Medicare Billing Fundamentals for Australian Practice Managers
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TalentMed

Operations & Billing
Medicare Billing Fundamentals for Australian Practice Managers
Medicare billing is the operational backbone of almost every Australian healthcare clinic, and the practice manager owns the systems, the reconciliation, the staff training and the audit trail behind it. The practice manager does not bill Medicare personally. Only eligible providers can do that. What the practice manager does is run the operation that lets accurate billing happen every day, prevents revenue leakage, keeps the practice compliant with the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS), and protects the clinic from the worst kind of avoidable risk: a Medicare audit triggered by sloppy item selection.
This guide is a practical operational explainer for new and current Australian practice managers. It walks through what Medicare billing actually covers, the item numbers a practice manager oversees most, the bulk-billing-versus-private-billing decision, the Medicare Online Claiming workflow, the compliance pitfalls that cause the most rework, and where a structured qualification like the HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management fits in. Fee figures change. The link to MBS Online and PRODA at the end of each relevant section is the live source of truth.
What Medicare billing actually covers
Medicare is Australia’s universal public health insurance scheme. Medicare billing is the act of claiming a Medicare Benefit on a patient’s behalf for an eligible service delivered by an eligible provider. The rulebook for what Medicare will pay, how much, and under what conditions is the Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS), maintained by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care and published at mbsonline.gov.au.
For an Australian practice manager, Medicare billing is not just a bookkeeping task. It is the operational system that touches reception, clinical staff, software, banking, audit and accreditation, all at once. Understanding the structure matters because most billing errors come from confusion about what Medicare actually pays for, not from the act of clicking the claim button.
Medicare benefits cover a defined list of services described as MBS items. Each item has a number, a descriptor, a scheduled fee, a rebate level (typically 75%, 85% or 100% of the schedule fee depending on setting), and rules about who can claim it, how often, and in what combinations. A general practitioner standard consultation is one item. A chronic disease management plan is another. A skin lesion excision is another. The provider chooses the item that best matches the service delivered. The practice manager makes sure the systems behind that choice are accurate.
Key MBS item numbers a practice manager should know
You do not need to memorise the entire MBS. You do need to recognise the items that drive most of your clinic’s revenue and most of your clinic’s billing rejections. The exact mix depends on the setting. A general practice will be dominated by the standard GP consultation items and chronic disease care items. A specialist clinic will be heavier on initial consultation, follow-up consultation and procedural items. An allied health practice will sit on the small allied-health item set plus chronic disease management referrals.
The table below is a categorical overview. The current item descriptors and scheduled fees are on MBS Online and they update with each MBS amendment cycle (usually 1 March, 1 July and 1 November). Always verify a specific item against the live MBS Online entry before relying on it.
| Item category | Setting | What it covers | Why a practice manager watches it |
|---|---|---|---|
| General attendance items (Levels A to D, time-tiered) | General practice | Standard GP consultations, scaled by length and complexity. Level B is the workhorse short to medium consultation. Level C is the longer consultation. Level D is the long, complex consultation. | Wrong tier selection is the single most common Medicare billing error. Time documentation in the clinical note must match the item claimed. |
| Chronic disease management items | General practice | GP Management Plans, Team Care Arrangements, plan reviews, and the allied-health items that flow from a referral. | Eligibility, frequency limits and the relationship between plan creation and review items create most of the confusion. The plan and the review have to be properly spaced. |
| Health assessments | General practice | Targeted health assessments for defined groups (75 and over, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health checks, refugee health, intellectual disability and others). | Each has eligibility rules. Claiming an assessment item for a patient outside the eligible group will reject or be recovered. |
| Mental health items (better access) | General practice and allied health | Mental health treatment plans, reviews and the linked psychology and other allied-health sessions under Better Access. | Annual session caps and the plan-to-allied-health pathway need accurate tracking. Software helps but the practice manager owns the audit. |
| Specialist consultation items | Specialist rooms | Initial consultations, subsequent consultations, and the consultant physician items used by paediatricians, geriatricians and others. | Initial vs subsequent rules, referral validity, and the rule about a single specialist initial consultation per condition per referral. |
| Procedural items | General practice and specialist | Skin excisions, minor surgical procedures, suturing, biopsies, joint injections and the wider procedural set. | Each procedural item has its own descriptor. Combining a procedural item with a same-day consultation needs care because the rules vary by item. |
| Bulk-bill incentive items | General practice | Additional Medicare benefit paid when a clinic bulk bills certain patient groups (concession card holders, children under 16, certain rural settings). | The incentive boosts revenue at the bulk-bill price point but only when applied correctly with the underlying consultation item. |
| Telehealth items | All settings | Video and phone consultations introduced and expanded since 2020, with rules around eligibility, established relationship requirements and item-tier alignment with face-to-face items. | Telehealth rules have changed repeatedly since 2020. The practice manager has to keep the team current on the latest rule set. |
The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management does not teach individual MBS item numbers (those change too often). It teaches the structure: how the schedule is organised, how to read an item descriptor, how to research current rules on MBS Online, how to set up internal training so the clinical team stays current, and how to build the audit discipline behind item selection.
Bulk billing, mixed billing, and private billing
The biggest billing decision an Australian practice makes is its overall billing model. Three patterns dominate. Each has clear operational implications.
Bulk billing means the patient pays nothing at the point of service. The provider accepts the Medicare benefit as full payment and bulk-bills the rebate directly to Medicare. The patient signs (or digitally consents to) the assignment of benefit. Cash flow is fast. Revenue per consultation is capped at the Medicare rebate plus any applicable bulk-bill incentive. Bulk-billing-only clinics tend to optimise for volume.
Mixed billing means the practice bulk bills some patient groups (commonly concession card holders, children, pension card holders, sometimes existing chronic-care patients) and privately bills others. The patient pays the difference between the practice’s private fee and the Medicare rebate. The Medicare rebate flows to the patient (or directly to the practice via patient-claim assignment) and the gap is the patient’s contribution. Most Australian general practices now run a mixed billing model.
Private billing means the practice charges its private fee and the patient claims the Medicare rebate themselves (or has it processed via patient-claiming at the practice). The practice receives the full private fee from the patient. This is common in specialist rooms.
The practice manager’s role in the billing-model decision is operational, not clinical. The decision itself sits with the principal GP, specialist owner or practice owners. What the practice manager does is set up the software, the patient communications, the consent forms, the receipt and gap-fee processes, the staff scripts at reception, and the audit behind every claim. Billing model changes are common when a clinic shifts from bulk-billing-only to mixed billing in response to fee-rebate gaps. The transition is operationally substantial and needs careful change management.
For the broader operational picture, see a day in the life of a practice manager, which sets billing reconciliation in the context of the rest of the role.
The Medicare Online Claiming workflow
Modern Australian practices claim Medicare benefits electronically through Medicare Online Claiming, integrated into the practice management software. The mechanics are largely invisible to the clinician, who selects an item at the end of the consultation. The mechanics are very visible to the practice manager who reconciles them every day.
The standard workflow runs in five steps:
PRODA (Provider Digital Access) is the identity service that authenticates the practice to Services Australia for online claiming, the Health Professional Online Services (HPOS) portal, and Medicare-related transactions. Setting up and maintaining PRODA access for the practice and its providers is a practice-management task, not a clinician task. So is keeping provider numbers, billing-agent arrangements and Pay Doctor Via Claimant settings up to date.
The reconciliation step is where most clinics either run smoothly or quietly leak revenue. A clinic with no formal next-day reconciliation discipline will accumulate uninvestigated rejections, missed re-submissions and timing gaps that show up months later as a revenue hole. A clinic with a tight daily reconciliation routine will catch most issues within twenty-four hours.
Common Medicare billing compliance pitfalls
Most Medicare billing problems are not fraud. They are sloppy item selection, time-tier mismatches, multi-item rule breaches and documentation gaps. They cause rework, rejections and, at the more serious end, audit attention from the Department of Health and Aged Care. The practice manager’s job is to design the operational systems that prevent these problems from happening in the first place.
The most common pitfalls in Australian general practice and specialist rooms:
The Department of Health and Aged Care runs the Medicare compliance program, which includes routine audits, targeted audits and educational interventions. Most audited practices end up in the educational stream rather than facing recovery action, but the audit cost (in time, reputation and operational disruption) is high. A practice manager who runs a tight item-selection training program, a daily reconciliation discipline, and a clean documentation standard will keep the clinic well clear of audit attention.
For the wider compliance landscape see the RACGP Standards explained for practice managers, which covers the accreditation framework that sits alongside Medicare compliance.
Where the practice manager fits in
The practice manager owns the system. The provider owns the clinical decision and the item selection. Reception owns the patient-facing process. Billing owns the daily reconciliation. A clear split of accountability is the difference between a clinic that runs smoothly and one that argues about whose fault a billing problem is.
The practice manager’s accountabilities for Medicare billing typically cover:
What the practice manager does not do is select items on behalf of providers. The provider is accountable for the clinical decision and for choosing the item that matches the service delivered. The practice manager makes that choice as easy and accurate as possible by setting up systems, training and audit. This is the line that protects everyone.
How to set up reliable billing systems
If you are stepping into a practice manager role with a wobbly Medicare billing operation, the playbook for the first ninety days is recognisable across most Australian clinics. The same playbook applies whether you are tightening an established system or building one from scratch.
None of this requires advanced accounting. It requires operational discipline, a working knowledge of MBS structure, and the systems thinking to design routines that the team can actually follow. That is what the HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management trains. For the broader career picture and the pathway into this kind of role, see how to become a practice manager in Australia.
For the live MBS rules, fees and item descriptors, the canonical sources are MBS Online (mbsonline.gov.au) and Services Australia for Health Professionals. PRODA, HPOS and the Medicare Online Claiming infrastructure are managed by Services Australia. Always treat the live MBS Online entry for an item as the source of truth, not any cached internal note or third-party summary.
The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management at TalentMed
The HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is TalentMed’s flagship practice-management qualification, designed for Australian healthcare workers stepping into the kind of operations role this article describes. It covers the operational, financial and compliance frameworks that sit behind Medicare billing, RACGP-aligned accreditation, people leadership and quality systems. It is delivered 100% online, runs alongside an existing healthcare role, and is approved for VET Student Loans.
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Frequently asked questions
TalentMed Pty Ltd, RTO 22151. HLT57715 Diploma of Practice Management is delivered fully online and is approved for VET Student Loans. Current fees, intake details, and unit content are confirmed on the course page and at training.gov.au. MBS item numbers, scheduled fees and Medicare rules are set by the Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care; always verify against MBS Online (mbsonline.gov.au) and Services Australia for current rates and rules.

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