Free Calculator · Updated 18 May 2026
Model the economics of bulk-billing vs charging a gap across GPs, specialists, psychologists, physios and other allied-health modalities. See what the patient pays, what you net, and what changes when you flip to gap-billing.
Indicative figures only. MBS scheduled fees and rebate percentages are updated annually (typically 1 November). Always verify current rates and eligibility at mbsonline.gov.au before billing.
Standard consult, 6–20 min · Scheduled fee $42.85 · 100% rebate $42.85
Market average for this item is around $90.
Bulk-bill vs Gap-bill comparison
Bulk-billed
$42.85
per visit, net
$1,286 / week
Gap-billed
$90.00
per visit, net
$2,700 / week
Gap-billing uplift: +$1,415 / week compared to bulk-billing the same patients.
How to use this calculator
The preset loads the relevant MBS item number, scheduled fee and rebate. GP consults attract 100% rebate (non-referred); specialists and allied-health items attract 85%.
The input snaps to the typical market charge for the modality — adjust up or down to reflect your suburb, room costs and time-per-consult. Or check 'bulk-billed' to lock to the rebate.
Concession patients (pensioner, DVA, under-16) attract bulk-billing incentive payments where applicable. Most clinical work is GST-free — only tick GST if you bill medico-legal, employer or cosmetic work.
Adjust visits per week to see your weekly take in gap-billed vs bulk-billed mode. The uplift figure is the headline trade-off you are weighing when you decide a fee policy.
Practical guidance
Bulk-bill selectively where the clinical or community case is strong — concession patients, complex chronic-disease management where access trumps margin, and where the bulk-billing incentive items (10990, 10991, 75870, 75871) bring the effective rebate close to your floor fee. Wholesale bulk-billing is rarely sustainable outside high-volume corporate clinics.
Anchor on rebate + a deliberate gap, not a round-number fee. For GPs, a $30–$50 gap on a Level B consult preserves access while protecting hourly economics. For allied-health CDM items, the rebate is unchanged regardless of your fee — so the gap is purely an income decision against your cost-to-serve.
Concession card holders (pensioner concession, health care card, DVA) and patients under 16 trigger additional bulk-billing incentive items when bulk-billed. Even where you charge a gap for general patients, many practices bulk-bill concession holders as a deliberate access policy — the calculator's concession toggle shows the rebate uplift for these items.
You cannot split a single MBS service between bulk-bill and private — it is one or the other per attendance. You can, however, run a mixed-billing practice: bulk-bill some cohorts (concession, under-16, particular item numbers) and gap-bill others. Make the policy explicit at booking and in your practice fee schedule to avoid disputes at reception.
Bulk-billing means the practitioner accepts the Medicare rebate as full payment for the consultation — the patient pays nothing out-of-pocket and signs an assignment-of-benefit (DB4 / DB1A). The practitioner bills Medicare directly and receives the rebate amount, which is always less than the typical market fee. For GPs seeing concession patients (pensioner, DVA, under-16), additional bulk-billing incentive items (10990, 10991, 75870, 75871) increase the effective rebate. Bulk-billing is a clinical and business decision — there is no obligation to bulk-bill.
Three benchmarks usually shape the decision: (1) the MBS scheduled fee and rebate — your floor if you bulk-bill; (2) AMA recommended fees, which are typically 2–2.5× MBS scheduled — what well-resourced private practice charges; (3) the local market median for your suburb and modality, available through professional-body member surveys (RACGP, APA, AHPRA-aligned associations). Setting your fee = rebate + a deliberate gap (say $30–$50 for a GP, $60+ for allied health) keeps the patient out-of-pocket digestible while protecting your hourly economics.
Medicare and private health insurance do not overlap for the same service in the same setting. If a service is claimable on Medicare (out-of-hospital MBS items), the patient cannot claim it on extras; if it is claimable on private extras (e.g. non-CDM physio), there is no Medicare rebate. 'No-gap' private health agreements typically apply to in-hospital specialist services where the fund and practitioner have agreed a fee that combines Medicare 75% and the fund's 25% with no out-of-pocket to the patient. Allied health on extras is reimbursed by the fund up to the patient's annual cap, not Medicare.
Medicare Easyclaim processes Medicare bulk-bill claims (DB4) and patient claims (DB1) at the point of care through an EFTPOS terminal — the rebate is paid into the patient's nominated bank account within minutes. HICAPS processes private-health-fund extras claims at the point of care for allied health — the patient pays only the gap (if any) after the fund's contribution is deducted. Most modern practice-management terminals (Tyro Health, Medipass, integrated EFTPOS) handle both rails. They are operationally similar but cover different payers.
The authoritative source is the Department of Health & Aged Care's MBS Online (mbsonline.gov.au) — search by item number, modality, or keyword. The MBS is reviewed and updated routinely with major indexation typically applied on 1 November each year. Always verify the current scheduled fee, 85% benefit, and any restrictions (referral, location, frequency) before billing. The presets in this calculator are indicative and should not be used in lieu of MBS Online for actual claims.
Most clinical health services delivered by a recognised health professional to an individual patient are GST-free under Subdivision 38-B of the GST Act — this covers GP consults, allied-health items in the Medicare list, and most psychology/physio/OT/speech sessions. GST applies, however, to: medico-legal reports, expert-witness work, employer / insurer reports, cosmetic procedures not Medicare-funded, and any business-to-business services (e.g. contracted hours to a hospital or NGO where the recipient is a business). If your annual GST turnover from those taxable supplies hits $75,000, you must register and charge GST on those line items.
OneBookPlus is the all-in-one platform for AU allied-health and general practice — online bookings, Medicare Easyclaim and HICAPS workflow, recall management, GST-aware invoicing, AHPRA-ready clinical notes. Free to start, no card required.
Last reviewed and updated: by Bishal Shrestha
About the author
Founder & CEO, OneBookPlus
Bishal has over a decade of experience in digital marketing, web development, and small business consulting across Australia. Bishal has reviewed Medicare and private-health gap-billing economics with AU allied-health practice owners.
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