Clinical Coder Salary in Australia: What to Expect in 2026

Clinical coders in Australia earn $87,000 to $158,000 per Queensland Health EB12. See full pay ranges by state, sector, experience and certification for 2026.

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Careers & Pay

Clinical Coder Salary in Australia: What to Expect in 2026

Clinical coders in Australia earn from around $87,000 at entry level up to $158,000 for managers, with experienced coders sitting in the $101,000 to $142,000 band (Queensland Health, Certified Agreement No. 12 / EB12, effective 1 September 2025). Pay rises quickly with experience, certification and specialisation, and the private sector typically adds 5 to 10 per cent on top of public-sector rates.

This article breaks the numbers down by career stage, state, sector, and specialisation so you can understand what you’ll realistically earn at each step of a clinical coding career in Australia. For the broader picture of what the job involves day to day, read our pillar guide, Clinical Coding in Australia: the complete guide. Figures cited are sourced from enterprise agreements, current market listings on Seek and CareerOne, and industry surveys, with the relevant source named beside each data point.

Clinical coder salary ranges in Australia

A qualified clinical coder in Australia typically earns between $87,000 and $142,000 a year, with entry-level coders starting around $87,000 and senior coders, auditors and educators reaching up to $142,000 under the Queensland Health EB12 agreement. Managers and statewide coding leads earn up to $158,000 at the top of the scale.

The most authoritative public benchmark for clinical coder pay in Australia is the Queensland Public Health Sector Certified Agreement (No. 12) 2025 (EB12), with rates effective 1 September 2025. It sets award-backed rates that other states tend to match within a few percentage points. The table below summarises the five classification levels and the annualised salary range for each.

Classification (QH EB12) Role Typical annual salary (AUD)
L1 Entry-level clinical coder $87,000 to $96,000
L2 Experienced clinical coder $101,000 to $111,000
L3 to L4 Senior coder, auditor or educator $117,000 to $142,000
L5 Manager or statewide coding lead $148,000 to $158,000

These figures are for a full-time public-hospital coder under the Queensland agreement. Private-sector salaries, contract rates, and specialist auditor pay all sit on top of this baseline. The rest of this article walks through how each of those variables shifts the number.

Salary by state: how clinical coder pay compares across Australia

Clinical coder pay is broadly consistent across Australia, with Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria setting the benchmark and WA, SA, Tasmania, the NT and ACT tracking within about 5 per cent of that range. Public-hospital pay is set by state enterprise agreements, so figures vary slightly but the structure is similar everywhere.

The table below compares approximate full-time annual salary bands for an experienced clinical coder (equivalent to Queensland L2 to L3) across the states and territories. Exact figures depend on the current enterprise agreement in each jurisdiction.

State or territory Experienced coder band (AUD) Primary source
Queensland $101,000 to $142,000 QH EB12, effective 1 September 2025
New South Wales $97,000 to $138,000 NSW Health HIM/HSM award
Victoria $98,000 to $140,000 Victorian public-sector health agreement
Western Australia $95,000 to $135,000 WA Health Services Union EBA
South Australia $94,000 to $132,000 SA Health HSU enterprise agreement
Tasmania $90,000 to $128,000 Tasmanian Health Services agreement
Australian Capital Territory $99,000 to $138,000 ACT Public Sector agreement
Northern Territory $96,000 to $135,000 NT Health EBA, includes remote loading in some roles

A few patterns are worth calling out:

  • Queensland currently leads on award-backed pay thanks to the September 2025 EB12 uplift.
  • NSW and Victoria sit just below Queensland but have larger private-hospital markets, which lifts overall earning potential.
  • Remote and regional coders in NT, WA and far north Queensland sometimes receive a locality or remote loading on top of base pay.
  • Because remote coding is common, experienced coders often accept a role under the highest-paying agreement regardless of where they live.

For current listings and live salary signals, search Seek and CareerOne. These platforms show advertised ranges that often match or exceed award rates, particularly for hard-to-fill remote roles.

How experience affects clinical coder pay

Most coders move from entry-level to experienced within two to three years, which typically lifts base pay by $15,000 to $25,000 a year. The biggest single jump is the transition from supervised coding (L1) to independent coding (L2), which usually happens around the 12 to 24 month mark.

Progression broadly follows this shape:

The trajectory is unusually clear for a mid-skilled healthcare role. Because clinical coding has award-backed levels tied to demonstrable skill, pay rises tend to be automatic once you hit the competency threshold, rather than depending on a manager’s goodwill.

“Within three years of finishing my Diploma I’d moved from L1 to L3, almost doubled my starting salary, and was working from home four days a week. I wish I’d heard about coding ten years earlier.”

Public vs private sector: which pays more?

Private-sector clinical coders typically earn 5 to 10 per cent more than public-sector equivalents at the same classification level, often with performance incentives on top. Public-sector roles trade the premium for stronger job security, superannuation and a clearer credentialling pathway.

Large private hospital groups like Ramsay Health Care, Healthscope and St Vincent’s Health Australia run their own coding teams with defined career ladders. Third-party coding service providers (contract coding companies) often pay a similar premium, particularly for remote coders who can flex hours. Both options are genuinely competitive for experienced coders.

Here’s how the two sectors compare on the factors that actually matter when you’re choosing:

Most experienced coders work across both sectors at some point in their career. It’s common to train and build speed in a large public hospital, then move to a private group or contract provider in mid-career for the pay bump and flexibility.

Remote and contract coder rates

Remote and contract clinical coders typically bill $55 to $90 per hour in Australia, which annualises to roughly $105,000 to $170,000 for a full-time equivalent load. Contract rates are higher than equivalent salaried pay because contractors cover their own superannuation, leave and equipment.

Remote and contract coding has grown significantly since 2020, and it’s now one of the most common mid-career moves in the profession. A typical remote-work path looks like this:

  • 12 to 24 months onsite to build speed, case-mix familiarity and a reputation for accuracy.
  • Hybrid remote arrangement negotiated with your current public or private employer, typically two to three days a week from home.
  • Fully remote salaried role with a large private group or a coding service provider once you have demonstrable auditor-grade accuracy.
  • Contract or ABN work billing $55 to $90 per hour, most common for senior coders, auditors and those combining coding with consulting.

Contract rates at the top of the band ($85 to $90 per hour) are usually reserved for credentialled senior coders with auditor experience, or for coders who specialise in a high-value case-mix like cardiothoracic surgery or oncology. Entry-level contract work exists but is less common, because employers prefer to invest in salaried coders during their first 12 months.

For more on who’s hiring remote coders and how the pay compares, read our guide to clinical coding jobs in Australia.

How certification and specialisation affect earnings

Credentialled coders and specialist auditors typically earn 10 to 20 per cent more than equivalent-grade general coders. Deep fluency in the ICD-10-AM classification system is what lets senior coders pick up high-complexity case-mix work, where the pay premium sits. The main certification in Australia is through the Clinical Coder’s Society of Australia (CCSA), and the biggest specialisation premiums go to auditors, educators and coders working in high-complexity case-mix.

The main levers that move coder pay beyond the award baseline are:

Most coders pursue CCSA credentialling within three to five years of graduation. It’s the clearest signal to employers that you’re ready for audit, education or senior coding work. For more on the role of the professional body, read Do clinical coders need to be a member of a professional association?.

Clinical coder career progression and pay trajectory

A clinical coder who stays in the profession for ten years typically moves from around $87,000 at graduation to $130,000 or more as a senior coder or auditor, without needing a university degree or management responsibility. The trajectory is unusually steep for a non-degree mid-skilled role in Australian healthcare.

What that looks like year by year, based on QH EB12 rates as the public benchmark:

  1. 1Graduation to Year 1: Start as L1 entry-level clinical coder at $87,000 to $96,000. Supervised coding, building speed.
  2. 2Year 2 to 3: Progress to L2 experienced coder at $101,000 to $111,000. Independent coding across most specialties.
  3. 3Year 4 to 7: Move to L3 senior coder, auditor or educator at $117,000 to $132,000. Often CCSA-credentialled by this point.
  4. 4Year 7 to 10: Progress to L4 senior specialist or lead auditor at $132,000 to $142,000, or lateral into private-sector roles at equivalent rates.
  5. 5Year 10+: Either move into L5 management at $148,000 to $158,000, continue as a high-earning senior specialist or auditor, or transition to contract work at $80 per hour or more.

Graduates work in roles including clinical coder, coding auditor, coding educator, health information manager, and coding team lead. The career is one of the clearest examples in Australian healthcare of a 12-month Diploma translating directly into a long-term, well-paid, remote-friendly profession.

Train with Australia’s best-value Diploma of Clinical Coding

The HLT50321 Diploma of Clinical Coding is TalentMed’s flagship qualification and the one Australian hospitals consistently ask for when shortlisting entry-level coders. It’s 100% online, takes about 12 months, and is priced as Australia’s best-value Diploma of Clinical Coding.

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Frequently asked questions

Clinical coders in Australia earn from around $87,000 at entry level up to $158,000 for managers and statewide leads, per the Queensland Public Health Sector Certified Agreement (No. 12) 2025 (EB12), with rates effective 1 September 2025. Experienced coders sit in the $101,000 to $111,000 band (L2), and senior coders, auditors and educators earn $117,000 to $142,000 (L3 to L4). Private-sector and contract pay tends to sit 5 to 10 per cent above public rates.
Entry-level clinical coders in Australia typically start at $87,000 to $96,000 a year under the Queensland Health EB12 agreement, which sets the public-sector benchmark. Other states pay within a few per cent of that range. Private-sector starting salaries are often 5 to 10 per cent higher, reflecting the premium paid for productivity from day one.
Private-sector clinical coders typically earn 5 to 10 per cent more than public-sector equivalents at the same classification level, often with performance incentives on top. Public-sector roles trade the pay premium for award-backed progression, stronger superannuation, and a clearer credentialling pathway. Many coders work in both sectors over a career.
Contract clinical coders typically bill $55 to $90 per hour in Australia, which annualises to roughly $105,000 to $170,000 for a full-time equivalent load. That’s higher than salaried pay at the same experience level, but contractors cover their own superannuation, leave, equipment and professional development. Net income is often similar to an equivalent salaried role once those costs are factored in.
Credentialling through the Clinical Coder’s Society of Australia (CCSA) typically lifts pay by 10 to 20 per cent at the same experience level, because it signals auditor-grade accuracy and opens senior roles like lead auditor, educator and coding manager. Most coders pursue CCSA credentialling within three to five years of graduation.
Most clinical coders reach $100,000 within two to three years of graduation. The transition from supervised L1 coding ($87,000 to $96,000) to independent L2 coding ($101,000 to $111,000) is usually the point at which pay crosses the six-figure mark. Credentialled coders and those in high-complexity case-mix often get there faster.
Queensland currently leads on award-backed public-sector pay, thanks to the September 2025 EB12 uplift which set rates from $87,000 at L1 to $158,000 at L5. New South Wales, Victoria and the ACT sit just below Queensland, and Western Australia, South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory track within about 5 per cent of that range. Because remote coding is common, experienced coders often accept roles under the highest-paying agreement regardless of where they live.
Yes, substantially. Medical receptionists and practice administrators in Australia typically earn $55,000 to $75,000 a year, while entry-level clinical coders start at $87,000 to $96,000 and experienced coders reach $101,000 to $142,000 under public-sector agreements. Clinical coding is one of the highest-paid non-clinical pathways in Australian healthcare that doesn’t require a university degree.
Yes. Remote clinical coders earn the same award-backed rates as onsite coders, and many private employers add a small remote-work premium because it expands their candidate pool. Most employers expect coders to have 12 to 24 months of onsite experience before moving to a fully remote arrangement, though hybrid roles are often available from day one.
At the top of the public-sector scale, coding managers and statewide leads earn up to $158,000 under the Queensland Health EB12 agreement. Private-sector senior auditors, specialised contractors and classification roles at IHACPA can exceed this, particularly when performance incentives are included. Contract auditors billing $85 to $90 per hour can annualise above $170,000 on a full-time equivalent load.
In the public sector, yes. Because clinical coding has award-backed classification levels tied to demonstrable skill, pay rises at classification boundaries are automatic once you meet the competency threshold, rather than depending on a manager’s discretion. Progression between levels is typically reviewed annually. Private-sector progression is employer-specific but broadly mirrors the public structure.
The highest-earning coders combine four things: CCSA credentialling, specialisation in a high-complexity case-mix (cardiothoracic, oncology, transplant or neurology), auditor or educator experience, and flexibility to work remotely or on contract. Coders who tick three or four of these consistently earn at or above the L4 band ($132,000 to $142,000), with contract rates above $80 per hour.

Sources: Queensland Public Health Sector Certified Agreement (No. 12) 2025 (EB12), effective 1 September 2025; state public-sector health agreements; current listings on Seek and CareerOne. Private-sector and contract rates are approximate market observations. TalentMed Pty Ltd, RTO 22151. Always confirm specific figures with the current enterprise agreement or listing.

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Choosing a clinical coding course in Australia? Our complete guide compares the Bachelor of Health Information Management against the Diploma of Clinical Coding HLT50321, with cost, duration, and career-outcome breakdowns: Clinical Coding Course in Australia: The Complete 2026 Guide.

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