Lower-Cost IVF in Australia 2026: Bulk-Billed Cycles, Access Programs & State Prices
Australia has several bulk-billing or lower-cost IVF clinic options, and lower-cost private alternatives such as Adora Fertility (~$4,400), Primary IVF (~$4,700) and City Fertility (~$4,500). Refer to each clinic's published pricing for current out-of-pocket figures. This page lists the lowest published price per state, the clinics that publish pricing, and how to reduce your IVF bill through Medicare, PBS and insurance.
Quick answer
Updated May 2026IVF costs in Australia are best compared as out-of-pocket costs after Medicare rebates, plus medication, anaesthetist, storage and any add-ons. The lower-cost clinic is not always the lowest total cost over multiple cycles.
- Compare clinic cycle fee, Medicare rebate and likely gap cost.
- Add PBS medication costs and optional services such as ICSI or PGT-A.
- Check whether a public IVF or access-program route is available in your state.
AU comparison next step
Compare the full IVF cost, not just the advertised cycle price
- Medication, scans, ICSI, embryo freezing and storage may be extra.
- Some clinics advertise lower base prices but higher add-ons.
- Success-rate context matters alongside price.
Sources and updates
How this page is sourced
Sources
- Published clinic price pages
- RTAC clinic information
- Medicare and PBS public information
- TreatCompare compiled fertility pricing dataset
Methodology: We compare advertised IVF cycle fees, rebate information and commonly charged add-ons where available. Out-of-pocket costs can vary by patient, protocol, Medicare Safety Net timing and clinic inclusions.
Caveat: This page is for cost comparison and planning. It is not medical advice or fertility treatment advice.
Important context
IVF success rates vary by age, diagnosis, treatment type, use of donor eggs, embryo transfer approach and patient selection. TreatCompare summarises published clinic-level data for comparison and research purposes only. It is not medical advice and should not be used as the sole basis for choosing a clinic. Patients should verify current figures, treatment suitability and pricing directly with the clinic.
- Source type
- Clinic-published prices, Medicare/PBS context and TreatCompare analysis
- Primary source
- TreatCompare Australia IVF clinic pricing dataset
- Reporting period
- Latest visible clinic price checks, May 2026
- Last updated
- May 2026
- Figure type
- Mixed sources
- Use
- Research and comparison only
Are you a clinic, provider or data owner?
If you believe information on this page is inaccurate, out of date, incomplete or presented without necessary context, contact us with the page URL and supporting evidence. We review correction requests promptly, but they are not automatically accepted.
Healthcare data note
Sources, review and limits
Main sources
- Published clinic out-of-pocket cost information across RTAC-accredited Australian IVF clinics
- Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) IVF item fees
- Services Australia Safety Net thresholds
- PBS pharmaceutical schedule for IVF medications
Methodology: We compare published out-of-pocket IVF cycle costs across RTAC-accredited Australian clinics, net of Medicare rebates but before Safety Net adjustments. Medication costs are PBS-subsidised and listed separately. Per-cycle costs can vary by clinical complexity, add-ons (ICSI, PGT-A, donor services) and state/territory.
Cost FAQs
How much does IVF cost in Australia?
IVF cost depends on clinic fees, Medicare rebates, medication, anaesthetist fees, storage and add-ons. Compare out-of-pocket cost after rebates, not only the advertised cycle price.
What is usually not included in an IVF headline price?
Medication, ICSI, embryo freezing, storage, anaesthetist fees and extra scans may be separate. Ask for a written estimate that lists inclusions and likely add-ons.
Are lower-cost IVF clinics always lower-cost overall?
Not always. A lower base cycle fee can still lead to a higher total if medication, add-ons or repeat cycles cost more than expected.
Does Medicare reduce IVF costs in Australia?
Medicare rebates can reduce eligible IVF service costs, and PBS subsidies can reduce many medication costs. The final gap depends on clinic billing and your Safety Net position.
According to TreatCompare comparison across 29 RTAC-accredited Australian IVF clinics (May 2026), published out-of-pocket cycle costs range from lower-cost/access-program routes to $9,000+ at premium private clinics. Patients should verify current inclusions directly with each clinic.
According to Medicare Benefits Schedule rules, IVF item fees attract rebates of approximately $3,000–$5,000 per cycle in Australia, with no limit on the number of subsidised cycles a patient may access.
According to RTAC (Reproductive Technology Accreditation Committee) accreditation standards, every Australian IVF clinic offering treatment must meet defined clinical, embryology and laboratory standards — verify accreditation before paying.
Sources: TreatCompare AU IVF clinic dataset, MBS, RTAC. Last reviewed May 2026.
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Compare next
Compare Australian IVF clinic fees, Medicare rebates, medication costs and clinic options.
5 lowest-published-price IVF options in Australia
Compared by published out-of-pocket cost per standard IVF cycle after Medicare rebates but before the Safety Net. Medication costs (PBS-subsidised) are separate. All clinics listed are RTAC-accredited.
Adora Fertility
Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Gold Coast, Canberra (NSW, VIC, QLD, WA, SA, ACT) — Adora Fertility
$4,400
out-of-pocket/cycle
Budget-focused IVF with transparent fixed-fee pricing. 7 locations nationally. IVF from ~$4,500. Good option for cost-conscious patients. Simpler protocols may mean fewer add-ons.
View full pricing & details →Primary IVF
Sydney CBD (NSW)
$4,700
out-of-pocket/cycle
Low-cost IVF model in Sydney. Transparent fixed pricing. One of the most affordable options in NSW. Smaller clinic with limited add-on services.
View full pricing & details →Number 1 Fertility
Melbourne City, East Melbourne, Sydney (VIC, NSW)
$4,734
out-of-pocket/cycle
Lower-cost independent fertility clinic with published VIC and NSW pricing. Current published estimates list a stimulated IVF cycle with fresh embryo transfer at about $4,733.50 out of pocket for an initial calendar-year cycle, before ancillary day surgery, anaesthetist, medication and cryopreservation fees. Verify current costs on the clinic website before booking.
View full pricing & details →Next Generation Fertility
Melbourne CBD (VIC)
$6,100
out-of-pocket/cycle
Newer Melbourne clinic with competitive pricing. Focus on evidence-based treatment without unnecessary add-ons. Transparent pricing published online.
View full pricing & details →Fertility Solutions
Sunshine Coast, Bundaberg (QLD)
$6,300
out-of-pocket/cycle
Only RTAC-accredited fertility clinic north of Brisbane. Serves Sunshine Coast, Wide Bay, and Central Queensland. Regional pricing lower than Brisbane. Essential for patients who cannot travel to Brisbane regularly.
View full pricing & details →Lowest published IVF price by state
IVF out-of-pocket costs vary significantly between states. Some clinics publish lower-cost or bulk-billing routes, so the lowest published OOP is in Victoria; remote states like the NT have fewer options and higher costs. This table shows the lowest published out-of-pocket IVF cost in each state or territory.
| State | Lower-cost clinic | IVF OOP | FET OOP |
|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales | Adora Fertility Sydney | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| Victoria | Adora Fertility Melbourne | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| Queensland | Adora Fertility Brisbane, Gold Coast | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| South Australia | Adora Fertility Adelaide | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| Western Australia | Adora Fertility Perth | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| Tasmania | TasIVF Hobart | $7,100 | $1,600 |
| Australian Capital Territory | Adora Fertility Canberra | $4,400 | $1,200 |
| Northern Territory | Monash IVF Darwin | $7,200 | $1,650 |
OOP = out-of-pocket after Medicare rebate, before Safety Net. Excludes medications, anaesthetist, and hospital fees. Based on standard IVF cycle pricing from clinic fee schedules (April 2026).
How to reduce your IVF costs
Medicare Safety Net
After $2,699.10 in annual gap fees, Medicare pays 80% of further out-of-pocket costs. This significantly reduces the out-of-pocket on your 2nd and 3rd cycles. Register your family group with Medicare to combine thresholds.
PBS-subsidised medications
All standard IVF drugs are PBS-listed. General patients pay $158–$285 per cycle (5–9 scripts at $25.00). Concession card holders pay $39–$69. Without PBS, the same drugs cost $1,500–$3,000. See our medication cost guide.
Private health insurance timing
Hospital-level cover can save $1,000–$3,000 per cycle on hospital and anaesthetist fees. The 12-month waiting period means you need to plan ahead. Take out cover at least 12 months before starting IVF.
Public IVF pathway
Free IVF through public hospitals in NSW, VIC, and QLD (limited). Wait times are 6–24 months and eligibility criteria apply, but it's the lower-cost option for those who qualify.
The lowest per-cycle cost isn't always the lowest total cost
Success rates matter as much as price. A lower-cost clinic with lower success rates may end up costing more over multiple cycles. The most meaningful comparison is cost per live birth — the total you spend to actually take home a baby.
Cost per live birth comparison (under 35, illustrative)
| Clinic type | OOP/cycle | Live birth rate (<35) | Avg cycles needed | Est. cost per live birth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower-cost route | Verify current estimate | 30% | ~3.3 | Depends on estimate |
| Low-cost (Adora, Primary IVF) | $4,500 | 30% | ~3.3 | ~$15,000 |
| Mid-range (City Fertility, Monash) | $7,000 | 34% | ~2.9 | ~$20,300 |
| Premium (Genea, Melbourne IVF) | $8,500 | 37% | ~2.7 | ~$23,000 |
Illustrative figures only. Success rates from ANZARD 2023 and clinic websites. Average cycles needed = 1 / live birth rate. Actual outcomes depend on individual factors (age, diagnosis, embryo quality). Cost per live birth excludes medications, storage, and add-ons.
For straightforward cases in younger patients, low-cost clinics offer excellent value. For complex cases (recurrent failure, advanced age, male factor), a clinic with higher success rates and more advanced services (PGT-A, time-lapse monitoring) may be worth the premium. Ask every clinic for their success rates for your age group and diagnosis, not just their headline numbers.
Public IVF (free but limited)
Public hospital IVF is the ultimate low-cost option — you pay nothing or a small medication gap. But availability is limited to certain states and eligibility criteria are strict.
New South Wales (NSW)
Public IVF available
6–18 months
typical wait
Hospitals
- Royal Hospital for Women (Randwick)
- Westmead Hospital
- Royal North Shore Hospital
Details
Cycles: Up to 3 funded cycles
Age limit: Generally under 42 years, varies by hospital
Cost: Free (public hospital) — small gap for some medications
NSW has the largest public IVF program in Australia. Wait times vary significantly between hospitals. Royal Hospital for Women has the shortest wait (~6 months). Westmead may be 12-18 months.
Victoria (VIC)
Public IVF available
6–12 months
typical wait
Hospitals
- Royal Women's Hospital (Melbourne)
- Monash Medical Centre
Details
Cycles: Up to 3 funded cycles
Age limit: Generally under 43 years
Cost: Free (public hospital) — some medication gap fees may apply
Victoria has a well-established public IVF program through the Royal Women's Hospital. Monash Medical Centre also offers public IVF. Wait times are moderate compared to other states.
Queensland (QLD)
Public IVF available
12–24 months
typical wait
Hospitals
- Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital
Details
Cycles: Up to 2 funded cycles
Age limit: Generally under 40 years
Cost: Free (public hospital) — medication costs may apply
Queensland has limited public IVF access through Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital. Long wait times. Many patients opt for private treatment due to limited availability. Regional QLD has no public IVF.
South Australia (SA)
Public IVF available
12–24 months
typical wait
Hospitals
- Flinders Medical Centre (limited)
Details
Cycles: Limited — typically 1-2 cycles
Age limit: Generally under 40 years
Cost: $500–1,000 gap fees may apply
SA has very limited public IVF. Flinders Medical Centre offers some public fertility services but capacity is constrained. Most SA patients use private clinics (Fertility SA, Flinders Fertility).
Western Australia (WA)
Public IVF available
12–24 months
typical wait
Hospitals
- King Edward Memorial Hospital (limited)
Details
Cycles: Very limited — typically 1 cycle
Age limit: Generally under 40 years
Cost: $500–1,500 gap fees may apply
WA has minimal public IVF access. King Edward Memorial Hospital offers limited fertility services. Most WA patients use private clinics (Fertility North, Concept Fertility, FSWA).
TAS, ACT, NT
No public IVF programs
Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory, and the Northern Territory do not have public IVF programs. Patients in these states use private clinics (TasIVF, Canberra Fertility Centre, Repromed Darwin) with Medicare rebates.
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Frequently asked questions
Which Australian IVF clinics publish the lowest out-of-pocket cost?
Bulk-billing and lower-cost models can reduce out-of-pocket costs for Medicare-eligible patients, but current written estimates matter more than the label. Number 1 Fertility publishes VIC and NSW pricing on its own website, and several bulk-billing or access-program options exist nationally. All listed clinics on TreatCompare are RTAC-accredited.
Can you get bulk-billed IVF in Australia?
Yes — Australia has several bulk-billing or lower-cost IVF clinic options, not a single provider. Inclusions vary: some Medicare-eligible services may be bulk-billed, while medicines, anaesthetist fees, storage and add-ons may still be charged separately. Refer to each clinic's published pricing for current out-of-pocket figures.
How can I reduce my IVF costs?
Five main ways: (1) Choose a bulk-billing or lower-cost clinic; (2) Maximise the Medicare Safety Net — after $2,699.10 in gap fees per year, you get 80% back on further gaps; (3) Use PBS-subsidised medications ($158–$285/cycle vs $1,500–$3,000 private); (4) Get hospital-level private health insurance (12-month waiting period) to reduce hospital fees; (5) Ask about access or fixed-fee IVF programs at clinics like Adora, City Fertility, or Monash IVF.
Is public IVF available in Australia?
Yes, but access is limited. NSW has well-established public IVF programs (Royal Hospital for Women, Westmead, Royal North Shore) with 6-18 month waits. Victoria offers public IVF through the Royal Women's Hospital. Queensland has limited access through Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital. Tasmania, the ACT, and the NT have no public IVF programs. Eligibility criteria include age limits, BMI requirements, and medical indication.
What is the cost per live birth for IVF?
Lower per-cycle out-of-pocket does not always mean lower cost per live birth. Cost per live birth accounts for success rates and cycle count. A clinic charging $8,000/cycle with a 36% live birth rate costs about $22,200 per live birth on average, before add-ons. Higher-cost clinics may offer better outcomes for complex cases. Compare both axes via [yourivfsuccess.com.au](https://www.yourivfsuccess.com.au).
Related guides
Sources & further reading
- ANZARD (Australian & New Zealand Assisted Reproduction Database) — National IVF success rates and cycle data
- RTAC Code of Practice for Assisted Reproductive Technology Units — Clinic accreditation standards
- Medicare Safety Net — Services Australia — Safety Net thresholds and eligibility
- PBS Schedule — Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme — Subsidised IVF medication pricing
Prescription treatments require a valid Australian prescription from an AHPRA-registered practitioner. This site does not provide medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any treatment.