GP Referral for Breast Augmentation in Australia
Yes — breast augmentation is a cosmetic surgical procedure under the AHPRA guidelines introduced on 1 July 2023. You must have a referral from a GP or non-cosmetic specialist before you can have a consultation with the operating doctor.
Who can refer me for breast augmentation?
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 ask about your general health, motivations for surgery, and any psychological considerations. They are required to conduct a brief mental health assessment. The consultation is confidential.
The consultation is confidential. A referral does not commit you to proceeding with surgery.
What it costs
A GP consultation costs $0 (if bulk-billed) to around $90 at a private clinic. Telehealth referral services charge $24.99–$49.95.
Your referral options
Comparative Assessment
Cosmetic Surgery GP Referral Services — Australia
Last verified:
June 2026
| Service | Price |
|---|---|
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. |
AHPRA preferred
Bulk-billed possible; Medicare rebate may apply
Business hours (varies) · In person or telehealth
AHPRA-preferred path. GP knows your medical history. Possible Medicare rebate if bulk-billed.
8am–midnight, 365 days · Phone/video consult; instant PDF download if approved
Lowest-priced dedicated cosmetic referral service found at time of verification.
6am–midnight daily · Questionnaire + practitioner call
Specific pages for cosmetic surgeon and plastic surgeon 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
24/7 · Phone consult
Wesfarmers-owned. Cosmetic surgery referrals not explicitly listed; would require a general telehealth consultation.
No Medicare rebates offered. Verify current pricing directly with provider.
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.
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
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Since 1 July 2023, AHPRA requires a GP or non-cosmetic specialist referral before your first consultation with the operating doctor for any cosmetic surgical procedure, including breast augmentation.
Yes — any AHPRA-registered GP or non-cosmetic specialist can provide the referral. The operating doctor's own clinic cannot provide it. Your usual GP is the AHPRA-preferred path.
GP referrals are generally valid for 12 months.
Yes. Several telehealth services offer cosmetic surgery referrals by phone or video consult, available outside business hours. The doctor can decline if they don't assess it as clinically appropriate.