If you are booking a telehealth ADHD assessment with a GP you have never seen before, Medicare will not automatically cover the consultation. Since 1 November 2023, a rebate for telehealth requires either MyMedicare registration or a recent in-person visit at the practice. This guide explains exactly how these rules work and what to do before your first appointment.
In this article
- What changed on 1 November 2023
- The existing clinical relationship requirement
- What is MyMedicare
- How to register for MyMedicare
- What if you are a new patient
- Exemptions from the relationship requirement
- Frequently asked questions
What changed on 1 November 2023
During COVID, the Australian Government introduced temporary telehealth MBS items so patients could see their GP by video or phone without an in-person visit. Those temporary items ended on 31 December 2022. From 1 January 2023, a new set of permanent telehealth items took effect, and from 1 November 2023, an existing clinical relationship requirement was introduced.
The permanent telehealth items sit in MBS Group A40. For a GP video consultation lasting 40 minutes or more (the length of a typical initial ADHD assessment), the relevant item is MBS Item 91802. The schedule fee is $125.10, and the Medicare rebate is 100% of that amount. For shorter follow-up consultations (20 minutes or more), the item is MBS Item 91801 with a schedule fee of $84.90.
The schedule fees for video consultations are identical to in-person equivalents. You get the same rebate whether you attend in person or by video. For a full breakdown of fees and out-of-pocket costs, see our guide to Medicare rebates for telehealth ADHD assessments.
The existing clinical relationship requirement
To claim a Medicare rebate for a GP telehealth consultation, the service must be performed by an “eligible telehealth practitioner.” MBS Note AN.1.1 defines what this means. You qualify for a rebate if at least one of these is true:
- You are registered with MyMedicare at the practice providing the telehealth service.
- You have had a face-to-face appointment at the practice within the preceding 12 months. This does not have to be with the same GP. Any GP at the practice counts. The visit must be in-person. A previous phone or video consultation does not count.
If neither of these applies, the GP cannot bill Medicare for the telehealth consultation. You would either need to pay the full fee without a rebate, or take one of the steps described in the new patient section below.
The rationale behind the rule is continuity of care. The Department of Health wants telehealth to supplement an ongoing relationship with a GP or practice, not replace it. RACGP President Dr Michael Wright noted in 2026 that telehealth compliance is a priority area, with “concerns about some of the telehealth-only providers in particular.”
What is MyMedicare
MyMedicare is a voluntary registration scheme run by Services Australia. It launched on 1 October 2023. When you register, you formally link yourself to one GP practice. Registration is free.
For telehealth, MyMedicare registration serves as proof of an existing relationship with the practice. If you are registered with a practice via MyMedicare, you automatically satisfy the existing clinical relationship requirement for telehealth billing, even if you have never attended the practice in person.
You can only be registered with one practice at a time. If you register with a new practice, you are automatically de-registered from the previous one. This does not stop you from seeing GPs at other practices. It only affects which practice counts as your “registered” practice for MyMedicare purposes.
How to register for MyMedicare
There are two ways to register:
- Through myGov. Log in to your myGov account, go to Medicare services, and select MyMedicare. You will need the practice’s name or provider number. The practice must already be signed up for MyMedicare on their end.
- At the practice. The reception staff at the GP practice can register you in person or over the phone.
Registration takes effect immediately. Once registered, you are eligible for Medicare-rebated telehealth consultations with that practice straight away.
What if you are a new patient
If you have never attended a practice and you want a telehealth ADHD assessment there, you have three options:
- Register with the practice via MyMedicare before your appointment. This is the simplest path for patients who are comfortable changing their MyMedicare registration. You register online through myGov or by calling the practice. Once registered, you are eligible for a Medicare-rebated telehealth consultation immediately. Note: this will de-register you from your current MyMedicare practice (if you have one).
- Attend one in-person appointment first. A single face-to-face visit establishes the clinical relationship for the next 12 months. After that visit, all subsequent telehealth consultations at that practice are Medicare-eligible.
- Pay privately for the first telehealth consultation. If neither MyMedicare registration nor an in-person visit is practical, the practice bills the consultation as a private (non-Medicare) service. You pay the full fee without a rebate for that first appointment. This is less common and more expensive, so options 1 or 2 are usually better.
For patients in regional or remote areas of Queensland who want a telehealth ADHD assessment, MyMedicare registration is usually the best option. It avoids the need to travel for an in-person visit and makes all your telehealth appointments with that practice eligible for a Medicare rebate.
Exemptions from the relationship requirement
The existing clinical relationship requirement does not apply in all situations. Under MBS Note AN.1.1, the following patients are exempt:
- Patients under 12 months old
- People experiencing homelessness
- People in natural disaster-declared areas
- Patients receiving care from Aboriginal medical services
- People isolating under COVID-related public health orders
Certain service types are also exempt, including urgent after-hours care, some mental health services, blood-borne virus services, and chronic condition management plan preparation. The mental health exemption is specific to certain MBS items and does not automatically cover all ADHD-related consultations. If you are unsure whether an exemption applies to your situation, ask the practice before your appointment.
GPs are required to document any exemption and the clinical reasoning in the patient’s notes.
This article is general information only and is not personal medical or financial advice. Medicare rules and schedule fees are subject to change. For the most current item numbers and fees, check MBS Online. For individual advice about your Medicare eligibility, contact Services Australia or talk to your GP practice.
Frequently asked questions
General health information
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