Strengthening Medicare: 50 more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics

ANTHONY ALBANESE MP
PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA

MARK BUTLER MP
MINISTER FOR HEALTH AND AGED CARE

A re-elected Albanese Labor Government will build on its historic investment in Medicare to expand the availability of free, urgent care, with a $644 million commitment to open another 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics, with more clinics in every state and territory.

  • New South Wales: 14 clinics
  • Victoria: 12 clinics
  • Queensland: 10 clinics
  • Western Australia: 6 clinics
  • South Australia: 3 clinics
  • Tasmania: 3 clinics
  • Northern Territory: 1 clinic
  • Aust. Capital Territory: 1 clinic
  • Australia: 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics

The Albanese Labor Government went to the last election promising to open 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics, and we have delivered 87 clinics.
 
The new clinics will open during the 2025-26 financial year. A full list of the locations of the additional 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics is available below.
 
Once all of Labor’s clinics are open, 4 in 5 Australians will live within a 20-minute drive of a Medicare Urgent Care Clinic, according to analysis by the Department of Health and Aged Care.
 
All you will need is your Medicare card, not your credit card.
 
More than 1.2 million Australians have already been treated at one of Labor’s existing 87 Urgent Care Clinics, which provide bulk billed care for urgent but non-life-threatening conditions, seven days a week, for extended hours, with no appointment needed.
 
Parents and families swear by them: one third of patients are under the age of 15.
 
The Liberals say the Albanese Labor Government’s Urgent Care Clinics are “wasteful spending”. Peter Dutton will close every Medicare Urgent Care Clinic, forcing over a million Australians a year back into the waiting rooms of busy hospital emergency departments.
 
Doctors have embraced the clinics, with a survey finding 7 in 10 GPs support Medicare Urgent Care Clinics, and 8 in 10 GPs say they have a positive impact on hospital emergency departments.
 
Around 2 million Australians are expected to make use of an Urgent Care Clinic each year, getting the free urgent care they need, fully bulk billed, without waiting hours in a busy hospital emergency department.
 
This extends Labor’s election commitment to strengthening Medicare, with the single largest investment in Medicare since its creation over 40 years ago:

  • $644 million for 50 more Urgent Care Clinics, with more in every state and territory.
  • $7.9 billion for more bulk billing, with 9 in 10 GP visits bulk billed by 2030.
  • $617 million for more doctors and nurses, with the largest GP training program ever.
  • $573 million for more choice, lower costs, and better health care for women.

The $644 million investment for 50 more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics was provisioned for in 2024-25 MYEFO.

LOCATIONS OF THE ADDITIONAL 50 MEDICARE URGENT CARE CLINICS
 
The locations of the additional 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics have been determined according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics Statistical Area Level 3 (SA3) geographic areas. More information on the SA3 locations for the 50 additional Medicare Urgent Care Clinics is available at: https://www.health.gov.au/resources/publications/locations-of-the-additional-50-medicare-urgent-care-clinics

  • New South Wales (14 clinics)
    • Bathurst
    • Bega
    • Burwood
    • Chatswood
    • Dee Why
    • Green Valley and surrounds
    • Maitland
    • Marrickville
    • Nowra
    • Rouse Hill
    • Shellharbour
    • Terrigal
    • Tweed Valley
    • Windsor
  • Victoria (12 clinics)
    • Bayside
    • Clifton Hill
    • Coburg
    • Diamond Creek and surrounds
    • Lilydale
    • Pakenham
    • Somerville
    • Stonnington
    • Sunshine
    • Torquay
    • Warrnambool
    • Warragul
  • Queensland (10 clinics)
    • Brisbane
    • Buderim
    • Burpengary
    • Cairns
    • Caloundra
    • Capalaba
    • Carindale
    • Gladstone
    • Greenslopes and surrounds
    • Mackay
  • Western Australia (6 clinics)
    • Bateman
    • Ellenbrook
    • Geraldton
    • Mirrabooka
    • Mundaring
    • Yanchep
  • South Australia (3 clinics)
    • East Adelaide
    • Victor Harbour
    • Whyalla
  • Tasmania (3 clinics)
    • Burnie
    • Kingston
    • Sorell
  • Northern Territory (1 clinic)
    • Darwin
  • Australian Capital Territory (1 clinic)
    • Woden Valley

The locations and providers of Medicare Urgent Care Clinics will be determined through independent commissioning processes conducted by Primary Health Networks or state and territory governments.
 
The commissioning process typically involves a competitive open tender or expression-of-interest, to determine the most appropriate private provider to operate the Medicare Urgent Care Clinic in that location.

As at 2 March 2025.