How to Get a Specialist Appointment Faster in Australia

Updated April 2026

Waiting 9 months for a dermatology appointment is not unusual in the public system. But there are legitimate ways to cut that wait - some obvious, some that most people never think to try. Here are the strategies that actually work.

1. Ask your GP to mark the referral as urgent

This is the single most effective thing you can do, and it takes 10 seconds at your GP appointment.

Public hospital outpatient clinics triage every referral into urgency categories. If your GP writes "routine" or leaves it blank, you go to the bottom of the pile. If they write "urgent" with clinical justification, you jump the queue.

The categories and target wait times:

Category Target wait What qualifies
Category 1 - Urgent Within 30 days Suspected cancer, acute cardiac symptoms, rapidly worsening neurological signs, severe mental health crisis
Category 2 - Semi-urgent Within 90 days Chronic pain affecting daily function, stable cardiac condition needing investigation, moderate mental health concerns
Category 3 - Routine Within 365 days Stable conditions, screening, monitoring, non-acute issues

Your GP knows the triage criteria. If your condition genuinely warrants urgency, ask them to state that clearly in the referral letter. A referral that says "suspicious pigmented lesion, rapid change in size over 6 weeks, family history of melanoma" gets triaged very differently from "mole check".

2. Get on the cancellation list

Every specialist has cancellations. Patients reschedule, move interstate, or simply don't show up. The cancellation list is your best friend.

Call the specialist's rooms directly and say: "I'd like to be added to the cancellation list. I can come in at short notice." Most practices keep a separate list for patients who are flexible on timing. You might get a call at 3pm asking if you can come in tomorrow at 8am.

This works for both private and public clinics. For public outpatient clinics, call the hospital's outpatient booking office and ask the same question. Be polite, be specific about how much notice you need (same day, 24 hours, 48 hours), and make sure your phone number is correct in their system.

Pro tip: Call back every 2 to 3 weeks to remind them you are still available. Reception staff manage hundreds of patients. A polite follow-up keeps your name visible.

3. Try telehealth for the initial consultation

Many specialists now offer telehealth appointments, and these often have shorter wait times than in-person visits. Medicare rebates apply to telehealth specialist consultations at the same rate as face-to-face visits.

A telehealth appointment works well for:

It does not work for anything requiring a physical examination, procedures, or hands-on assessment. But for many conditions, the specialist can review your referral letter, discuss your symptoms, order blood tests or imaging, and see you in person only when the results are back. This can save months.

4. Ask about registrar clinics at teaching hospitals

Teaching hospitals like The Royal Melbourne, Alfred, Monash Medical Centre, St Vincent's, and Austin Health run registrar clinics alongside consultant clinics. A registrar is a fully qualified doctor completing their specialist training. They work under the direct supervision of a consultant specialist.

Registrar clinics often have shorter wait times because they run more frequently and have more appointment slots. The quality of care is the same - a consultant reviews all cases and is available for complex decisions.

Real examples from Melbourne hospitals:

Ask your GP to refer you to the registrar clinic specifically, or call the hospital's outpatient department and ask if a registrar clinic is available for your condition.

5. Consider a different specialist in the same field

Your referral is not locked to one specialist. If Dr Smith has a 6-month wait and Dr Jones in the next suburb has a 6-week wait, you can take the same referral letter to Dr Jones.

Ask your GP who else they recommend. Call multiple specialist rooms and ask about wait times. The difference can be dramatic - a popular inner-city specialist might have a 4-month wait while a specialist 30 minutes further out has openings next week.

For private specialists, check outer suburban areas. Specialists in Dandenong, Werribee, Frankston, and Cranbourne often have shorter wait times than those in the CBD, East Melbourne, or South Yarra. Fees are sometimes lower too.

6. Look at regional and interstate options

If you live in Melbourne or Sydney and face a long wait, consider specialists in regional centres. Geelong, Ballarat, Bendigo, Albury-Wodonga, and the Gold Coast hinterland all have specialist clinics with shorter wait lists.

Your Medicare card works everywhere in Australia. Your referral is valid nationally. The only cost is your travel, and for some people, a 90-minute drive to see a specialist next week beats waiting 6 months locally.

Some regional specialists also offer telehealth for the initial consultation, with only the procedure or physical examination requiring an in-person visit.

7. Use your private health insurance strategically

If you have private hospital cover, your GP can refer you as a private patient. Private specialists often have shorter wait times because they are not bound by public hospital capacity limits.

The trade-off is cost. A private orthopaedic consultation might cost $350 to $600, with a Medicare rebate of around $76 to $130. But if the alternative is waiting 10 months in pain, the $250 to $470 gap might be worth it.

Some private hospitals run "rapid access" clinics for specific conditions - particularly cardiac, orthopaedic, and gastroenterology. Ask your GP or call the private hospital directly.

Know your wait time benchmarks. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare publishes elective surgery wait times. In 2025, median wait times nationally were: urgent surgery 18 days, semi-urgent 47 days, non-urgent 139 days. But these are medians. The 90th percentile for non-urgent surgery was 365 days, meaning 10% of patients waited over a year.

8. When your condition changes, tell your GP immediately

If your symptoms get worse while you are waiting, go back to your GP. They can upgrade your referral from routine to urgent, or from semi-urgent to urgent. The hospital will re-triage your case and potentially move your appointment forward.

This is not gaming the system. If your condition has genuinely changed, the triage category should change too. A mole that was stable but has now started bleeding is a different clinical picture. Knee pain that was manageable but now prevents you from working is a different urgency level.

What not to do

Don't go to the emergency department for a non-emergency. EDs are for emergencies. Going to the ED because you can't get a specialist appointment will result in a long wait (4 to 8 hours for non-urgent cases), and the ED doctor will likely tell you to follow up with a specialist anyway. It does not speed up your outpatient appointment.

The exception: if your condition genuinely becomes an emergency (chest pain, sudden neurological symptoms, severe allergic reaction, uncontrolled bleeding), go to the ED immediately. That is exactly what it is for.

Summary: your action plan

  1. Ask your GP to clearly state the urgency in the referral letter
  2. Call the specialist and get on the cancellation list
  3. Ask about telehealth for the initial consultation
  4. Check if a registrar clinic at a teaching hospital can see you sooner
  5. Call multiple specialists and compare wait times
  6. Consider regional or outer suburban specialists
  7. Go back to your GP if your condition changes

Need a referral first? Read our guide to which specialists need a GP referral. Want to know what the appointment will cost? Check our breakdown of specialist costs, public vs private. Or try the Medicare Navigator tool for personalised answers.

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