If you are reading this, there is a good chance someone in your life needs more support than they are currently getting. Or maybe the support is there, but the living situation is wrong, the timing is off, or the whole thing just feels harder than it should.
That is usually where people find us.
Velvet Care is a registered NDIS provider based in Adelaide offering personalised NDIS daily living support and supported accommodation services that help people with disability live independently with dignity. Sometimes that means moving into a shared home with 24-hour care. Sometimes it means a few nights of respite while a carer catches their breath. Sometimes it means somewhere safe to stay for a couple of months while a housing transition gets sorted.
There is a name for each of those: SIL, STA, and MTA. We will explain what each one actually means in a moment. But the short version is: if someone needs to be supported to live well, we can help figure out which option fits and how to make it happen.
Here is the thing about NDIS accommodation support that nobody really prepares families for: the system is genuinely confusing, and most of the confusion is not your fault.
SIL, STA, and MTA all sound similar. They are funded differently, used for completely different situations, and apply at different points in a person’s life. Getting that wrong costs time, and sometimes it costs a plan review cycle you do not have to spare.
Velvet Care works with participants and families across Adelaide to cut through that while also providing NDIS community participation support that helps individuals stay active and connected to their community. We are not going to hand you a brochure and wish you luck. We sit with you, we look at the situation, and we tell you honestly which type of accommodation support fits and what the realistic path to getting it looks like.
We support plan-managed, self-managed, and NDIA-managed participants. We know the Adelaide NDIS landscape in a way that only comes from actually working in it, not just reading about it. And when something changes with a plan or a participant’s needs, we adjust without drama.
If you are a support coordinator looking for a provider you can actually rely on, that matters too. We work closely with coordinators across Greater Adelaide and understand what you need from a provider relationship.
The day-to-day details are not minor. Getting through the morning with dignity. Having a clean, safe home. Knowing someone reliable is there. These are the things that make independence feel real rather than just theoretical.
Our daily tasks and shared living support covers the full range of what participants need to actually live well:
All support is reviewed regularly. When a participant’s goals or needs change, the support plan changes with them.
Something many families do not realise: NDIS short-term accommodation is sitting in a lot of plans, fully funded, and barely being touched. Not because families do not need a break. Because no one ever explained that this is what it is there for.
STA gives participants a properly staffed, supported stay away from home for a short period, with meals, personal care, activities, and company included. For a lot of participants, it is genuinely enjoyable. A change of scenery, some independence, a different routine for a few days. And for carers, it is the rest that allows everything else to keep functioning.
STA funding covers up to 28 days of respite per year. Those days can be used as a block, spread across weekends, or split however the situation calls for. Flexibility is built in.
As registered NDIS short-term accommodation providers in Adelaide, we run stays that are properly staffed and genuinely supportive. Support coordinators looking for NDIS respite accommodation providers in Adelaide are welcome to contact us directly.
The NDIS housing system is not fast. Everyone knows that. And sometimes the gap between where someone is right now and where they need to be has no obvious solution sitting in the middle.
Medium-term accommodation exists for exactly that. It gives participants a stable, fully supported place to live for up to 90 days while the permanent plan comes together. Daily support does not stop during MTA. Routines stay intact. The participant keeps moving toward their goals. The transition period does not have to be a complete pause on life.
If the situation is urgent, please call us directly. We will give you an honest answer about availability and next steps without wasting your time.
SIL is for people who want to live in their own home or a shared setting but need consistent, skilled support to do that safely. It is not about doing everything for someone. It is about being present when it matters, supporting independence over time, and making the everyday genuinely manageable.
Our SIL accommodation services in Adelaide start with a real conversation about the person: who they are, what they want, what a good day looks like for them. The support plan comes from that, not from a template.
Personal care and hygiene assistance
Help with cooking, cleaning and household tasks
Companionship and daily supervision
Assistance with budgeting and managing routines
Everyday living costs (rent, groceries, utilities)
Hospital-based care
SDA expenses (repairs, vacancy costs, etc.)
Activities outside the home, including transport and holidays
Our SIL services in Adelaide cover all suburbs and reach into regional South Australia. If you are not sure whether SIL is in the current plan, call us and we will help you work it out.
There are a lot of NDIS providers in Adelaide. We are not going to tell you we are the biggest or the best. What we will tell you is what we actually stand for:
Our skilled team is committed to providing high-quality, reliable support tailored to your needs.
We focus on what matters to you, offering personalised care that aligns with your goals and preferences.
From in-home assistance to community access and skill development, our flexible services adapt to your lifestyle.
We follow clear, consistent processes and welcome your feedback to ensure trustworthy, high-quality support.
Honestly, the naming does not help. So here is the practical version.
SIL is for people who are going to live somewhere and need ongoing support built around that life. Think of it as the long game — daily help with routines, personal care, skill building, all of it consistent and continuous. It is not temporary.
STA is the opposite in almost every way. It is a short stay, usually a few nights or a week, away from the usual home. Carers get a real break. Participants often genuinely enjoy it. Then everyone goes back. It comes out of a different part of the NDIS plan and it has a yearly cap of 28 days. The two do not compete with each other and a lot of participants use both at different points.
Probably yes, but it depends on whether STA is written into their current Core Supports budget. That sounds complicated but it is actually a quick thing to check. Call your plan manager or support coordinator and ask them directly. They can tell you in a few minutes whether it is there and how much is funded.
If it is not in the current plan and it should be, that is worth raising at the next plan review. In the meantime, call us anyway. We can sometimes help identify other options while the plan process catches up.
The 90 days is a funding cap, not a fixed timeline. Some people use it in full. Others need less. The point of MTA is to give participants somewhere stable and properly supported to live during a gap period — usually while they are waiting for a permanent home, recovering after a hospital discharge, or in a situation where the usual place is no longer an option.
During that time, daily support keeps going as normal. The accommodation changes but the care does not stop. For a lot of families it is genuinely reassuring to know there is a funded, structured option for exactly these kinds of messy in-between periods.
The NDIS pays for it, through the Short-Term Accommodation (STA) line in Core Supports. That covers the accommodation itself, meals, personal care, medication support, and activities during the stay. Families do not pay separately for those things as long as STA is funded in the plan.
The caveat: it has to be in the plan first. If you have not checked recently, check now. A surprising number of families find it is already there and just has not been used yet.
The NDIS provider finder is fine as a starting list. It is not fine as a way of figuring out whether someone is actually good at this.
What we suggest: call them. Ask specific things. How do they handle a situation where a participant is from a non-English speaking background? What happens when something goes wrong at 10pm? How quickly do they actually respond to a family when the plan changes? Those questions will tell you more in five minutes than a provider listing ever will.
We are happy to be held to that standard. Call us and ask the hard questions. That is exactly what the free consultation is there for.
0434 915 558