Manage your care with the new Mable app for clients

DisabilityAged CareSupport Workers

Last updated

10 June 2026

Reading time

3 min read

Share

jenny-conor-device-600x450px_xa0fvc

The Mable: Find Support app is new and designed to make managing your support easier. It has a simplified design so everything you need is one place.

In this article, we share what’s new in the app and how these updates can help you organise your support more easily.

 

What’s new in the Mable: Find Support app?

The new app features a new navigation menu that groups key features together, making it easier to find what you need. You can easily move between the four main areas:

  • Home: View upcoming support sessions, updates, and quickly manage changes.
  • My Support: Find everything related to your ongoing support here, including your current support workers, support hours and more.
  • Find Support: An easier way to quickly post a job, search for support workers and more.
  • Messages: Chat, video call or voice call with support workers.

 

A simpler way to stay on top of your support

Our new app gives you a more streamlined support experience, so you can spend less time looking for what you need and more time focusing on your support.

Here are some of the benefits of using the Mable: Find Support app:

Stay informed at a glance

Your personalised homepage gives you a snapshot of what's relevant to you and your support. You can view important updates, see upcoming support sessions and use quick actions to easily make changes, all in one place.

Find what you need faster

The redesigned app brings key support features together so they’re easier to access. Use the customised My Support page to see your support hours, agreements and support session information. Use the dedicated Find Support page to quickly post a job, search for support workers, review job applications and check pending agreements.

Handle changes quickly

If plans change at the last minute, you can now respond with just a few taps. Cancel, reschedule, or find a replacement support worker using quick actions on your homepage.

Manage your support without barriers

The new app is designed to support a more accessible experience. It’s compatible with screen readers and the menu icons are identifiable for people with colour blindness.

 

Your existing login will work

If you are already using the Mable app, your current login details will work on the new one. Download the new app and then sign in to get started.

 

Watch webinar to learn how to use the new app

To help you navigate the new app, you can watch the recording of our recent webinar, where we explain exactly how to use it and share lots of useful tips.

The webinar includes a full online tour of the app and will teach you how to complete key tasks in the app.

 

Download now to manage your support more easily

Managing your support should feel simple and with Mable’s new app, it can be. Download the new Mable: Find Support app today to discover how much easier it can be to manage your support in one place. The old version of the app will stop working at the end of May 2026, so if you want to continue managing your support on the go, the new app is for you!

Please note that downloading the new app is optional. You can still manage your support on a desktop via a web browser.

You might be interested in

Support worker dries dishes while talking to a client in a wheelchair.
Preventing everyday harm in support work
As a support worker, you want your clients to feel safe, respected and supported. You may already think carefully about how to provide safe support and prevent serious incidents. But harm is not always obvious. Sometimes, small everyday actions, words or assumptions can affect a client in ways you may not have intended or noticed at the time. This is sometimes referred to as everyday harm. Over time, these small moments can build up and may affect how respected, heard, in control or safe your client feels. The newly launched Everyday Harm website brings together practical resources to help support workers and organisations build safer, more respectful support relationships. These resources were developed through Australian Research Council studies, including interviews with people with disability about their experiences. Mable was proud to be involved in this project as an Industry and Community Partner organisation. We hope these resources help you better understand everyday harm
NDIS reforms announced: What we know so far
We know recent news about NDIS reforms might feel heavy. For many of you, your participants, and your loved ones, hearing about potential service caps or changes to funding for social and community participation is deeply stressful. We want to start by saying: we hear you, and we are here for you. Our commitment to you remains unchanged While the government works through these changes, we want you to know Mable's business model is not changing. Our platform continues to be a place where you can find and book independent support workers who best meet your needs or those of your clients. While we may make a few small technical updates behind the scenes, your ability to use Mable remains exactly as it is today. We're your partner and advocate During this transition, we're dedicated to supporting safe, transparent connections. We are actively advocating for person-centred approaches to care that respect your choice and control, and we'll keep helping our community understand what these r
Disabled mums are the quiet supermums
As the water trickled over the rocks and my kids explored the bush, their laughter mingling with birdsong, I sat quietly on the wooden seat, taking it all in. The peace, the joy - but also something else. My eyes welled up just as my independent support worker glanced at me. She slipped an arm around me and gave a gentle squeeze. I didn't need to explain what I was feeling but she already knew. That feeling is something that I think every parent living with a disability needs to hear and embrace. A different kind of angst Mum - and dad - guilt is almost synonymous with parenting these days. We worry we're not doing enough, not being enough; that there's never enough time, money, or energy. But when you're parenting with disability, that feeling cuts deeper. It's the sting when you can't do something for, or with, your kids. Like driving them to a birthday party, kicking a soccer ball in the backyard. It's crying quietly in the kitchen when disability and parenthood all feels too much.