Informational
Disability Home Security Privacy and Support Worker Rules Australia
Privacy
Important
This is practical buying guidance, not legal advice. Surveillance, audio, tenancy, strata, employment and privacy rules can vary. Check local requirements and get appropriate advice where the situation is complex.
Privacy decision table
| Decision | Good practice | Risky practice |
|---|---|---|
| Indoor cameras | Use only agreed shared areas and document the reason. | Private rooms, bathrooms, bedrooms or hidden cameras. |
| Audio | Check state/territory rules and consent before enabling. | Leaving microphones on because the device supports it. |
| Support-worker visibility | Tell relevant workers/providers if entry cameras are used and why. | Using footage secretly or casually. |
| Family app access | Limit to people with a support, response or admin role. | Giving every relative live viewing access. |
| Footage review | Review for incidents, access records or agreed safety reasons. | Checking footage because someone is curious. |
Support-worker camera policy
- Write down where cameras are and why they are there.
- Use entry and approach cameras before considering indoor views.
- Do not use hidden cameras as a substitute for provider management or safeguarding advice.
- Define who can export footage and where it is stored.
- Remove app access when family, worker or provider roles change.
Special property situations
| Situation | Extra check |
|---|---|
| Rental property | Check lease, landlord consent and cabling or mounting limits. |
| Strata or apartment | Check common area camera rules, door hardware and body corporate requirements. |
| Shared disability home | Consent and privacy may involve more than one resident. |
| Paid support workers | Consider provider policies, privacy notice and incident handling. |
Frequently asked questions
Can family install cameras to check support workers?
Be careful. Entry cameras and incident review can be appropriate, but hidden or intrusive monitoring creates privacy and trust problems. Get advice for complex concerns.
Should audio be enabled?
Only after checking consent and local recording laws. Many systems should be video-only by default.
Who owns the footage?
Work this out before installation. Ownership, access, exporting and deletion rules should be documented.
















