What we do

Support built around the person — not the schedule

Every service we offer is shaped by one belief: when a person feels truly understood, behaviour settles, communication grows, and life opens up. We support non-verbal participants and people with autism and intellectual disabilities — here's how we make that real.

1:1 in-home support

Consistent, carefully matched support in the place a participant feels safest. We build routine and trust before anything else.

  • Participant-led worker matching
  • Consistent shift coverage — no last-minute gaps
  • Detailed, useful documentation for plan reviews

Sensory-aware respite

Short stays in our purpose-designed respite home — low stimulation, participant-informed, and never a shared facility.

  • Calm, regulated environment
  • Quiet outdoor spaces
  • A genuine break for families

Overnight & short-term respite

Planned overnight stays with thorough preparation, so both participants and families feel confident and rested.

  • Considered preparation and handover
  • Familiar, consistent staff
  • Family feedback at every step

Community access & participation

From the market to the beach to the cinema — we build community experiences around individual interests, at the right pace.

  • Activities chosen with the participant
  • Belonging, not just attendance
  • Adaptive equipment when it helps

Prevention-based behaviour support

We read micro-signals and intervene before escalation. We interpret behaviour as communication — never as a problem to control.

  • Behaviour-as-communication model
  • Collaboration with your full care team
  • Measurable reduction in incidents over 3–6 months

Consistent, collaborative coordination

Proactive communication with families and referrers, with founder oversight on recruitment, onboarding, reporting and quality.

  • Regular, meaningful updates
  • Transparent reporting
  • A partner, not a service vendor

Refer your most complex participant

This is what we were built for. If your current provider is still reacting instead of preventing, let's talk about a different approach.