Buyer's guide · Practical checklist
How to Choose A Skin Specialist in Australia (2026 Checklist)
Practical 2026 checklist for choosing the right skin specialist in Australia. Credentials to confirm, 7 questions to ask every shortlist candidate, red flags to avoid, and how to compare quotes.
Written by Compare Skin Specialists editorial team · Updated 11 June 2026 · 3 min read
What should I look for when choosing a skin specialist?
Choose a skin specialist by checking these five things first: (1) current registration with the appropriate Australian regulator, (2) clear written terms of engagement, (3) transparent itemised pricing in a written quote, (4) availability within your timeframe, and (5) responsiveness to your initial enquiry. Shortlist 3 candidates, ask the same 5 questions of each, and choose the one that scores highest on communication and value rather than just the lowest price.
Checklist based on 20 providers profiled in our directory across 6 service types.
★Key takeaways
- ✓Always verify credentials with the relevant Australian industry body.
- ✓Require 3+ written itemised quotes before committing.
- ✓A 4.5+ rating across 50+ public reviews is a reasonable baseline — ignore <20 reviews.
- ✓Communication quality in the first 24 hours predicts service quality later.
- ✓Cheapest is rarely best; mid-tier value is usually the safest pick.
The 10-point checklist
- Credentials: is the skin specialist registered with the relevant Australian industry body?
- Reviews: 50+ public reviews with a 4.5+ average on Google or Productreview.com.au
- Pricing transparency: do they provide written itemised quotes within 24 hours?
- Insurance: professional indemnity or public liability cover appropriate to the service
- Experience: minimum 3 years in the specific service type you need
- Communication: clear, prompt replies to your first enquiry
- Scope alignment: do they offer the exact service you need (not just something similar)?
- Location: physically based near you or with proven service coverage in your suburb
- References: willing to provide 2 recent client references on request
- Warranty or guarantee: what happens if the service doesn't meet agreed standards?
7 questions to ask every skin specialist on your shortlist
- What's included in your quote? What's NOT included?
- Who exactly will be doing the work, and what are their qualifications?
- Can you provide 2 references from clients with similar needs to mine?
- How do you handle changes or issues once the service has started?
- What's your refund or redress policy if I'm not satisfied?
- How long will this take from engagement to completion?
- Is there a case in which your costs could exceed the quote, and by how much?
Red flags to walk away from
- Pressure to sign a contract on the first call
- No written quote, or verbal-only pricing
- Fewer than 20 public reviews, or a perfect 5.0 with <30 reviews (often fake)
- Unwilling to provide credentials or registration numbers
- Asks for large upfront payment (>30%) before starting work
- No physical address listed or can't be verified on ABR/ABN Lookup
- Consistently avoids specific scope or pricing questions
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
What should I look for when choosing a skin specialist?
Choose a skin specialist by checking these five things first: (1) current registration with the appropriate Australian regulator, (2) clear written terms of engagement, (3) transparent itemised pricing in a written quote, (4) availability within your timeframe, and (5) responsiveness to your initial enquiry. Shortlist 3 candidates, ask the same 5 questions of each, and choose the one that scores highest on communication and value rather than just the lowest price.
How much does a skin check cost in Australia?
Most skin cancer clinics offer bulk-billed skin checks for Medicare card holders — $0 out-of-pocket. A specialist dermatologist consultation (if referred by GP) costs $250-$450 with a Medicare rebate of $80-$150. Skin Cancer Doctors, Spot Check Clinic and similar national chains bulk-bill general skin checks at most locations. Dermatology specialist skin checks for high-risk patients (history of melanoma, atypical mole syndrome) include dermoscopy and computer-assisted mole mapping.
Do I need a GP referral to see a dermatologist?
Yes — you need a GP referral to claim Medicare rebates on dermatologist consultations. Without a referral, you can still see a dermatologist privately but pay full fee with no rebate ($350-$600 instead of $80-$150 out-of-pocket). Skin cancer clinics (separate from dermatology clinics) generally don't require referrals and can bulk-bill general checks. Cosmetic-only consultations with cosmetic doctors don't require GP referral, though following 2023 reforms a referral is now required for cosmetic surgery.
Is Roaccutane (isotretinoin) safe and how do I get it?
Roaccutane (now sold as Oratane and other generics) is highly effective for severe nodulocystic acne — about 80% of patients have lasting clearance after one course. It requires dermatologist prescription due to side effects: dry skin/lips (universal), elevated liver enzymes, severe birth defects (women must use contraception), and rare mood changes. Cost: $250-$500/month for 4-6 months. Strict pregnancy prevention rules apply for women including monthly pregnancy tests.
What's the safest place to get Botox?
Choose a clinic with: registered medical practitioner on premises (doctor or nurse practitioner), GP referral pathway (now required), 7-day cooling-off period, transparent pricing, and willingness to refuse treatment if inappropriate. Avoid: discount providers, "Botox parties", clinics offering BOGOF deals on injectables, anyone working from non-clinical premises. Reputable AU chains: Skin Club, All Saints Skin Clinic, Clear Skincare, dermatology practices. Cost: $300-$700 per treatment area (forehead, frown, crows feet).
How do I treat eczema and psoriasis?
Mild eczema/psoriasis: GP-prescribed topical steroids (cheap, on PBS) plus emollients. Moderate: dermatologist consultation, prescription calcineurin inhibitors (Elidel, Protopic), short courses of stronger steroids. Severe: biologic injections (Dupixent for eczema, Stelara/Cosentyx for psoriasis) — PBS subsidised for severe cases, otherwise $1,500-$3,500/month. Phototherapy (UV light treatment) at dermatology clinics: $50-$120/session, 2-3 sessions/week for 6-12 weeks, often Medicare rebated.