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 women’s health clinic can be one of the most practical places to manage perimenopause and menopause, because it brings your care together in one place rather than leaving you to assemble it yourself. The clinics listed here have been vetted for a genuine, stated menopause focus, so you are not relying on a general practice that happens to see the occasional menopause patient.
In plain terms, a women’s health clinic is a GP-led practice with a dedicated focus on women’s health, usually offering menopause assessment, MHT prescribing, and coordinated referrals under one roof. Many bring together GPs with a menopause interest, practice nurses, and allied health, so more of your care happens within one team. They sit between a single general practice appointment and specialist referral.
What makes a women’s health clinic menopause-focused
A clinic with a genuine menopause focus does more than list women’s health on its website. It will have one or more GPs who actively manage menopause and stay current on MHT evidence, offer dedicated menopause or perimenopause assessments rather than fitting them into a standard appointment, and be able to discuss hormonal and non-hormonal options, different MHT formulations, and delivery methods. Many also coordinate the wider picture, arranging bone density testing, cardiovascular and breast screening, pelvic health support, and mental health care, and drawing in allied health where it helps.
Useful signs of a real focus: GPs on the team who hold menopause-specific training such as Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP) status or active Australasian Menopause Society (AMS) involvement, a named menopause or perimenopause service rather than a general women’s health page, and clarity about whether the clinic offers the Medicare menopause health assessment. A clinic that treats menopause regularly will take a thorough symptom history across the full range of presentations, not just hot flushes, and will not dismiss symptoms as normal ageing.
When a clinic is the right choice, and when you need more
For many women a women’s health clinic is the ideal middle ground, more coordinated and menopause-focused than a single general practice appointment, without needing a specialist referral to start. A solo menopause-informed GP can be just as good if you already have one you trust, and you can browse those in the menopause doctors directory. Some situations still call for specialist input. Gynaecologists with a menopause focus suit complex presentations, significant pelvic or hormonal concerns, and cases where surgery may be relevant. Endocrinologists help where thyroid, adrenal, or other hormonal conditions complicate the picture. A good clinic will arrange those referrals when they are needed.
Billing and referrals at a women’s health clinic
Because women’s health clinics are GP-led, you do not need a referral to book one. A referral is only required if the clinic refers you on to a gynaecologist or endocrinologist, since specialist appointments need a GP referral for a Medicare rebate. Billing varies between clinics: some bulk-bill, many charge private fees with a Medicare rebate, and some offer a mix depending on the appointment. The listing for each clinic shows how it bills and whether it is taking new patients. Clinics with GPs can also offer the Medicare menopause and perimenopause health assessment (MBS item 695), available since 1 July 2025, which funds a longer dedicated appointment. It is worth asking whether the clinic offers it when you book.
How to prepare for a menopause appointment
A well-prepared first appointment produces better outcomes, which is why we created the Appointment Ready Workshop, a free resource with checklists and guides. Before attending, document your symptoms specifically: which ones, how often, how severe, and how they are affecting sleep, work, mood, and daily function. Note your last menstrual period and any cycle changes, current medications and supplements, relevant personal and family health history (particularly cardiovascular disease, breast cancer, blood clots, and osteoporosis), and your top three questions or treatment goals. Arriving with this information lets the clinic move quickly to meaningful clinical discussion rather than spending the appointment establishing basics.
Common questions about women’s health clinics and menopause
What is a women’s health clinic?
A women’s health clinic is a GP-led practice with a dedicated focus on women’s health, including perimenopause and menopause. Compared with a standard general practice, it usually offers longer or dedicated menopause assessments, GPs who actively manage menopause, and coordinated access to related care such as bone density testing, pelvic health, and mental health support, often with allied health on the team.
What does a menopause clinic offer that a regular GP appointment does not?
More coordinated, menopause-focused care in one place. A women’s health clinic typically offers dedicated assessment time, GPs who keep current on MHT evidence, and in-house or closely linked services for the wider menopause picture, from screening to pelvic health. A single general practice can manage menopause well, but a women’s health clinic is built around it, which matters most if your symptoms are complex or you have been dismissed elsewhere.
Do I need a referral to see a women’s health clinic?
No. Because women’s health clinics are GP-led, you can book directly without a referral. A referral is only needed if the clinic refers you on to a gynaecologist or endocrinologist, since specialist appointments require a GP referral for a Medicare rebate.
Are women’s health clinics bulk-billed?
It varies. Some bulk-bill, many charge private fees with a Medicare rebate, and some offer a mix depending on the appointment. The listing for each clinic shows how it bills, so you can choose one that suits. Clinics with GPs can also offer the Medicare menopause health assessment under MBS item 695, which funds a longer dedicated appointment.
How do I choose a menopause clinic?
Look for a named menopause or perimenopause service rather than a general women’s health page, GPs on the team with menopause-specific training such as MSCP or AMS involvement, and clarity about assessment time, billing, and whether they offer the item 695 health assessment. The clinics in this directory have been vetted for a genuine menopause focus, so filtering by this category narrows the field to clinics that treat menopause regularly.
For information on MHT options and what to discuss at your appointment, see our MHT in Australia guide and menopause treatment guide. If you would prefer an individual doctor, browse the menopause doctors directory.
Browse women’s health clinics by city in the Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane directories, or search the full Australian menopause directory.
Reviewed and updated 23 June 2026.
