Choosing a support worker is about more than finding someone available. You want someone who can provide the right support, communicate clearly, and feel like the right fit for the person receiving care.
This guide covers the most important questions to ask before choosing an independent support worker, so you can make a more confident decision.
Why asking the right questions matters
A strong profile can tell you a lot, but it cannot tell you everything. A conversation helps you understand whether the worker is experienced, reliable, comfortable with the role, and likely to suit the person and household.
The goal is not to turn it into a formal interview. The goal is to make sure the support feels safe, clear and well matched from the start.
Questions about experience
Start by understanding the worker’s background and whether they have supported people with similar needs before.
Ask questions such as:
- Have you supported people with similar needs before?
- What kind of support work do you usually do?
- Do you have experience with personal care, community access, transport, or routine support?
- Have you worked with older people, people with disability, or people with mental health support needs?
- What do you feel most confident helping with?
These questions help you understand whether the worker’s experience matches the type of support you need.
Questions about the support itself
It is important to be clear about the actual tasks involved.
You could ask:
- Are you comfortable with the types of support needed?
- Have you provided this kind of support before?
- Is there anything in the role you would like clarified?
- Are there any tasks you do not provide?
This helps avoid confusion and makes expectations clear early on.
Questions about availability and reliability
Even a great worker may not be the right match if their schedule does not align with yours.
Ask:
- What days and times are you available?
- Are you looking for regular work or more occasional shifts?
- How much notice do you usually need?
- What happens if you are sick or running late?
- Are you comfortable with the schedule we need?
These questions are especially important if support is time-sensitive, such as school runs, morning care, medication routines or appointments.
Questions about communication
Good support often depends on clear, calm communication.
Ask:
- How do you usually communicate with clients and families?
- Are you comfortable with text messages, phone calls or app-based communication?
- How do you handle changes to routine?
- How do you raise concerns if something does not seem right?
- What does good communication look like to you?
This gives you a better sense of how the worker will manage day-to-day practicalities.
Questions about fit
Fit matters. A worker can have all the right checks and still not feel like the right person for the role.
Ask:
- What do you think makes a good support relationship?
- How do you like to build trust with a new client?
- What is your approach when someone is anxious, upset or having a difficult day?
- What helps you work well with families or support coordinators?
- Why are you interested in this kind of role?
These questions help you understand the worker’s approach, personality and attitude.
Questions about boundaries and professionalism
It is helpful to understand how the worker sees their role and responsibilities.
Ask:
- How do you maintain professional boundaries?
- How do you manage privacy and confidentiality?
- How do you approach working in someone’s home?
- What would you do if there was an incident or safety concern?
This can give you confidence that the worker understands respectful, professional support.
Questions about checks and compliance
Before support begins, make sure the basics are covered.
You may want to confirm:
- police checks
- NDIS Worker Screening
- any relevant qualifications or training
- references
- experience relevant to the support needed
On Careseekers, workers complete a verification and compliance process before providing services through the platform.
Questions you can ask yourself afterwards
After you have spoken with the worker, it helps to step back and reflect.
Ask yourself:
- Did they seem calm, respectful and clear?
- Did they understand the support being requested?
- Did they answer questions openly?
- Did they feel reliable?
- Would the person receiving support feel comfortable with them?
- Did the interaction feel easy and reassuring?
That final sense of fit is important.
A simple shortlist of the most useful questions
If you want to keep it simple, start with these:
- Have you supported people with similar needs before?
- Are you comfortable with the support tasks involved?
- What days and times are you available?
- How do you usually communicate if plans change?
- What do you think makes a good support relationship?
- Is there anything about this role you would like clarified?
Why this matters on Careseekers
Careseekers gives you more choice over who provides support, which means asking the right questions matters even more. When you can compare workers directly, review profiles and speak with them before starting, you are better placed to choose someone who is not just available, but right for the role.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to ask every question before choosing a support worker?
No. You do not need to ask everything on one call. Focus on the questions that matter most for the type of support you need.
What is the most important thing to look for?
Usually it is a combination of experience, reliability, communication and fit.
Can I speak with a worker before booking?
Yes. Speaking with a worker before support starts is one of the best ways to understand whether they are the right match.
What if I am not sure after the conversation?
That usually means you need more clarity, or that the fit may not be right. It is better to keep looking than rush the decision.
Can a family member or support coordinator ask these questions?
Yes. A family member, nominee or support coordinator can help ask questions and compare workers.
Looking for the right support worker?
Browse profiles, compare experience and choose an independent worker that fits your needs through Careseekers
Comments
0 comments
Please sign in to leave a comment.