Everyday Independence is a registered NDIS provider delivering therapy services and employment supports across Central Adelaide.
The most consistent theme across reviews is strong satisfaction with named individual workers — particularly key workers such as Keren, who is mentioned by multiple reviewers as having made a meaningful difference for children with autism, developmental delay, and non-verbal communication challenges. Parents also speak positively about speech pathology, behaviour support, and the organisation's multi-disciplinary access, with several noting that staff communicate well and involve parents in their child's progress. One reviewer reported a negative experience involving mismatched staff qualifications, repeated appointments that felt unproductive, and an unresolved complaint, which is worth noting for parents considering the service.
Summarised from Google reviews.
Everyday Independence is a registered NDIS provider delivering therapy services and employment supports across Central Adelaide. They work with children, teenagers, and adults in everyday settings—homes, schools, workplaces, and communities—to help people create positive life changes and build independence through their 'Everyday Way' approach, which identifies real-world barriers and provides strategies that fit into daily routines.
A therapy that helps children and adults develop the everyday skills needed for daily life — from dressing, writing and play to sensory processing and school participation. Occupational therapists assess what is getting in the way and design practical strategies to build independence and confidence.
Assessment and treatment of communication difficulties including speech sounds, language development, stuttering, voice, and feeding and swallowing. Speech pathologists work with children and adults to help them communicate clearly and confidently.
Treatment that uses movement, exercise and hands-on techniques to improve physical function, strength and mobility. For children, physiotherapy often targets gross motor development, balance and coordination; for adults it addresses pain, injury recovery and long-term conditions.
Support in the early years (usually under 7) that helps children with developmental delay or disability build communication, movement, social and everyday-living skills while their development is most responsive.
A therapy approach that reduces challenging behaviours by understanding what is driving them and building supportive routines, environments and skills, so a child can take part more fully at home, school and in the community.
Goal-oriented one-on-one support that helps individuals build skills, confidence and direction in specific areas of life. Mentoring and coaching draw on the person's own strengths and can cover social, academic, vocational or personal development goals.
Support to help young people and adults with disability find, prepare for and maintain employment. Services may include job skills training, work experience, career planning and on-the-job support from a disability employment specialist.
Therapy delivered to small groups of children or adults with similar goals, allowing participants to practise skills, build connections and learn from shared experiences. Groups are facilitated by a qualified therapist and can cover areas such as social skills, emotional regulation or anxiety management.
NDIS-approved supports, from the Commission register.