Short answer
The Australian health system routes almost everything through a General Practitioner (GP) — you cannot self-refer to most specialists. To see one as a student:
- Find a local clinic using HotDoc, HealthEngine, or a Google Maps search for “bulk billing GP near me”.
- Check whether they bulk-bill OSHC students before booking. Not every clinic does, and this determines whether you pay AU$0 or AU$90+ on the day.
- Book online (fastest) or phone the clinic. Same-day slots are common for non-urgent issues; you may wait 1–3 days for a specific doctor.
- On the day, bring your OSHC membership card (in the insurer’s app), passport or Australian driver licence, and arrive 10 minutes early to fill in a new-patient form.
- If they don’t bulk-bill, pay the gap on the day and claim the MBS portion back through your OSHC app — reimbursement lands in your bank in 2–5 business days.
| What you need | Why |
|---|---|
| OSHC card (digital is fine) | Clinic needs the member number to direct-bill or to give you an itemised receipt |
| Passport or licence | ID — clinics verify this for new patients |
| Medicare card (RHCA students only) | Some clinics can bulk-bill Medicare and claim the gap from OSHC |
| Your Australian address + mobile | Required on the new-patient form |
Why the first GP visit trips up every new arrival
The Australian primary care system does not work like what most students have at home. Key differences:
- No walk-ins to specialists. Seeing a dermatologist, orthopedist, psychiatrist, or obstetrician requires a GP referral first. Without the referral, Medicare/OSHC will not reimburse the specialist fee.
- GP appointments are 15 minutes by default. If you have two problems, book a “long consult” (30 minutes) when making the appointment. Otherwise the doctor will ask you to come back.
- You almost always book in advance, not walk in. Walk-in clinics exist but are the exception, not the norm.
- There is no insurance card to swipe. The clinic bills Medicare (or your OSHC) electronically using your membership number.
Finding the right clinic
Option A — HotDoc
HotDoc (https://www.hotdoc.com.au/) is the dominant online booking platform in Australia. Enter a postcode, filter by “Open now” or “Bulk billing”, read doctor profiles, and book a specific time slot. It integrates with about 40% of Australian GP clinics. Free to use.
Option B — HealthEngine
HealthEngine (https://healthengine.com.au/) is the next-largest booking aggregator. Similar feature set to HotDoc but covers a different (overlapping) set of clinics. Worth checking if HotDoc has nothing nearby.
Option C — University health service
Most Australian universities run an on-campus medical centre. These are usually the smoothest option for international students because:
- Staff are used to OSHC and RHCA workflows
- Bulk billing for enrolled students is common
- Appointment slots are held for students
Check your university’s student portal for the health service link. Examples:
- Monash University Health Service — bulk-bills most OSHC members
- UNSW Health Service — bulk-bills enrolled students
- University of Melbourne Health Service — fee-charging but direct-bills Medibank OSHC
Option D — Google Maps + phone call
Search “bulk billing GP [suburb]” and filter by 4+ stars. Call the clinic to confirm they bulk-bill your specific OSHC insurer — Medibank is widely accepted, Bupa/Allianz less so, ahm depends on the clinic. This is the single most important question to ask.
Understanding bulk billing — the difference between AU$0 and AU$90
“Bulk billing” means the GP accepts the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) fee as full payment and charges you nothing on the day. The clinic bills Medicare directly — or for OSHC students, bills your insurer directly if you’re with one of the participating insurers.
When the clinic bulk-bills:
- You pay AU$0 on the day
- Clinic claims the MBS fee (~AU$42 for standard consult in 2026) from your OSHC
- No paperwork for you
When the clinic does NOT bulk-bill (the “gap” scenario):
- You pay the full consult fee on the day — usually AU$85–110 for a standard consult
- Clinic gives you an itemised receipt
- You submit the receipt to your OSHC app
- OSHC reimburses you the MBS amount (~AU$42)
- The difference (AU$43–68) is out of pocket — this is the “gap”
Standard MBS fee for a GP consult (2026, always check current figure):
| MBS item | Description | Rebate |
|---|---|---|
| 23 | Standard consult (up to 20 min) | ~AU$42.85 |
| 36 | Long consult (20–40 min) | ~AU$82.90 |
| 44 | Extended consult (>40 min) | ~AU$122.15 |
The actual appointment — what happens
- Arrive 10 minutes early. A new-patient form takes 5–8 minutes to complete — name, address, mobile, emergency contact, allergies, current medications, past surgeries, family history.
- Check in at reception. Hand over your OSHC card or app screen. They scan your membership number.
- Wait 5–25 minutes. GPs usually run behind schedule.
- In the consult: Describe the symptom in plain English — start with what, then when, then severity. Bring a written list if you’re worried about forgetting.
- Prescriptions are issued electronically — most now go directly to any Australian pharmacy via SMS or the MyMedicare app.
- Referrals to specialists are issued on paper or as a PDF emailed to you. Keep the referral: it’s valid for 12 months.
- Pathology requests (blood tests, etc.) go to any Australian pathology lab — Douglass Hanly Moir, 4Cyte, Healius. Walk-in, no appointment needed.
Claiming the visit on OSHC — the actual steps
If the clinic didn’t bulk-bill:
Step 1. Open your insurer’s app. Go to “Claims” or “Make a claim”.
Step 2. Select “GP consultation” or “Medical consultation”.
Step 3. Enter the date of service, the clinic name, and the amount you paid. Upload a photo of the itemised receipt (make sure the MBS item number, usually 23 or 36, is visible).
Step 4. Submit. You’ll get a confirmation email within an hour.
Step 5. Reimbursement lands in the bank account linked to your OSHC in 2–5 business days. If it hasn’t arrived in 5 days, check the app for “More information required” — usually a clearer photo of the receipt.
Common first-visit mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Booking a short consult for three problems | Always book “long consult” if you have >1 issue |
| Not asking about bulk billing first | Call the clinic, or filter by bulk-billing in HotDoc |
| Forgetting the OSHC card | Screenshot it from the app the night before |
| Losing the specialist referral | Scan to your phone immediately after the consult |
| Trying to self-refer to a specialist | Can’t — MBS won’t rebate without GP referral |
| Missing the appointment | Most clinics charge AU$30–50 no-show fee |
FAQ
Can I see a female / male / Mandarin-speaking doctor? Yes — HotDoc filters by doctor gender and languages spoken. Most urban clinics have at least one Mandarin-, Hindi-, or Korean-speaking GP.
What if I need to see someone out of hours? After-hours GP services (13SICK / House Call Doctor) send a GP to your address between 6pm–11pm and are usually bulk-billed to OSHC. For anything urgent after 11pm, go to a hospital Emergency Department.
Is telehealth covered? Yes. MBS telehealth items (91790, 91800) are rebated the same as in-person. Good for follow-up scripts, results review.
Do I need to register with one GP? No — Australia has no gatekeeper registration. You can see any GP at any clinic. But continuity is valuable for ongoing issues.
Sources
- Services Australia — Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS): https://www.servicesaustralia.gov.au/individuals/medicare
- MBS Online — current item numbers and fees: https://www.mbsonline.gov.au/
- HotDoc — booking platform: https://www.hotdoc.com.au/
- HealthEngine — booking platform: https://healthengine.com.au/
- 13SICK National Home Doctor Service: https://www.13sick.com.au/
Last updated: 2026-04-10