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Full Blood Count Test Cost Australia 2026: Providers & What's Included

Compare full blood count test costs in Australia, including typical price ranges, what is included, common add-ons, provider differences and questions to ask before paying.

Quick answer

Updated May 2026

A full blood count is often Medicare-funded when ordered by a GP for a clinical reason. Private self-referred options usually cost more and vary by provider and collection route.

  • Compare the test route before paying privately.
  • Check exactly which markers are included in the panel.
  • A low headline price may not include clinical interpretation.

AU comparison next step

Compare the test route before paying privately

  • Some standard blood tests may be funded when ordered by a GP.
  • Private panels vary by markers, collection route and turnaround time.
  • A low headline price may not include clinical interpretation.
Compare blood test options

Full blood count cost table

Testing routeTypical costWhat to check
GP-referred pathologyOften bulk-billedDepends on Medicare eligibility and clinical indication.
Private self-referred FBCA$25-A$60May not include doctor interpretation.
General health panel including FBCA$55-A$150Often includes liver, kidney, thyroid or lipid markers.
Clinic health checkA$250-A$1,200+May include examination, ECG and doctor review.

Provider routes for full blood count

Provider routeTypical cost structureProvider explanation
GP plus pathology collection centreOften Medicare-fundedUsually the lower-cost route where clinically appropriate.
Private online pathology requestPanel price plus collectionUseful for self-referred testing, but check marker list and result support.
Private health assessment clinicPackage priceHigher cost, but may include doctor review and multiple checks.

What affects full blood count price?

  • Referral route
  • Whether other markers are included
  • Collection centre vs home kit
  • Whether results include clinical interpretation

Usually included

  • Full blood count markers
  • Collection route stated by provider
  • Lab result report

Usually excluded

  • GP review unless arranged separately
  • Additional markers outside the panel
  • Repeat tests if needed later

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Related Australia blood test and healthcare guides

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Sources and updates

How this page is sourced

Updated May 2026

Sources

  • Published pathology and private test provider pages
  • Public Medicare and bulk-billing information
  • Clinic and home-test provider information
  • TreatCompare compiled pricing dataset

Methodology: We compare publicly advertised private prices and explain where GP referral or public clinic routes may change out-of-pocket cost.

Caveat: This page is for cost comparison and planning only. It is not medical advice and does not replace advice from a GP or qualified clinician.

Data methodology: how prices are collected, normalised, dated and outlier-checked is documented on the methodology page. Corrections go through the public corrections route. Clinical accuracy on healthcare pages is the responsibility of an appropriate registered healthcare professional, not TreatCompare.

FAQs

How much does a full blood count cost in Australia?

It is often bulk-billed when ordered by a GP for a clinical reason. Private self-referred full blood count testing usually costs more.

Can I get a full blood count without a GP referral?

Some private providers offer self-referred testing. You usually pay privately and should check whether interpretation is included.

What is included in a full blood count?

A full blood count usually measures red cells, white cells, haemoglobin, haematocrit and platelets. It does not include every vitamin, hormone or organ-function marker.

Is a home full blood count lower-cost?

Not always. Home kits can add convenience but may cost more or include fewer markers than a GP-referred pathology test.

What should I compare?

Compare referral route, collection method, marker list, turnaround time and whether a clinician explains the result.