Peer Support Worker jobs in Australia
13 current roles available
Safe Haven Consumer Peer Support Worker
The Royal Melbourne Hospital
Youth Peer Worker - First Nations (Identified)
Anglicare Central Queensland
Peer Worker - Carer Support
Anglicare Central Queensland
Peer Support Worker
Hope Community Services
Peer Worker
Wellways Australia
Peer Worker
Wellways
About Peer Support Worker roles
Peer Support Workers occupy a unique and valued role in the mental health sector — their personal experience of mental illness and recovery is the core qualification for the role. They provide one-to-one and group support, model recovery, share coping strategies, and help people navigate the mental health system from a position of genuine empathy.
In Australia, peer work has grown significantly as both government and NGO services recognise the evidence base for peer support. Positions exist across community mental health, headspace, NDIS providers, inpatient units, and crisis services. The Certificate IV in Mental Health Peer Work is the standard vocational qualification.
Peer Support Workers often work alongside clinical staff in multidisciplinary teams. The role is distinct from clinical roles — it is explicitly non-clinical and rooted in mutuality and shared experience. Advocacy for the peer workforce model and systemic change is increasingly part of the role.
Typical salary
$55k – $75k AUD
Rates vary by employer and award. Community services award applies in most NGO roles. Senior peer worker and coordinator roles attract higher salaries.
Registration
No statutory registration required. Certificate IV in Mental Health Peer Work is the standard qualification.
Qualifications typically required
- Lived experience of mental illness and recovery (essential)
- Certificate IV in Mental Health Peer Work (or equivalent)
- NDIS Worker Screening Check for community roles
- Working with Children Check where applicable
Career pathway
Many peer workers begin in casual or part-time roles and build to full-time. Senior pathways include Senior Peer Worker, Peer Work Coordinator, and Peer Workforce Development roles. Some move into clinical training, management, or advocacy and policy positions, bringing lived experience to systemic change.