Write a 1-page “daily life” summary
List the main areas impacted: personal care, meals, sleep, emotional regulation, mobility, community access, communication, school/work and safety.
A simple checklist of what to gather before a plan review, reassessment, or change of circumstances.
Tip: If you’re unsure what’s “enough”, start with a short summary + 2–3 strong pieces of evidence.
Strong evidence is often simple: what is difficult, how often it happens, what risks exist, and what changes when support is in place.
List the main areas impacted: personal care, meals, sleep, emotional regulation, mobility, community access, communication, school/work and safety.
Example: “Needs prompting for showering daily (30–45 mins)”, “Unsafe road awareness (every outing)”.
Evidence is easier to understand when it supports a goal (e.g. safety, independence, community participation).
Use what’s relevant — you don’t need everything on this list.
Small improvements here can make your evidence much clearer.
Write how you’d explain it to someone new. Clear beats complicated.
What can’t be done without support? What risks happen?
Create folders like “Reports”, “Letters”, “Routines”, “Incidents” and label by date.
Preparing for a review? See our NDIS Plan Review Guide.
We can help you sort what you have, identify gaps, and prepare a clear summary.