Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker Jobs in Australia

Dari-speaking disability support worker roles are for Dari-English bilingual applicants who assist NDIS participants with daily living, personal care, community access, transport, appointments and communication with families or care teams.

Help at Hand Support is recruiting Dari-speaking disability support workers across its Australian service areas. Your Dari and English communication skills help participants and families discuss routines, care preferences, privacy needs, appointments and home support clearly.

We are looking for caring, reliable and respectful applicants who support Dari-speaking participants in home and community settings.

Complete our online application form and tell us your location, experience, availability and Dari language skills.

Looking for other language-based roles? View our multilingual disability support worker jobs page.

Dari speaking disability support worker supporting an NDIS participant at home

Role Summary

Role – Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker
Applicant – Dari-English bilingual support worker
Work setting – Home, community, transport and appointments
Main support – Daily living, personal care, community access and family communication
Application action – Submit the online application form
Language value – Dari and English communication for participants, families and care teams
Community relevance – Dari-speaking Afghan community support where relevant
Matching distinction – Dari, Farsi and Pashto are treated as separate language matching needs

Ready to apply?

Submit your Dari-speaking DSW application online. Include your suburb, state, Dari and English language skills, previous support experience, availability and resume.

Apply for Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker Jobs

Help at Hand Support recruits Dari-speaking disability support workers for NDIS support roles across its service areas in Australia.

This role suits Dari-English bilingual applicants who want to use their language skills in meaningful disability support work. Dari-speaking participants and families often need clear communication around daily routines, personal care, appointments, transport, community access, privacy needs and family preferences.

As a Dari-speaking support worker, you assist participants with practical daily tasks while helping them feel understood during conversations about care, dignity, personal routines and support goals.

This role is relevant for applicants with experience in disability support, nursing, personal care, community care, family care or support work within Dari-speaking households, the Dari-speaking Afghan community, or Afghan-Australian community settings where relevant.

What Dari Speaking Disability Support Workers Do

Dari-speaking disability support workers support NDIS participants with daily activities, personal care, home routines, community participation and communication.

Assigned duties depend on the participant’s NDIS plan, support needs, location, shift type and worker suitability.

Daily Living Support

Dari-speaking disability support workers support participants with daily routines, including meal preparation, light household tasks, dressing, hygiene reminders, organising the day and maintaining a safe home environment. For Dari-speaking participants, daily living support also involves understanding familiar home routines, Dari-speaking household communication, family expectations, meal preferences and comfort around everyday care.

Personal Care Support

Personal care support is part of many disability support worker roles. For personal care shifts, support workers assist with showering, grooming, dressing, toileting or mobility while following the participant’s support plan, privacy preferences and dignity needs. Dari language skills help participants explain sensitive personal care preferences clearly and comfortably. For some Dari-speaking participants, respectful support also includes careful communication around privacy, modesty, personal boundaries and family involvement.

Community Access

Dari-speaking support workers help participants attend shopping, social activities, community programs, Dari-speaking community settings, exercise, education, appointments and family visits. Where relevant, this includes Afghan community events, family gatherings, cultural activities, mosque visits, community centre activities, Ramadan, Eid or Nowruz-related gatherings.

Transport and Appointments

Dari-speaking disability support workers support participants with transport to medical appointments, therapy sessions, shopping, family commitments, community activities and social outings. Clear Dari-English communication helps participants and families understand appointment times, travel arrangements, routines, care team instructions, and support expectations.

Family and Coordinator Communication

Support workers communicate with participants, families, carers, coordinators and care teams to keep support consistent and respectful. For Dari-speaking families, clear communication in Dari supports better conversations about routines, personal care, appointments, concerns, preferences and participant goals.

Dari-Language and Culturally Familiar Support

Dari-speaking support workers help participants and families discuss care needs in a familiar language while respecting privacy, dignity, family involvement and home routines. For some Dari-speaking participants, culturally familiar support includes understanding Afghan family communication, Dari-speaking household routines, meal preferences, family visits, Ramadan, Eid, Nowruz, mosque visits, community centre visits and respectful explanation during personal care.

Who Can Apply for Dari Speaking DSW Jobs?

This role suits caring, reliable and respectful Dari-English bilingual applicants who want to support people with disability.

  • Speak Dari and English
  • Understand that Dari, Farsi and Pashto are different language needs
  • Have experience in disability support, personal care, nursing, community care or family care

  • Communicate clearly with participants, families and coordinators
  • Respect privacy, dignity, culture and personal boundaries
  • Understand modesty and respectful communication during personal care
  • Follow participant support plans and workplace instructions
  • Complete checks and onboarding required for the assigned role
  • Hold the right to work in Australia

Dari-speaking applicants bring more than translation. They bring Dari-language clarity, Afghan community familiarity, family understanding, respectful communication and confidence when supporting participants who prefer Dari-language care.

Common Checks and Requirements

Applicants complete the checks and requirements connected to their assigned role, state, participant needs and support setting.

  • NDIS Worker Screening Check
  • Police Check
  • Working With Children Check where required
  • First Aid and CPR where required
  • Driver licence for transport-based shifts
  • Right to work in Australia
  • Relevant disability, personal care, nursing or community support experience

  • Resume or work history
  • Availability for suitable shifts
  • Agreement to follow participant support plans and workplace policies

The recruitment team confirms the exact checks, documents and onboarding steps during the application process.

Who This Role Suits in the Dari-Speaking Afghan Community

Dari-speaking disability support worker roles are especially relevant for applicants who understand:

  • Dari family communication
  • Dari-speaking Afghan community settings
  • Afghan-Australian community context
  • Dari-speaking households and home-based routines
  • Privacy, modesty, respect and family involvement
  • Support needs of older Dari-speaking participants
  • Dari-language care explanation and Dari-English support communication
  • Appointment, transport and service navigation in English and Dari
  • Cultural or religious gatherings such as Ramadan, Eid and Nowruz where relevant
Stuart and Yogendra a Special Bonding

Why Dari Language Skills Matter in Disability Support

Dari language skills create clearer communication between participants, families, support workers and care teams.

Dari-speaking participants often feel more confident when they explain daily routines, care preferences, personal care needs, appointments, home tasks and support goals in Dari. Families also communicate more clearly when discussing support expectations in their preferred language.

  • Explaining personal care preferences in Dari
  • Supporting older Dari-speaking participants who speak limited English
  • Communicating with family members about routines and appointments
  • Supporting community access in Dari-speaking Afghan community settings where relevant
  • Supporting participants around Ramadan, Eid, Nowruz, family gatherings or community events where relevant
  • Respecting privacy, modesty, dignity and family involvement during care
  • Explaining support routines clearly between Dari and English

Dari and Afghan Community Context in Disability Support

Dari language skills are valuable because disability support often involves personal conversations about care, privacy, routines, appointments, transport and family communication.

For Dari-speaking participants and families, support can feel clearer when the worker understands both the language and the context of the Dari-speaking Afghan community in Australia. This includes Afghan family communication, respect for older family members, familiar home routines, meal preferences, community gatherings, Ramadan, Eid, Nowruz, mosque visits, community centres and family events where relevant.

Dari-English bilingual support workers help participants explain what they need, what they prefer, what feels uncomfortable and what support routine works best for them.

This role is not only about speaking Dari. It is about using Dari and English to connect participant needs, family communication, care team instructions and daily support tasks.

Dari Support Situations Where Your Language Skills Matter

Dari-English bilingual support workers are valuable when the participant’s support depends on language, trust, family communication and cultural comfort.

Personal Care Conversations

Discussing showering, dressing, toileting, mobility support, pain, discomfort, preferences, boundaries, privacy and modesty respectfully in Dari.

Family and Appointment Support

Speaking with family members about changes in routine, appointment needs, transport, family visits and care team communication in Dari and English.

Community and Cultural Comfort

Supporting family visits, Afghan community events, Ramadan, Eid or Nowruz gatherings, mosque visits, community centres, cultural activities and unfamiliar appointments where relevant.

Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker Jobs by Location

Help at Hand Support recruits disability support workers across its Australian service areas.

Dari-speaking applicants are considered for suitable roles based on participant demand, language matching, location, availability, experience and support needs.

  • Victoria
  • New South Wales
  • Queensland
  • Western Australia
  • South Australia

When you apply, include your suburb, state, Dari language ability, support experience and shift availability. This helps the recruitment team review suitable opportunities in your area.

Casey Community Disability Expo

How to Apply for Dari Speaking DSW Jobs

Step 1

Open the online application form.

Step 2

Submit your details and resume.

Step 3

Speak with the recruitment team.

Step 4

Complete checks and onboarding.

Step 5

Get matched with suitable participants.

Why Join Help at Hand Support?

Help at Hand Support values support workers who care about people, communication and respectful disability support.

As a Dari-speaking disability support worker, you use your language skills to support participants who prefer Dari-language communication. You also build experience in the disability and NDIS sector while helping people with daily routines, personal goals and community participation.

  • Use your Dari language skills in a meaningful support role
  • Support NDIS participants with daily living and community access
  • Help participants and families communicate clearly
  • Work in home, appointment, transport and community settings
  • Build experience in the disability support sector
  • Join a team that values cultural understanding and respectful care

Explore More Multilingual Disability Support Worker Jobs

Looking for other language-based roles? View our multilingual disability support worker jobs page to explore Farsi, Mandarin, Vietnamese, Cantonese and other language opportunities.

You can also apply through the general application form and list all languages you speak.

Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker Job FAQs

Complete the online application form and submit your contact details, location, Dari language skills, English communication level, experience, availability and resume. The recruitment team reviews your application and contacts suitable applicants.
Dari-speaking support worker roles require strong Dari communication when the participant or family prefers support in Dari. The recruitment team reviews your language ability, experience and suitability for each role.
Yes. Dari-English bilingual applicants are encouraged to apply, especially when they have disability support, aged care, nursing, personal care, community support or family care experience.
No. Dari and Farsi are closely related but treated as different language needs for recruitment matching. Dari-speaking applicants are considered for Dari-language participant matches. Farsi-speaking applicants should apply through Farsi speaking disability support worker opportunities.
Dari-speaking disability support workers support NDIS participants with daily living, personal care, transport, appointments, community access, household tasks, family communication and Dari-language support.
Previous disability support experience strengthens your application. Relevant aged care, nursing, personal care, community care, family care or support work experience also supports your suitability.
Applicants complete the checks required for the assigned role and location. These include the NDIS Worker Screening Check, Police Check, Working With Children Check where required, First Aid and CPR where required, and onboarding requirements.
A driver licence is required for transport-based shifts. The recruitment team confirms whether the role involves transport, appointments or community access.
Yes. Family care experience is relevant when it includes respectful support, personal care, routines, appointments, transport or communication with care teams. The recruitment team reviews your full experience and suitability.
Yes. Dari-speaking disability support workers support participants who feel more comfortable communicating in Dari, including older participants and people who speak limited English.
Help at Hand Support matches workers with participants based on language, location, availability, support needs, experience and role suitability. Dari-speaking applicants are considered for Dari-language participant matches and other suitable disability support roles.
Dari-speaking disability support worker roles depend on participant demand and service coverage. Help at Hand Support recruits across service areas in Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia and South Australia.
Include your name, phone number, email, suburb, state, Dari language ability, English communication level, previous experience, availability and resume.

Ready to Use Your Dari Language Skills to Support Your Community?

Apply today and join a team that values your language skills, cultural understanding and commitment to respectful disability support.

Apply for Dari Speaking Disability Support Worker Jobs

Speak Dari and English? Complete the online application form below and include your suburb, state, Dari and English language skills, previous support experience, availability and resume.