Weight loss Australia
Mounjaro cost in Australia
Compare indicative private Mounjaro prices in Australia by dose and provider route. Prices are in AUD and can change by pharmacy, dose, stock and consultation model.
Last updated: 2026-05-11. All prices in AUD unless stated.
Quick answer
Mounjaro is not PBS listed for weight loss in Australia. Published private prices commonly start around A$285 per month for starter dosing and can rise to around A$690 per month at higher doses.
How the bill works
Cost anatomy
Provider or programme fee
Telehealth consult, coaching or account fee where charged.
May be separate from medicine price.
Medicine price
The private pharmacy or programme medicine charge.
Changes by medicine, dose, supply and stock.
PBS contribution
PBS only helps when the medicine and patient meet current criteria.
Most weight-loss GLP-1 use is paid privately.
Patient gap
What the patient pays after any rebate or subsidy.
Usually the full medicine price plus any private fees.
Access routes
Pharmacy private script
Valid Australian prescription, pharmacy dispensing and private medicine price.
Useful when medicine price is visible separately.
Online programme
Assessment, prescriber route, support and pharmacy delivery.
Compare total monthly cost, not just headline subscription.
PBS route
Only where current PBS criteria are met.
Do not assume weight-loss use is PBS subsidised.
Indicative Mounjaro private prices
| Dose or route | Typical advertised cost | Access route | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.5mg starter dose | from A$285/month | Private prescription | Starter dosing; price varies by pharmacy and provider route. |
| 5mg escalation dose | around A$425/month | Private prescription | Usually more expensive than starter dose. |
| 10mg-15mg higher doses | around A$550-A$690/month | Private prescription | Higher doses can materially change monthly cost. |
| Telehealth programme | medicine plus programme fees | Online assessment | Check whether consults, delivery and follow-up are included. |
Typical patient journey
Before
Eligibility screening, BMI/health history, prescriber review.
Ask what happens if you are not suitable.
During
Prescription, dispensing, delivery and dose review.
Confirm dose-escalation pricing.
After
Follow-up, side-effect review, continuation or stopping plan.
Check cancellation and pause terms.
PBS and access notes
- Mounjaro requires an Australian prescriber.
- PBS status and approved indications should be checked against current official sources.
- Provider pages may quote programme pricing rather than medicine-only pricing.
Usually included
- Medicine price where published
- Private prescription pathway where approved
- Delivery or follow-up only if the provider states it is included
May cost extra
- Initial consultation
- Follow-up appointments
- Delivery
- Dose changes
- Blood tests or GP review
Questions to ask before booking
- Is the quoted price medicine-only or programme-inclusive?
- Which AHPRA-registered clinician reviews the assessment?
- What will the monthly cost be after dose escalation?
- Are delivery, follow-up and cancellation terms clear?
Cost terms used on this page
Gap
The amount left for the patient after Medicare, insurer or subsidy payments.
MBS item
A Medicare Benefits Schedule service code used to calculate rebates.
PBS
The Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which subsidises eligible medicines.
Known-gap
A private insurance arrangement where the patient gap is disclosed in advance.
Hospital excess
A fixed amount a patient may pay when claiming on private hospital cover.
Related Australian pages
Sources & further reading
- PBS medicine search — PBS listing and subsidy status for medicines.
- TGA medicine information — Australian medicine regulatory information and safety context.
- AHPRA Register of Practitioners — Registration checks for Australian prescribers.
- Provider websites — Published provider prices and programme inclusions collected by TreatCompare.
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.