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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A gynaecologist is a specialist in women’s reproductive and hormonal health, and for menopause they handle the more complex end of care. Most women manage menopause well with a GP or a women’s health clinic, but when symptoms are difficult, layered, or tied to a specific gynaecological condition, a gynaecologist with a genuine menopause focus is the right step up. The gynaecologists listed here have been vetted for a dedicated, substantive menopause service, not just a general women’s health page, so you are not guessing at who actually focuses on this.
In plain terms, a menopause gynaecologist is a specialist doctor, a FRANZCOG, who has chosen to make perimenopause and menopause a real part of their practice. They can investigate and treat gynaecological causes of symptoms, manage complex hormone therapy, and offer procedures or surgery where these are needed. Seeing one does not mean leaving your GP behind, the two work together, with your GP coordinating your overall care.
What makes a gynaecologist menopause-focused
Every gynaecologist in Australia is a specialist who holds Fellowship of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, shown as FRANZCOG, and is registered with AHPRA. That is the baseline. The menopause signal is what sits on top of it. A menopause-focused gynaecologist runs a dedicated, named menopause or perimenopause service rather than listing menopause among many conditions, and keeps current on hormone therapy evidence.
The clearest menopause-specific marker is the Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP) credential, earned by examination and focused entirely on menopause care. Active involvement in the Australasian Menopause Society (AMS) also signals a genuine interest in this area, though on its own it indicates interest rather than certified expertise. A gynaecologist with a real menopause focus will take a thorough history across the full range of symptoms, not just bleeding or hot flushes, and will discuss hormonal and non-hormonal options clearly.
When you might see a gynaecologist for menopause
For many women, a GP or a women’s health clinic is the right place to start and may be all that is needed. A gynaecologist comes in when care needs to go further. That includes complex or persistent symptoms that first-line care has not settled, hormone therapy decisions complicated by your medical history, and specific conditions such as abnormal or postmenopausal bleeding, pelvic organ prolapse, fibroids, or endometriosis carried into midlife.
It also includes early menopause, premature ovarian insufficiency, and menopause brought on by surgery or cancer treatment, where specialist input matters. If you are not sure whether you need this level of care, starting with the menopause doctors directory or a women’s health clinic is sensible, and they can refer you on if a gynaecologist is the right next step.
Referrals and getting an appointment
Seeing a gynaecologist 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 gynaecologist, including one you have found here, rather than being sent to a specific name.
You can also contact a gynaecologist’s rooms directly before you have a referral, to ask about availability, waiting times, fees, and what they need from you. Many are happy to answer these questions so you can plan. If you would rather not involve a GP, you can still book and be seen as a private patient without a referral, you would simply pay the full fee without the Medicare rebate. A standard GP referral lasts twelve months from your first appointment, and you can keep seeing the gynaecologist for that issue under the same referral.
Gynaecology, Medicare, and private health cover
Gynaecologists 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 gynaecologists 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.
Private health insurance does not change the rebate for rooms consultations, but hospital cover becomes relevant if you need a procedure or surgery as a private patient. The listing for each gynaecologist gives you a starting point, and the rooms can confirm current fees and whether they are taking new patients.
How to prepare for a gynaecology appointment
A specialist appointment goes further when you arrive prepared. Bring your GP referral and any relevant test results, scans, or prior investigations, since these save repeating work. Note your symptoms and how they affect daily life, your menstrual and any bleeding history, your current hormone therapy, medications and supplements, and relevant personal and family history, particularly breast cancer, blood clots, and cardiovascular disease.
Our free Appointment Ready Workshop includes checklists you can adapt for a specialist visit. Writing down your top questions and your goals for treatment helps the gynaecologist focus the appointment on what matters most to you.
Common questions about gynaecologists and menopause
What does a gynaecologist do for menopause?
A gynaecologist manages the more complex side of menopause, including difficult or persistent symptoms, complicated hormone therapy decisions, and gynaecological conditions such as abnormal bleeding, prolapse, or fibroids. They can investigate, prescribe, and offer procedures or surgery where needed, and they work alongside your GP rather than replacing them.
Do I need a referral to see a gynaecologist?
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 gynaecologist to see, including one from this directory. You can contact a gynaecologist’s 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.
When should I see a gynaecologist rather than a GP for menopause?
A GP or women’s health clinic is the right starting point for most menopause care. Consider a gynaecologist when symptoms are complex or have not settled, when hormone therapy is complicated by your history, when there is a specific gynaecological condition, or for early, surgical, or cancer-related menopause. Your GP can advise whether specialist care is the right next step and refer you on.
Does Medicare cover a gynaecologist?
With a valid referral, Medicare rebates part of a gynaecologist’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. Private health hospital cover is relevant if you need a procedure or surgery as a private patient. Ask the rooms about out-of-pocket costs when you book.
How do I choose a menopause gynaecologist?
Look for a FRANZCOG gynaecologist with a dedicated, named menopause service rather than a general women’s health page, ideally holding the MSCP credential or actively involved in the Australasian Menopause Society. The gynaecologists 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 gynaecologists by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 24 June 2026.
