Australia’s government-funded healthcare system continues to expand, with increasing investment into services that support veterans and their families.
The Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) plays a central role in this system, with $16.2 billion in funding allocated to support healthcare services for Defence Force veterans. Community Nursing forms a key part of this, funding clinical care delivered directly in the home.
For Registered Nurses and existing care providers, this creates a clear and time-sensitive opportunity to enter a structured, federally funded healthcare pathway.
A growing funding pool with limited provider access
DVA Community Nursing provides access to approximately $2.9 billion in annual funding for in-home clinical services.
Despite this, provider participation remains limited.
In many regions:
- There are fewer approved providers compared to NDIS and aged care
- Referral pathways are structured through GPs, hospitals, and discharge planners
- Demand continues to exceed available service capacity
Reports indicate that a significant proportion of eligible clients are unable to access timely care, creating a clear supply gap for providers who are ready to enter the system.
Why this matters for nurses and care providers
For Registered Nurses looking to start their own business, or for existing providers struggling to generate consistent client flow, DVA offers a different model.
This is not a lead-generation challenge. It is a referral-based system where:
- Clients are approved and funded
- Referrals are structured and ongoing
- Services are clinically aligned with existing nursing capabilities
If you are already delivering services such as wound care, chronic disease management, or in-home clinical support, the service model itself does not change significantly.
What changes is how you access clients, how compliance is structured, and how funding flows.
A limited window to enter the DVA system
The current DVA Community Nursing tender is open now, with registration closing June 30.
Once this tender closes, the next opportunity to enter may not arise until 2030.
This makes the current period a critical entry window for providers considering expansion into government-funded healthcare.
Unlike ongoing registration models in other sectors, DVA operates on structured tender cycles. Missing this window means waiting several years for re-entry.
What is required to become a DVA provider
Entering DVA Community Nursing is not about changing your service offering. It is about aligning with a regulated framework.
Providers typically need to:
- Meet DVA Community Nursing Provider Notes requirements
- Establish strong clinical governance and medication management systems
- Prepare compliant documentation and policies
- Understand billing, claiming, and referral processes
For providers who already operate in NDIS or aged care, these requirements are familiar. The difference lies in alignment and readiness, not reinvention.
Regulation as a pathway to growth
DVA Community Nursing reflects a broader principle across healthcare.
The most valuable opportunities are found within regulated, government-funded systems where:
- Demand is already approved
- Funding is secured
- Referral pathways are structured
At HCPA, this is defined as Regulatory Growth. It is the approach of using regulation as a growth advantage rather than viewing it as a barrier.
The biggest opportunities are not in unregulated markets. They exist behind the regulated wall, where providers who understand compliance and governance can scale sustainably.
We help organisations enter and scale highly regulated industries, turning complexity into structured growth pathways.
Getting started
For nurses and providers considering this opportunity, early preparation is critical.
This includes:
- Understanding eligibility and tender requirements
- Preparing governance and compliance frameworks
- Aligning your current service model with DVA expectations
- Ensuring documentation is complete before submission deadlines
Structured preparation significantly increases the likelihood of successful entry.
Explore how to enter DVA Community Nursing and access this opportunity.
Take the next step
The DVA Community Nursing tender represents a rare and time-sensitive opportunity within Australia’s healthcare system.
For those ready to move, the pathway is clear but requires preparation, compliance, and the right structure.
HCPA guides providers from setup through to successful entry, helping you navigate requirements and position your business for long-term growth.





