NDIS quality audit preparation is rhythm work, not sprint work. Approved Quality Auditors don't just review documents on audit day — they look for evidence of an operation that has been running according to its documented system for months. Three months of evidence is the bare minimum auditors accept; six months is the realistic preparation window for small SIL providers who don't yet have a documented system in place. Here's the month-by-month plan we run, with the kit document references that pair to each step.

Why six months (and not less)

Two constraints set the timeline. First, registers need populated entries. An auditor opens your training register and sees a single entry from yesterday — they correctly read that as "the register was created for the audit, not used as a live document." Six months gives you enough register history to demonstrate the policy is operational. Second, Approved Quality Auditors are booking 8-12 weeks ahead in 2026 — you cannot compress the booking window even if you compress the prep window. Plan backwards from audit date, not forwards from today.

If you have less than six months and can't shift the deadline, see the compressed 60-day version at the bottom of this article. It works for very small operations (1-5 staff, 1-3 participants) but requires concentrated effort — not part-time evening work.

Month 1: Documentation foundation

Objective: every Practice Standards Outcome covered by at least one customised policy, one form, and one register slot.

Month 1 deliverable: a complete, customised, printed policy binder + a populated Document Control Register (Doc 48). If you can't show every document is approved and version-tracked by end of Month 1, the rest of the timeline slips.

Month 2: Staff training + worker screening

Objective: every staff member has read the relevant policies, signed the code of conduct, and has current NDIS Worker Screening Check clearance.

Month 2 deliverable: every staff file is complete (qualifications, WSC clearance, code of conduct acknowledgement, induction checklist, first supervision record). Auditors will sample-pick 2-3 staff files; you need all of them to survive sampling.

Month 3: Operationalise the registers

Objective: all 10 registers are live documents — not "registers established yesterday" but registers with actual operational entries.

Month 3 deliverable: registers showing 30-90 days of operational entries, demonstrating the documented system is actually running.

Month 4: Internal audit dry-run

Objective: one complete internal audit conducted, findings documented, remediation plan in motion.

This is the most-skipped step in NDIS quality audit preparation, and the highest-leverage one. Doc 51 (Internal Audit Program & Schedule) and Doc 52 (Internal Audit Report Template) in the kit walk you through it. The internal audit covers every Practice Standards Outcome and prompts evidence collection from your registers, files, and observations. Treat it as the dress rehearsal for the certification audit.

Month 4 deliverable: a completed Doc 52 (Internal Audit Report) plus an active CAP log. If the internal audit finds zero non-conformances, it was probably too easy. Aim for the internal audit to find what the external auditor would find — that's the value.

74 documents structured for the 6-month roadmap

Every step above maps to specific kit documents. $297 early bird (GST-inclusive AUD). 30-day guarantee.

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Month 5: Remediate & re-test

Objective: every Month-4 non-conformance is closed, with evidence of closure.

Month 5 deliverable: zero open major non-conformances, CAP log closed where possible. Auditors don't expect a perfect operation — they expect to see active management of non-conformances.

Month 6: Audit-day staging

Objective: ready for the auditor to walk in tomorrow.

Month 6 deliverable: the audit happens, you survive it. Likely outcome: a small number of minor non-conformances (most providers get 1-5), a CAP for closure within 3-6 months, certification awarded.

The compressed 60-day version

If the 1 July 2026 deadline has compressed your timeline to 60 days, the rhythm above collapses to:

Key insight for compressed timelines: the 1 July 2026 deadline is the deadline for applying for registration, not for completing the certification audit. Applications submitted before 1 July with a booked audit date later in 2026 are accepted. So the binding constraint is application submission, which requires evidence the operation is documented and trained — Days 1-21 of the compressed plan. For the registration-vs-audit timeline, see our SIL provider registration guide.

If your audit is within 6 months and you're starting the Practice Standards documentation from scratch, the Complete SIL Kit ($297 early bird, GST-inclusive AUD) is the documentation foundation this roadmap is built around. The 30-day guarantee means there's no risk in checking the kit's contents against the timeline above.

Important: This article provides general guidance about NDIS compliance requirements. It is not legal or professional advice. Requirements may change as the NDIS Commission updates its policies and Practice Standards. Always verify current requirements with the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission or a registered NDIS consultant before making compliance decisions.