Updated June 2026

GP Referral for Blepharoplasty in Australia

Cosmetic blepharoplasty requires a GP referral under AHPRA's 2023 guidelines. If your eyelid surgery has a functional component — such as excess upper eyelid skin impairing your vision — the pathway and funding options may be different.

A referral is not a recommendation of surgery or any practitioner. The doctor may decline if they do not assess it as clinically appropriate.

Who can refer me for blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery)?

Any AHPRA-registered GP or non-cosmetic specialist can provide the referral. The referral cannot come from the operating doctor's own clinic — this is a deliberate safeguard introduced in the 2023 AHPRA reforms. Your usual GP is the preferred path, as they know your medical history.

What to expect at the GP consultation

Your GP will discuss your motivations and health. For upper blepharoplasty, they may assess whether there is a documented visual field impairment. Functional (not cosmetic) blepharoplasty follows a different referral pathway.

The consultation is confidential. A referral does not commit you to proceeding with surgery.

What it costs

GP consultation: $0–$90. Telehealth: $24.99–$49.95.

Your referral options

Comparative Assessment

Cosmetic Surgery GP Referral Services — Australia

Last verified:

June 2026

ServicePrice
Your own GP

AHPRA preferred

$0–$90

Bulk-billed possible; Medicare rebate may apply

$24.99
From $39.95
$39.90
From $49

Standard listed referrals (skin/eye/colonoscopy) $24; cosmetic requires Telehealth Consult from $49

Standard fees apply

No Medicare rebates offered. Verify current pricing directly with provider.

Your own GP

AHPRA preferred

$0–$90

Bulk-billed possible; Medicare rebate may apply

Any GP can refer for cosmetic surgery

Business hours (varies) · In person or telehealth

AHPRA-preferred path. GP knows your medical history. Possible Medicare rebate if bulk-billed.

$24.99
Dedicated cosmetic surgery referral product

8am–midnight, 365 days · Phone/video consult; instant PDF download if approved

Lowest-priced dedicated cosmetic referral service found at time of verification.

From $39.95
Dedicated cosmetic surgeon & plastic surgeon referral pages

6am–midnight daily · Questionnaire + practitioner call

Specific pages for cosmetic surgeon and plastic surgeon referrals.

General specialist referrals

6am–midnight AEDT · Phone consult; ~1 hour turnaround claimed

18+ only. General specialist referral service; not cosmetic-specific.

Standard listed referrals (skin/eye/colonoscopy) $24; cosmetic requires Telehealth Consult from $49

Cosmetic surgery not listed — requires general telehealth consult

24/7 · Phone consult

Wesfarmers-owned. Cosmetic surgery referrals not explicitly listed; would require a general telehealth consultation.

Standard fees apply

No Medicare rebates offered. Verify current pricing directly with provider.

Cosmetic surgery and dermatology specialist referrals available

Verify with provider · Questionnaire + phone or video consult with Australian-registered practitioner

NIB-affiliated. Complete pre-screening questionnaire, then book a consult. Referral issued if assessed as clinically appropriate. No Medicare rebates.

Important: All referrals are issued only if an AHPRA-registered practitioner assesses them as clinically appropriate. A referral is not a recommendation of surgery or any practitioner. Prices verified June 2026 — verify directly with each provider before booking.

View full comparison with all details →

After the referral: what to expect

A GP referral allows you to book the first of two mandatory consultations with the operating doctor. Under AHPRA's 2023 guidelines:

  • A minimum of two consultations with the operating doctor are required
  • The operating doctor must conduct psychological/BDD screening
  • After you provide written consent, a 7-day cooling-off period applies before surgery can be scheduled
  • You can withdraw consent at any time without penalty

Read about all your patient rights →

Frequently asked questions

Yes, if the procedure is cosmetic. Cosmetic blepharoplasty requires a GP referral before consultation. Functional blepharoplasty (vision impairment from excess eyelid skin) may follow a different medical referral pathway.

Cosmetic blepharoplasty is not Medicare-covered. If there is a documented functional impairment of vision, the procedure may attract Medicare rebates. Your GP or ophthalmologist can advise on eligibility.