Originally reported by Michael Smith and Joshua Peach in The Australian Financial Review
Walk down Macquarie Street or George Street in Liverpool’s CBD, and you’ll notice something remarkable – and concerning. NDIS provider shopfronts line almost every block, their distinctive purple and green signage promising everything from household cleaning to overseas holidays for people with disabilities.
What you’re witnessing is Australia’s largest concentration of National Disability Insurance Scheme providers, a phenomenon that’s transforming our local community in ways both intended and unintended.
The Numbers Tell the Story
Liverpool has become home to 283 registered NDIS providers – that’s one provider for every 1,250 residents in our area. Of these, about 188 are “active” providers who’ve received NDIS payments in the past three months. When you expand to the broader 2170 postcode, covering Liverpool and surrounding suburbs, that number jumps to more than 600 providers – the largest cluster in Australia .
To put this in perspective, NDIS providers now easily outnumber traditional businesses like barbers, restaurants, and grocery stores in our CBD. It’s a dramatic shift that reflects both the genuine need for disability services in our diverse community and the challenges of an over – saturated market.

Why Liverpool?
The concentration isn’t accidental. Liverpool’s multicultural community has higher rates of disability support needs, making it a natural hub for NDIS services. The suburb’s lower commercial rents compared to more affluent areas also make it attractive for providers looking to establish operations cost-effectively .
Local providers explain that it’s simply cheaper to rent premises and find disability support workers in areas like Liverpool than in Sydney’s eastern suburbs or north shore. This economic reality has created what experts call a “super cluster” – but not necessarily a healthy one.
The Dark Side of the Boom
Recent investigations have revealed troubling practices within this provider concentration. The Australian Federal Police recently charged a Sydney NDIS provider director with allegedly defrauding $3.5 million from the scheme by submitting claims for services never provided to participants . This case is part of a broader pattern of fraud that’s particularly concentrated in areas like Liverpool.
Local providers are speaking out about the challenges they face. Ayesha Fakhri from NewWay Support & Care tells how legitimate providers are struggling: “I do hear some providers are a bit dodgy. They offer clients money rather than services. In fact, some clients moved from our business to others because they wanted us to pay them money, which was a little dodgy” .
The owner of St Moses Community Care Services, who’s closing down after three years, describes seeing fake invoicing daily: “You see it every day. They suck the blood… these people get the money, and these people are sucking the government’s money, but they do not even have a client” .
Government Response and Local Impact
The Albanese government has invested $550 million to tackle NDIS fraud and non-compliance since coming to power, with NDIS Minister Jenny McAllister noting that more claims are now reviewed daily than were reviewed annually under the previous government . The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission has issued 23 compliance actions in Liverpool alone, including seven banning orders .
However, the enforcement crackdown, while necessary, is creating additional pressure on legitimate local providers. The Fraud Fusion Taskforce has recovered $132 million from unscrupulous providers, but the damage to community trust and legitimate businesses continues .

What This Means for Liverpool Families
For Liverpool families genuinely needing NDIS support, this over-saturation creates a confusing landscape. While choice is important, the sheer number of providers – many of questionable quality – makes it difficult for families to identify legitimate, quality services.
The pricing model compounds the problem. With maximum hourly rates around $62-65 for daytime self-care support and $183-194 for therapists, there’s significant money at stake. This attracts both genuine service providers and those looking to exploit the system .
Looking Forward
The government’s new agreement with states aims to reduce NDIS growth from over 10% annually to under 6%, partly by moving children with autism to a state-backed “Thriving Kids” program. For Liverpool, this could mean fewer providers competing for a smaller pool of funding .
Local MP Mike Freelander, who headed a parliamentary committee investigating the Thriving Kids program, doesn’t mince words: “Every urger, every pimp, every dependent person in the country has latched onto the NDIS, and I’m afraid some hard decisions will have to be made about it” .
The Community Challenge
Liverpool’s NDIS provider concentration reflects broader challenges in how we deliver disability services. While the scheme has undoubtedly helped many local families access vital support, the current model has created an unsustainable situation where fraudulent operators can thrive alongside legitimate providers.
For our community, the path forward requires better oversight, clearer quality standards, and support for legitimate providers who genuinely serve people with disabilities. Liverpool families deserve better than a system where providers outnumber patients and where finding quality care means navigating through hundreds of options of varying legitimacy.
The NDIS was designed to give people with disabilities choice and control over their support. In Liverpool, that noble goal has been complicated by a market failure that puts both participants and taxpayers at risk. Fixing it will require sustained effort from government, regulators, and our local community working together.
Read the full story: Financial Review
Sources:
- : NDIS fraud crackdown, prosecution protects public funds – NDIS.gov.au
- : The suburbs where NDIS providers outnumber patients – Australian Financial Review
- : A Sydney man has been charged for his alleged role in defrauding $3.5 million from the NDIS – Australian Federal Police Facebook
- : NDIS Fraud Crackdown: $132M Recovered from Dodgy STA Providers – Regis Provider Consulting





















