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 naturopath can be a useful part of menopause care when you want to focus on nutrition, lifestyle, sleep, and day-to-day wellbeing alongside your medical treatment. The naturopaths listed here have been vetted for a genuine, stated menopause focus and for the qualifications and standards set out below, so you are not left sorting credible practitioners from the rest yourself.
In plain terms, a naturopath uses diet, lifestyle, and evidence-informed herbal and nutritional medicine to support your health. A good one works alongside your GP rather than in place of one. They do not diagnose serious conditions, prescribe menopausal hormone therapy, or replace a medical assessment, and a credible naturopath will tell you so and refer you on when that is what you need.
How we vet a menopause naturopath
Naturopathy carries a credibility question that medicine does not, because the practice is not nationally registered. We vet against a clear bar so a listing here means something. To be listed, a naturopath must be degree-qualified, usually a Bachelor of Health Science in naturopathy, must be a current member of a recognised professional body such as the Naturopaths and Herbalists Association of Australia, the Australian Traditional-Medicine Society, or the Australian Natural Therapists Association, and must show a genuine, stated menopause focus rather than a passing mention.
We also exclude practitioners who rely on discredited diagnostics or energy-based methods, such as iridology, hair-tissue mineral analysis, or IgG food-intolerance testing. These are not evidence-based and are not a marker of safe menopause care. If a naturopath is listed here, they have cleared that bar.
It is worth knowing the regulatory reality. Naturopaths are not registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, and the title naturopath is not protected by law, which means anyone can use it regardless of training. That is precisely why qualifications and recognised membership matter, and why a vetted directory is more useful here than in fields where registration already guarantees a baseline.
When a naturopath is the right choice, and when you need more
A naturopath suits you well if you want practical support with nutrition, energy, sleep, stress, and general wellbeing, and if you prefer a complementary approach that sits alongside your medical care. Many women see a naturopath and a menopause-informed doctor at the same time, for different parts of the picture.
Some decisions belong with a doctor. Menopausal hormone therapy, interpreting hormone or other blood tests, and any red-flag symptom such as unusual bleeding need medical assessment. If that is where you are, browse the menopause doctors directory or a women’s health clinic, and consider an endocrinologist where a thyroid, adrenal, or other hormonal condition may be involved. A good naturopath will encourage exactly this and work in with your medical team.
Naturopathy, Medicare, and private health cover
Naturopathy is not covered by Medicare, so there is no Medicare rebate for a naturopathy consultation. Private health insurance is a different story, and it changed recently. After being removed in 2019, naturopathy and Western herbal medicine became eligible again for private health extras rebates from 1 July 2025, following a federal review of the evidence.
That change lifts the ban but does not compel insurers to act. Whether your fund offers a naturopathy rebate, at what level, and for which practitioners is up to each insurer, and many are still re-establishing provider credentialing. Check your own extras policy, and ask the practitioner whether they are recognised by your fund, before you book.
How to prepare for a naturopathy appointment
Arriving prepared makes the first visit far more useful. Note your main symptoms, how often they occur and how they affect daily life, your menstrual history, and your sleep, mood, and energy patterns. Bring a full list of current medications and supplements, because some herbs and nutrients interact with prescription medicines, and a credible naturopath will check for this. Recent blood test results are helpful if you have them.
Our free Appointment Ready Workshop includes checklists you can use for a naturopathy visit as well as a GP one. Telling your naturopath who else is involved in your care, particularly your GP, lets them work safely alongside your medical treatment.
Common questions about naturopaths and menopause
What does a naturopath do for menopause?
A naturopath uses nutrition, lifestyle changes, and evidence-informed herbal and nutritional medicine to support common menopause concerns such as energy, sleep, mood, and digestion. They focus on day-to-day wellbeing and work best alongside your medical care, not in place of it. They do not prescribe menopausal hormone therapy.
Are naturopaths regulated in Australia?
Not in the way doctors and other registered health professions are. Naturopaths are not registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, and the title is not protected by law. The profession is self-regulated through associations, so the things to look for are a recognised degree and current membership of a body such as the Naturopaths and Herbalists Association of Australia, ATMS, or ANTA.
Can a naturopath prescribe menopausal hormone therapy?
No. Menopausal hormone therapy is a prescription medical treatment, so it is prescribed by a doctor, usually a GP or a specialist. A naturopath can support you with nutrition and herbal or nutritional medicine, but for hormone therapy you need a menopause-informed doctor. The two approaches can work well together.
Does Medicare or private health insurance cover a naturopath?
Medicare does not cover naturopathy. Private health extras rebates for naturopathy and Western herbal medicine became available again from 1 July 2025, after being removed in 2019, but it is up to each insurer whether they offer them. Check your extras policy and ask whether the practitioner is recognised by your fund before booking.
How do I choose a menopause naturopath?
Look for a degree-qualified naturopath who is a member of a recognised body, who states a genuine menopause focus rather than listing it among many conditions, and who is happy to work alongside your GP. Be cautious of anyone relying on iridology, hair-tissue mineral analysis, or food-intolerance blood testing. The naturopaths in this directory have been vetted against these standards.
For more on supporting yourself through the transition, see our menopause support guide and our menopause treatment guide. If you would prefer to start with medical care, browse the menopause doctors directory.
Browse menopause naturopaths by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 24 June 2026.