, the NDIA generally expects the work to be clearly separated so the roles do not duplicate each other.
No. A recovery coach is an NDIS support, not a clinical service. They do not provide therapy, prescribe medication, or replace your treating clinician. Their role is to work alongside the mental health system, not to replace it. If you have concerns about your clinical care, they should be directed to your psychiatrist, psychologist, or GP.
You can request a change to your plan review. Bring evidence of what coordination work has been needed that falls outside what a recovery coach is expected to do. Your LAC or NDIA planner can help you understand what would justify the change. If your plan review is not for a while and your needs have changed significantly, ask your LAC about whether an unscheduled review is appropriate.
Recovery coaching falls under the Capacity Building budget, within the Coordination of Supports and Psychosocial Recovery Coaching support category. It is a separate line item from support coordination. If your plan lists both, they are funded independently. Check your plan budget in the my NDIS portal or ask your coordinator if you are unsure what your plan includes.
Recovery coaching and support coordination both sit within Capacity Building supports, but they use different support items and are funded separately. If your plan includes both, each role will usually have its own allocated funding.
Yes. A recovery coach can contribute evidence, document recovery goals, and explain functional impacts related to psychosocial disability. However, their role is broader than just review preparation.
The NDIA decides funding based on your disability-related support needs, evidence of functional impact, and whether recovery coaching is considered reasonable and necessary for your situation.
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If you are trying to work out whether a recovery coach vs support coordinator is the right fit for your NDIS plan, or whether your current arrangement matches what you actually need, Hyre Support Coordination can help.
We are registered with the NDIS to deliver support coordination and work with participants across Melbourne, including those navigating psychosocial disability, NDIS funding, and mental health plan reviews.