Youth Mental Health Worker jobs in Australia
11 current roles available
headspace Youth Access Clinician (Mental Health Clinician)
Flourish Australia
Senior Intake and Assessment Officer
Dereka-Jo Williams
YOUTH ACCESS WORKER
JP Smith Recruitment
CLINICAL LEAD (HEADSPACE)
JP Smith Recruitment
headspace Clinician (1)
Gateway Health
CAMHS Allied Health Professional or Clinical Nurse
Women's and Children's Health Network
About Youth Mental Health Worker roles
Youth mental health is one of the most active areas of growth in the Australian sector. The headspace network — with over 160 centres nationally — is the primary employer of youth mental health workers, providing services across mental health, physical health, alcohol and drugs, and vocational support for young people aged 12–25.
Youth mental health workers come from a range of professional backgrounds including psychology, social work, nursing, occupational therapy, and youth work. A youth-specific therapeutic approach — engaging, non-stigmatising, and collaborative — is essential. Many workers have specialist training in early psychosis, eating disorders, or AOD.
Beyond headspace, youth mental health workers are employed by Orygen, ReachOut, and state government early psychosis programs, schools, and community youth organisations. The field emphasises early intervention and reducing the duration of untreated mental illness in young people.
Typical salary
$65k – $95k AUD
Rates vary by professional background — clinical staff (psychologists, nurses) attract higher salaries. headspace centre workers are employed through host organisations with varying awards.
Registration
Depends on professional background. Relevant AHPRA or professional association registration if applicable.
Qualifications typically required
- Qualification in psychology, social work, nursing, OT, or youth work
- Experience or training in youth-specific therapeutic approaches
- Working with Children Check (mandatory)
- NDIS Worker Screening Check for relevant roles
Career pathway
Youth mental health workers often progress to senior clinician, team leader, or service development roles within the youth sector. Specialist pathways include early psychosis, eating disorders, and AOD. Many senior practitioners move into clinical governance, training, or policy roles within the sector.