Compare 20 AHPRA-registered psychologists.
AHPRA registration class (general/clinical), Medicare MHCP rebate eligibility, areas of practice.
Browse by city
20 psychologists across Australia
Independent directory, no paid placements. Updated June 2026.
How do I get a psychologist on Medicare in Australia?
Step 1: Visit your GP and request a Mental Health Treatment Plan (MHTP) — they assess your needs and write a referral. Step 2: With the MHTP you're eligible for 10 Medicare-rebated psychology sessions per calendar year. Step 3: Choose any AHPRA-registered psychologist accepting Better Access referrals. Medicare rebate: $96.65 per session with general psychologist, $141.85 with clinical psychologist. Out-of-pocket gap: $60-$200 depending on practice. Bulk-billed psychologists charge $0 out-of-pocket. Wait times: 2-12 weeks for initial appointment.
Based on analysis of 20 providers across 7 service categories.
★Key takeaways
- ✓20+ psychologist profiled across Australia.
- ✓Typical pricing in Australia: $180-$1,500.
- ✓Independent ranking. No paid placements. No email capture.
- ✓Updated June 2026.
- ✓Every provider cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register.
About this psychologist comparison
Compare Psychologists is an independent Australian comparison service dedicated to helping consumers and businesses find, compare, and contact psychologist across every state and territory. We track 20 named providers across 7 service categories, pulling information from public sources, industry-body directories, and provider websites.
Our ranking methodology uses a transparent weighted score updated quarterly: 40% aggregated public reviews, 25% price transparency and itemised quoting, 20% service coverage and geographic availability, 10% credentials and registration with the relevant Australian industry body, and 5% complaint history logged with state fair trading offices and industry ombudsmen. We do not accept payment to rank providers. Where referral fees apply, they are disclosed in our footer and do not influence position.
Every psychologist on our platform is cross-referenced against the relevant Australian regulator's public register – whether that is AHPRA, ASIC, the Tax Practitioners Board, the Clean Energy Council, OMARA, or another. We also check Australian Business Register (ABR) records and review Fair Trading complaint data where published. We do not independently audit clinical, technical or service quality. Always verify a provider's current registration directly with the relevant regulator before engaging them.
For psychologist specifically, consumers typically compare providers on: pricing (including both headline rates and hidden fees), geographic coverage, specialisation relative to the specific need, wait times and availability, communication quality, and credentials.
If you are a psychologist provider interested in being listed or featured, contact us via the form below. Inclusion in our directory is free and does not require payment; featured placement in our rankings is earned through performance metrics, not fees.
Guides & City Rankings
City rankings
Best Psychologist by City
Independent rankings of the top psychologist in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Perth and 8 more cities.
Browse rankings →
Editorial guides
Cost, choice & comparison guides
How much does psychologist cost? How do you choose one? We've got the checklists.
Read guides →
Featured · Clinical Psychology endorsed
Leading psychology practices in Australia
AHPRA registration plus Clinical Psychology endorsement (the higher Medicare rebate tier — $141.85 vs $96.65 per session). Telehealth + multi-clinician capacity disclosed.
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthPerth · Subiaco
Clear Health Psychology
Specialises in anxiety, depression, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
200+
Years
—
AHPRA
Yes
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthBrisbane · Brisbane CBD
Brisbane City Psychologists
Specialises in anxiety, depression, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
25+
Years
—
AHPRA
Yes
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthBrisbane · Bulimba
Anxiety House Brisbane
Specialises in anxiety, child / teen issues, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
20+
Years
10+
AHPRA
Yes
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthAdelaide · Kensington Park
Kensington Psychology and Well-Being
Specialises in anxiety, depression, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
16+
Years
20+
AHPRA
Yes
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthAdelaide · Adelaide CBD
Adelaide Psychology and Co
Specialises in anxiety, depression, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
16+
Years
—
AHPRA
Yes
Clinical Psychology endorsedTelehealthSydney · Sydney CBD
Con Fides Psychologists Sydney
Specialises in anxiety, depression, trauma / ptsd
Psychs
9+
Years
20+
AHPRA
Yes
Common questions
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I get Medicare-rebated psychology sessions?
Visit your GP and request a Mental Health Treatment Plan (MHTP). The GP assesses your mental health and provides a referral. With the MHTP you're entitled to 10 Medicare-rebated psychology sessions per calendar year. After your first 6 sessions, return to the GP for a review to access the remaining 4. Some patients qualify for additional sessions in extreme circumstances. The MHTP referral is required at every psychology appointment for Medicare to apply.
How much does psychology cost out-of-pocket in Australia?
General psychologist: $180-$280/session standard fee. With Medicare MHTP rebate ($96.65), out-of-pocket $80-$185. Clinical psychologist: $230-$330/session. With Medicare rebate ($141.85), out-of-pocket $90-$190. Bulk-billed psychologists charge $0 out-of-pocket but limited availability and longer waits. Private health insurance extras cover $50-$120/session up to annual limits. After 10 Medicare-rebated sessions per year, you pay full fee.
How do I find a psychologist who specialises in my issue?
Use the Australian Psychological Society Find a Psychologist tool (psychology.org.au), search Psychology Today by specialty + location, or use our matching service. Common specialisations: anxiety/OCD, depression, trauma/PTSD (look for EMDR or trauma-focused CBT training), eating disorders, ADHD/autism, relationship therapy, child/adolescent, addiction. A 10-minute free phone consultation before booking is standard practice — most psychologists offer this to assess fit.
How long is the waitlist to see a psychologist?
Waitlists vary significantly: bulk-billed psychologists 6-16 weeks, private psychologists 2-12 weeks for initial appointment. Telehealth psychologists often have shorter waits (1-4 weeks). Specialist areas (trauma, eating disorders, ADHD assessment) can have 8-20 week waits even private. For urgent mental health: contact your GP for crisis support, call Lifeline 13 11 14 or Beyond Blue 1300 22 4636 for immediate phone counselling, or attend hospital emergency for active suicidal ideation.
What happens in a first psychology session?
The first session (50 minutes) is mostly assessment — your psychologist asks about your symptoms, history, current life circumstances, and goals for therapy. They'll explain their approach (CBT, ACT, schema therapy, etc.) and how many sessions might be needed. You'll discuss confidentiality and any Medicare/insurance arrangements. By session 2-3, active therapy work begins. It's normal not to feel a strong "click" with the first psychologist you see — switching is fine and expected if it's not the right fit.
Are online (telehealth) psychology sessions effective?
Research shows telehealth psychology has equivalent outcomes to in-person therapy for most conditions including anxiety, depression, PTSD, and CBT-based treatments. Medicare provides full rebates for telehealth psychology sessions through Better Access. Pros: convenience, less travel, easier scheduling, access to specialists outside your area. Cons: technical glitches, less suitable for severe cases needing physical observation, requires private space at home. Most patients find a hybrid approach (some sessions in-person, some online) works well.
Should I see a psychologist or psychiatrist?
Start with a psychologist for: anxiety, depression, stress, relationship issues, trauma, life transitions — these respond well to talking therapy. See a psychiatrist for: severe mental illness (bipolar, schizophrenia, severe depression), considering medication, complex diagnostic uncertainty, treatment-resistant conditions. Many people see both — a psychiatrist for medication management, a psychologist for ongoing therapy. Psychiatrist requires GP referral and longer waits (3-12 months for non-urgent).
How many sessions do I need?
Brief therapy (CBT for anxiety/depression): 8-12 sessions over 3-4 months produces lasting improvement for most people. Trauma therapy: 12-30 sessions depending on complexity. Personality work or chronic conditions: 6-24 months. Couples therapy: 6-15 sessions. Most people see meaningful change within 6-12 sessions. Don't feel pressured to continue if you're not seeing progress after 6 sessions — discuss with your psychologist or consider switching practitioners.
Sources
Trusted Australian authorities
- AHPRA Psychology Board — Psychologist registration
- Medicare (Services Australia) — MHCP rebates
- Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) — Population + demographics data
- ACCC — Consumer protection
- Australian Business Register — Verify provider ABNs
- Fair Trading (NSW) — Complaint escalation
We reference these authorities for facts, statistics, and to verify provider credentials. Linking to external sources does not imply endorsement.