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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The mental health side of menopause is real, and it is often the part that gets dismissed. As hormones shift through perimenopause and menopause, many women notice low mood, anxiety, irritability, poor sleep, and brain fog, and the perimenopausal years carry a genuinely higher risk of depression, including for women who have never experienced it before. A psychologist with a menopause focus can help you understand what is happening and give you practical tools. The psychologists listed here have been vetted for a real menopause or midlife mental health focus, so you are not starting from scratch explaining why this stage matters.
In plain terms, a psychologist provides talking therapy, structured and evidence-based, to help with mood, anxiety, stress, and the way you cope day to day. They do not prescribe medication, that is a doctor’s role, but they work well alongside medical care, and for many women the two together make the biggest difference.
What makes a psychologist menopause-informed
Psychologists are registered health professionals. Every psychologist in Australia is registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, and the title is protected, so registration is a reliable baseline. There are two main types you will see. A registered psychologist has completed the required training and supervision, and a clinical psychologist has additional postgraduate training and an area of practice endorsement, which also affects the Medicare rebate.
There is no separate menopause certification for psychologists, so the marker that matters is a genuine, stated focus on midlife and menopause mental health, and the use of evidence-based approaches. The strongest of these for menopause is cognitive behaviour therapy, which is recommended in menopause guidelines and has good evidence for mood, sleep, and even the distress of hot flushes. You can find a psychologist through the Australian Psychological Society (APS), and the listings here are filtered to those with a menopause focus.
What a psychologist helps with at menopause
Psychological support at menopause covers more than low mood. It includes anxiety and irritability that feel out of character, sleep problems, and ways to manage brain fog and concentration. It also includes the emotional weight of the physical symptoms themselves, where cognitive behaviour therapy can reduce how much hot flushes and night sweats bother you, separate from any hormonal treatment.
Just as importantly, this stage of life often brings change, in identity, relationships, caring roles, and work, and these can land heavily at the same time as the hormonal shift. A psychologist gives you a structured space to work through that, with practical strategies rather than just talking it over.
When a psychologist is the right choice, and when you need more
A psychologist is the right choice when you want to understand and manage the psychological side of menopause and build coping tools that last. It works well on its own and alongside medical care. Because perimenopausal mood changes can be partly hormonal, it is worth knowing that menopausal hormone therapy helps some women with mood, so a menopause-informed doctor can be part of the picture too.
If you think the hormonal side needs attention as well, browse the menopause doctors directory or a women’s health clinic. If your symptoms are severe, or you are having thoughts of harming yourself, please speak to your doctor promptly, or call Lifeline on 13 11 14, or 000 in an emergency. A good psychologist will also help you coordinate with your GP where medical input is needed.
Psychology, Medicare, and private health cover
You do not need a referral to see a psychologist. You can book directly and pay privately, or claim through private health extras cover if your policy includes psychology.
To claim a Medicare rebate, you need a Mental Health Treatment Plan and referral from your GP, prepared in a longer appointment. This gives you up to ten rebated individual sessions per calendar year under the Better Access initiative, usually referred in two parts, an initial course and then more after a GP review. The rebate covers part of the fee, with a gap on top, and it is higher for a clinical psychologist than for a registered psychologist. You can read more on the government’s Medicare Mental Health site. Ask the practice about fees and gaps when you book.
How to prepare for a psychology appointment
A first session goes further when you have thought about what you want from it. Note what has been hardest, how long it has been going on, and how it affects your sleep, work, relationships, and daily life. It helps to track when things are worse, for example around your cycle if you are still having one, and to bring a list of current medications and any hormone therapy.
Our free Appointment Ready Workshop includes checklists you can adapt for a psychology visit. If you have a Mental Health Treatment Plan and referral from your GP, bring them, and if you do not, you can still book privately and sort out a plan later.
Common questions about psychologists and menopause
How can a psychologist help with menopause?
A psychologist helps with the mood, anxiety, sleep, and brain fog changes of perimenopause and menopause, and with the life changes that often arrive at the same time. They use evidence-based therapy such as cognitive behaviour therapy, which can also reduce how much physical symptoms like hot flushes bother you. They do not prescribe medication, but work well alongside your medical care.
Do I need a referral to see a psychologist?
No. You can see a psychologist directly and pay privately, or claim through private health extras. A referral is only needed to claim a Medicare rebate, which also requires a Mental Health Treatment Plan from your GP. Your GP can write an open referral so you choose which psychologist to see, including one from this directory.
What is the difference between a clinical and a registered psychologist?
Both are AHPRA-registered and qualified to provide therapy. A clinical psychologist has additional postgraduate training and an area of practice endorsement, and attracts a higher Medicare rebate. A registered psychologist attracts a lower rebate. The right choice depends on your needs and budget, and both can help with menopause-related concerns.
Does Medicare cover psychology?
In part. With a Mental Health Treatment Plan and referral from your GP, you can claim a Medicare rebate for up to ten individual sessions per calendar year under the Better Access initiative. The rebate covers part of the fee, with a gap you pay on top, and it is higher for a clinical psychologist. Without a plan you can still see a psychologist privately or use private health extras.
How do I choose a menopause psychologist?
Look for an AHPRA-registered psychologist who states a genuine focus on midlife or menopause mental health and uses evidence-based approaches such as cognitive behaviour therapy. Consider whether you want a clinical or registered psychologist, partly a rebate question, and whether they offer telehealth. The psychologists in this directory have been vetted for a real menopause focus.
For more on managing the transition, see our menopause support guide and our menopause treatment guide. If the hormonal side needs attention, browse the menopause doctors directory.
Browse menopause psychologists by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 24 June 2026.
