Providers listed here are vetted for menopause relevance and alignment with our standards. “Vetted” means we check fit and clarity. It does not mean we verify clinical outcomes or replace medical advice.
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An endocrinologist is a specialist in hormones and the conditions linked to them, and for menopause they handle the part where the transition collides with something else. Most menopause care is managed well by a GP or a women’s health clinic, and more complex gynaecological care by a gynaecologist. An endocrinologist becomes the right person when menopause overlaps with a hormonal or metabolic condition, when bone health needs a long-term plan, or when menopause has come early. The endocrinologists listed here have been vetted for a genuine menopause or women’s hormonal health focus, which is a relatively small group, so you are not guessing at who actually works in this area.
In plain terms, an endocrinologist is a specialist physician, a FRACP, who focuses on the body’s hormone systems, including the thyroid, bones, and metabolism. Seeing one does not replace your GP or gynaecologist. Endocrinologists work as part of a team, focusing on hormone balance, metabolic risk, and bone protection, while your gynaecologist handles pelvic and procedural care and your GP coordinates the whole picture.
What makes an endocrinologist menopause-focused
Every endocrinologist in Australia is a specialist physician who holds Fellowship of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, shown as FRACP, and is registered with AHPRA. That is the baseline. Because relatively few endocrinologists make menopause a focus, the signal that matters is a clearly stated interest in menopause or women’s hormonal health, rather than general endocrinology alone.
The clearest menopause-specific marker is the Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP) credential, earned by examination. Being listed with the Australasian Menopause Society (AMS) is also useful, as the AMS lists endocrinologists with a menopause interest by state, though on its own it indicates interest rather than certified expertise. A menopause-focused endocrinologist will look at the whole hormonal and metabolic picture, not just one gland.
When you might see an endocrinologist for menopause
For most women, a GP or women’s health clinic is the right starting point, and a gynaecologist handles complex gynaecological care. An endocrinologist is the right step when menopause meets another hormone-linked condition. The most common reasons are thyroid problems, where symptoms such as fatigue, hair shedding, and palpitations overlap with menopause and need untangling, and bone health, where osteopenia, osteoporosis, or a fracture history calls for a long-term plan beyond first-line care.
Other reasons include diabetes, prediabetes, or other metabolic concerns alongside menopause, polycystic ovary syndrome carried into midlife, and early menopause or premature ovarian insufficiency, where long-term bone and heart health planning matters. An endocrinologist may also help when hormone therapy decisions are complicated by your medical history. They do not perform pelvic examinations or investigate bleeding, which sit with your GP or a gynaecologist, so it helps to know which question you are trying to answer. If primary or gynaecological care fits better, you can start with the menopause doctors directory, a women’s health clinic, or a gynaecologist.
Referrals and getting an appointment
Seeing an endocrinologist usually involves a GP referral, but this is a routine step rather than a barrier. You need a referral mainly so that Medicare will rebate part of the consultation. Your GP can write a general referral addressed to no one in particular, which means you are free to choose the endocrinologist, including one you have found here.
You can also contact an endocrinologist’s rooms directly before you have a referral, to ask about availability, waiting times, fees, and what they need from you, including any blood tests or scans to bring. If you would rather not involve a GP, you can be seen as a private patient without a referral, paying the full fee without the Medicare rebate. A standard GP referral lasts twelve months from your first appointment, and you can keep seeing the endocrinologist for that issue under the same referral.
Endocrinology, Medicare, and private health cover
Endocrinologists are specialists, so they set their own fees, and costs vary. With a valid referral, Medicare rebates part of the consultation, and you pay the difference as a gap. Some endocrinologists bulk-bill in certain circumstances, but many charge a private fee with a rebate, so it is worth asking about out-of-pocket costs when you book.
Much endocrine care is consultations and tests rather than procedures, so private hospital cover is less often relevant than it is for surgery. Bone density testing, blood tests, and ongoing review are a common part of the picture. The listing for each endocrinologist gives you a starting point, and the rooms can confirm current fees and whether they are taking new patients.
How to prepare for an endocrinology appointment
A specialist appointment goes further when you arrive prepared. Bring your GP referral and any relevant results, including recent blood tests such as thyroid, hormone, glucose, and lipid levels, and any bone density scans, since these save repeating work. Note your symptoms and how they affect daily life, your menstrual and menopause history, your current hormone therapy, medications, and supplements, and relevant personal and family history, particularly thyroid disease, diabetes, osteoporosis, and early menopause.
Our free Appointment Ready Workshop includes checklists you can adapt for a specialist visit. Writing down your main questions and what you want from treatment helps the endocrinologist focus the appointment on what matters most to you.
Common questions about endocrinologists and menopause
What does an endocrinologist do for menopause?
An endocrinologist manages menopause when it overlaps with another hormone or metabolic condition, such as thyroid disease, bone loss, or diabetes, and helps with complex hormone decisions and early menopause. They focus on hormone balance, metabolic risk, and bone protection, and work alongside your GP and gynaecologist rather than replacing them. They do not perform pelvic examinations or investigate bleeding.
When should I see an endocrinologist rather than a GP or gynaecologist?
A GP or women’s health clinic is the right starting point for most menopause care, and a gynaecologist handles complex gynaecological and pelvic concerns. Consider an endocrinologist when menopause overlaps with thyroid, metabolic, or bone conditions, when you have early or premature menopause, or when hormone therapy is complicated by your medical history. Your GP can advise whether endocrine input is the right next step.
Do I need a referral to see an endocrinologist?
For a Medicare rebate, yes, you need a referral, usually from your GP. This is routine, and your GP can write a general referral so you can choose which endocrinologist to see, including one from this directory. You can contact the rooms directly to ask about fees and availability, and you can also be seen privately without a referral if you are happy to pay the full fee.
Does Medicare cover an endocrinologist?
With a valid referral, Medicare rebates part of an endocrinologist’s consultation. Because specialists set their own fees, you usually pay a gap on top of the rebate, though some bulk-bill in certain situations. Most endocrine care involves consultations and tests rather than procedures. Ask the rooms about out-of-pocket costs when you book.
How do I choose a menopause endocrinologist?
Look for a FRACP endocrinologist with a clearly stated menopause or women’s hormonal health focus, ideally holding the MSCP credential or listed with the Australasian Menopause Society. Because few endocrinologists focus on menopause, this matters. The endocrinologists in this directory have been vetted for a genuine menopause focus, and you can contact the rooms to confirm fees, waiting times, and whether they are taking new patients.
For more on hormonal and non-hormonal options, see our menopause treatment guide and our MHT in Australia guide. To start with primary care, browse the menopause doctors directory.
Browse menopause endocrinologists by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 24 June 2026.
