ANTHONY ALBANESE MP
PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA
MARK BUTLER MP
MINISTER FOR HEALTH AND AGED CARE
The Albanese Government is delivering cost-of-living relief through a major Medicare investment in the upcoming Budget, making Medicare Urgent Care Clinics a permanent part of Australia’s health system.
This significant health measure includes an additional $1.8 billion over five years from 2025-26 and $525.6 million a year ongoing from 2030-31 to keep Medicare Urgent Care Clinics open and free.
Medicare Urgent Care Clinics offer walk-in and bulk-billed urgent care, seven days a week for extended hours. Each clinic is equipped to treat a range of conditions and injuries that need urgent attention but aren’t life threatening. This includes cuts, viral infections, or sprains, allowing local hospital emergency departments to focus on emergencies and life-threatening conditions.
Across Australia, Medicare Urgent Care Clinics have already seen nearly 3 million presentations since the first clinics opened in June 2023.
More than one in four of these presentations were patients aged under 15 years old, more than one in four were on weekends, and one in four were after 5pm on weekdays when many GPs are not available.
A recent interim evaluation report of the Medicare Urgent Care Clinics Program found:
There are currently 135 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics open across Australia with an additional two clinics due to open by the end of June 2026. There are 47 clinics in regional, rural or remote Australia.
Once all are opened, 4 out of 5 Australians will live within a 20-minute drive from their local Medicare Urgent Care Clinic.