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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Physiotherapy is one of the most practical and underused parts of menopause care. As oestrogen falls, the pelvic floor, bladder, and vaginal tissue change, and many women notice leakage, urgency, prolapse, or discomfort with sex, alongside the more familiar joint aches and loss of strength. A physiotherapist with a genuine menopause focus can assess and treat much of this directly. The physiotherapists listed here have been vetted for a real menopause or women’s health focus, so you are not relying on a general clinic that rarely sees these concerns.
In plain terms, a menopause physiotherapist is most often a pelvic health or women’s health physiotherapist, with extra training in the pelvic floor and continence on top of their physiotherapy degree. Some also focus on the musculoskeletal side, helping you stay strong and protect bone and joint health through the transition. A good one works alongside your GP and any specialist, not in place of them.
What makes a physiotherapist menopause-informed
Physiotherapists are registered health professionals. Every physiotherapist in Australia is registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, and the title physiotherapist is protected by law, so registration is a genuine baseline you can rely on. The marker that matters for menopause is further training in pelvic and women’s health on top of that base.
The clearest signal is an Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) Titled Continence and Women’s Health Physiotherapist, a title awarded after advanced study and assessed experience in this area. The highest level is a Specialist, awarded by the Australian College of Physiotherapists, recognised with the letters FACP. Many menopause-focused physiotherapists also hold a postgraduate qualification such as a Master of Clinical Physiotherapy in continence and pelvic health. A physiotherapist with a real menopause focus will be comfortable taking a full pelvic, bladder, and bowel history, and will explain assessment options, including internal pelvic floor assessment, clearly and with your consent.
What a menopause physiotherapist helps with
Pelvic health physiotherapy addresses several of the most common and least talked about menopause changes. That includes urinary urgency, frequency, and leakage, pelvic organ prolapse and the support strategies that help it, and pelvic floor muscle training tailored to your situation rather than generic exercises. It also includes pelvic pain and discomfort with sex, which often relate to genitourinary syndrome of menopause, where physiotherapy frequently works best paired with vaginal oestrogen prescribed by your doctor.
On the musculoskeletal side, a physiotherapist can help with menopause-related joint aches, guide safe strength and weight-bearing exercise to support bone density, and keep you moving confidently. The listing for each physiotherapist indicates their focus, so you can choose one whose work matches your main concern.
When a physiotherapist is the right choice, and when you need more
A physiotherapist is the right starting point for pelvic floor symptoms, prolapse support, and staying strong, and for many women it is the first thing that genuinely helps. It sits well alongside medical care rather than replacing it. Hormone treatment, including vaginal oestrogen for genitourinary symptoms, is a medical decision, so it is prescribed by a doctor.
Some situations need medical or specialist input first. For a diagnosis, for menopausal hormone therapy, or where symptoms are unclear, browse the menopause doctors directory or a women’s health clinic. For significant prolapse where surgery may be considered, or for complex pelvic concerns, a gynaecologist with a menopause focus is appropriate. A good physiotherapist will refer you on and work in with your medical team.
Physiotherapy, Medicare, and private health cover
You do not need a referral to see a physiotherapist. You can book directly, and most physiotherapy is paid privately or claimed through private health extras cover, depending on your policy.
A Medicare rebate is possible in some cases. From 1 July 2025, the older care plans were replaced by a single GP Chronic Condition Management Plan. If you have an eligible chronic condition, your GP can refer you for up to five rebated allied health visits per calendar year, which can all be physiotherapy, though the rebate is partial and most clinics charge a gap. Whether you qualify is a clinical decision for your GP, so it is worth asking. For pelvic health concerns that are not covered this way, extras cover or private payment is the usual route.
How to prepare for a physiotherapy appointment
A little preparation makes the first visit more useful. Note your main symptoms and when they happen, for example leakage with coughing or exercise, urgency, or heaviness, and keep a short bladder diary for a few days if bladder symptoms are your concern. Note your menstrual history, current medications and supplements, any relevant surgery or childbirth history, and your exercise routine. It also helps to know what you want to achieve, whether that is continence, returning to running, or comfort during sex.
Our free Appointment Ready Workshop includes checklists you can adapt for a physiotherapy visit. If a pelvic health physiotherapist suggests an internal assessment, they will explain why and seek your consent first, and you can decline or ask for alternatives at any point.
Common questions about physiotherapists and menopause
What does a physiotherapist do for menopause?
A menopause physiotherapist treats the physical changes of the transition, especially pelvic floor and bladder symptoms, prolapse, and pelvic pain, and supports bone and joint health with safe, guided exercise. Much of this can be treated directly, and physiotherapy works well alongside medical care. It does not replace assessment or hormone treatment from a doctor.
What is a pelvic health or women’s health physiotherapist?
A pelvic health physiotherapist is a physiotherapist with extra training in the pelvic floor, bladder, and bowel, sometimes also called a women’s health or continence physiotherapist. The recognised marker in Australia is an APA Titled Continence and Women’s Health Physiotherapist, with a Specialist tier awarded by the Australian College of Physiotherapists. They are well suited to menopause-related pelvic symptoms.
Do I need a referral to see a physiotherapist?
No. You can book a physiotherapist directly without a referral. A referral from your GP is only needed if you want to claim a Medicare rebate under a GP Chronic Condition Management Plan, which requires an eligible chronic condition. Otherwise physiotherapy is paid privately or through private health extras.
Does Medicare or private health insurance cover physiotherapy?
Sometimes. If you have an eligible chronic condition, a GP Chronic Condition Management Plan can provide up to five rebated allied health visits per calendar year, introduced in this form on 1 July 2025, with a partial rebate and usually a gap. Many people instead claim physiotherapy through private health extras cover, or pay privately. Check your policy and ask the clinic how it bills.
How do I choose a menopause physiotherapist?
Look for an AHPRA-registered physiotherapist who states a genuine menopause or women’s health focus, ideally an APA Titled Continence and Women’s Health Physiotherapist, and who is comfortable taking a full pelvic and bladder history. The physiotherapists in this directory have been vetted for a real menopause focus, so filtering by this category narrows the field to clinicians who treat these concerns regularly.
For more on managing the transition, see our menopause support guide and our menopause treatment guide. If you need medical assessment or hormone treatment first, browse the menopause doctors directory.
Browse menopause physiotherapists by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 24 June 2026.
