Skip to content
Government Federal

Transparency on specialist fees is a welcome and necessary reform

Catholic Health Australia 2 mins read

Catholic Health Australia has welcomed new legislation introduced today to improve the transparency of specialist doctor fees as health costs continue to soar.

The new legislation will allow the Government to upload specialist cost data directly to the Medical Costs Finder, an online tool that helps patients understand costs for specialist services.

The Medical Costs Finder is already operating, but its impact has been limited because participation by individual specialists has been voluntary and extremely low, meaning patients often cannot see what a specific doctor actually charges.

The new legislation allowing the Government to upload data directly to the Medical Costs Finder will address this gap by using existing Medicare, hospital, and private health insurance data.

“This reform is critical as out-of-pocket costs for specialist care are rising and becoming increasingly unpredictable for patients,” said Catholic Health Australia Director of Health Policy Dr Katharine Bassett.

Dr Bassett said CHA has long called for changes to ensure the Medical Costs Finder is genuinely useful for patients. 

While this reform is welcome, it is only the start. Access to specialist care is shaped by a range of factors, and transparency of fees is just one of them. Broader systemic issues affecting access must also be addressed.

“CHA is calling for a comprehensive review of access to specialist care across both public and private settings to ensure people can get the care they need, when they need it.”

“The goal must be a health system where people can access timely specialist care based on need, not on their capacity to absorb unexpected and growing out-of-pocket costs, their postcode, or other structural barriers,” Dr Bassett said.

CHA looks forward to working constructively with the Government to ensure these laws deliver strong consumer protections, improve access to specialist care, and support a sustainable and trusted health system.

Notes to editors: Catholic Health Australia (CHA) is Australia’s largest non-government, not-for-profit group of health, community, and aged care providers. Our members operate 80 hospitals in each Australian state and the ACT, providing around 30 per cent of private hospital care and 5 per cent of public hospital care, in addition to extensive community and residential aged care. There are 63 private hospitals operated by CHA members, including St Vincent's, Calvary, Mater, St John of God and Cabrini. CHA members also provide approximately 12 per cent of all aged care facilities across Australia, in addition to around 20 per cent of home care services. 25 per cent of our members’ service provision is regional, rural and remote.


Contact details:

Charlie Moore: 0452 606 171

More from this category

  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 12/02/2026
  • 13:10
National Tertiary Education Union

National survey finds high levels of stress and overwork among university staff

A shocking new report shows Australia’s universities are living a tale of two workplaces where senior leaders say they experience relatively low levels of psychological risk while staff at every university in the study are working in conditions that put them at high risk of psychological harm. The findings, released today as part of the 2025 Australian University Census on StaffWellbeing, lay bare the deep disconnect between management and frontline staff at institutions which educate more than a million students and employ hundreds of thousands. National Assistant Secretary of the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) Gabe Gooding said the alarming…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 12/02/2026
  • 09:29
Private Healthcare Australia

Health funds back stronger transparency laws for specialist doctor fees

Private Healthcare Australia has welcomed the Federal Government’s legislation to upgrade the Medical Costs Finder website, saying it is a critical step toward tackling Australia’s growing specialist fee crisis. The reform will expand the information available about specialist doctors’ fees, allowing patients to compare typical costs before booking an appointment and better estimate their likely out-of-pocket expenses. The move comes after PHA last week released its report, Restoring affordable access to specialist care in Australia, backed by a nationally representative survey of more than 4,000 Australians. The report revealed an urgent affordability and access problem reshaping Australia’s health system. It…

  • Government Federal, Manufacturing
  • 12/02/2026
  • 06:45
Weld Australia

Weld Australia Welcomes Federal Consultation on Local Wind and Transmission Tower Manufacturing

Weld Australia has welcomed the Australian Government’s decision to open national consultation on domestic manufacturing of wind and transmission towers and related infrastructure, applauding the initiative as a significant step toward strengthening sovereign industrial capacity and boosting local manufacturing jobs across clean energy supply chains. The consultation, announced on 9 February 2026 by Minister for Industry and Innovation, Senator the Hon Tim Ayres, and Minister for Climate Change and Energy, the Hon Chris Bowen, invites input from businesses across the clean energy manufacturing supply chain to inform policy development and potential future support measures. “Wind and transmission tower infrastructure is…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.