Costs & no-gap

How Much Does a Colonoscopy Cost in Australia? (No-Gap & Private Options)

In short
  • In the public system a colonoscopy is free, but non-urgent waits can run many months.
  • Privately, the total fee is built from the specialist (proceduralist) fee, the anaesthetist, the day-hospital facility fee and any biopsy/pathology.
  • With eligible private health insurance, an in-network no-gap colonoscopy can mean little or no out-of-pocket cost.
  • Without insurance, you pay the full private fee — ask for an itemised quote up front so there are no surprises.

“How much does a colonoscopy cost?” is one of the most common questions we are asked — and the honest answer is “it depends on how you have it done.” The procedure itself is the same; what changes is who pays for each part of it.

This guide breaks the cost into its real components, explains the difference between the public and private pathways, and shows how a no-gap colonoscopy works for insured patients in Brisbane.

The three ways to have a colonoscopy in Australia

PathwayWhat you payTypical wait
Public hospital (Medicare)FreeUrgent cases prioritised; routine cases can wait months
Private, with health insuranceOften no gap or a small known gapDays to a few weeks
Private, without insuranceFull private fee (self-funded)Days to a few weeks

Medicare and your health fund both contribute to the private fee. The ‘gap’ is whatever is left over after those rebates — and that is the number patients actually feel.

What makes up the private fee

A private colonoscopy fee is not one charge. It is usually four separate items:

  • Proceduralist (specialist) fee — for performing the colonoscopy.
  • Anaesthetist fee — colonoscopy is done under sedation, so an anaesthetist is involved.
  • Facility / day-hospital fee — the theatre, nursing and recovery.
  • Pathology — only if polyps or biopsies are taken and sent to the lab.

Medicare pays a set rebate against the specialist and anaesthetist items, and (if you are insured) your fund covers the hospital item. Whether you have a gap depends on how each provider sets their fee relative to those rebates.

Exact figures change. Medicare item numbers and scheduled fees are reviewed periodically — we confirm the current rebate and any out-of-pocket with you in writing before your procedure.
Concerned about your gut health?
Talk to Dr Goutham about colonoscopy and bowel-cancer screening — with no-gap options for insured patients.

What a ‘no-gap’ colonoscopy means

If you hold eligible private hospital cover, a no-gap arrangement means the proceduralist and anaesthetist agree to accept the combined Medicare and health-fund rebate as full payment — so you have no out-of-pocket cost for those fees. Many funds run no-gap or known-gap schemes (for example Bupa, HCF, Medibank and nib programs).

Two things still matter: your policy must actually cover colonoscopy (check for waiting periods and exclusions), and any hospital excess on your policy may still apply. We check your eligibility before the day so you know exactly where you stand.

Costs without private insurance

If you are uninsured, you pay the full private fee yourself, and Medicare still rebates part of the specialist and anaesthetist items. The facility fee is the largest variable. The best protection against bill-shock is simple: ask for an itemised, fixed quote before you book, covering all four components above.

For people who only need screening because of age or family history, it is also worth asking whether you qualify for the national bowel-screening program first, which is free.

Is it worth paying privately?

The main thing you buy privately is time — a procedure in days or weeks rather than months — plus continuity with one specialist from consult to result. For an urgent symptom such as rectal bleeding, a change in bowel habit, or a positive screening test, that speed can matter clinically, not just for convenience.

Frequently asked questions

Is a colonoscopy covered by Medicare?

Yes. Medicare rebates the specialist and anaesthetist fees for a clinically indicated colonoscopy. In a public hospital it is free; privately, Medicare plus your health fund reduce the cost, and a no-gap arrangement can remove the out-of-pocket entirely.

How much is a colonoscopy without insurance in Australia?

You pay the full private fee, made up of the specialist, anaesthetist and day-hospital charges, with Medicare rebating part of the first two. The amount varies by provider and facility, so always request an itemised quote up front.

What is a no-gap colonoscopy?

It is a private colonoscopy where the proceduralist and anaesthetist accept the Medicare and health-fund rebates as full payment, leaving you with no out-of-pocket fee for those items (a hospital excess may still apply if your policy has one).

Can I get a free colonoscopy?

Yes — through the public hospital system if you have a Medicare card and a referral, or if you are eligible for the national bowel-cancer screening program. The trade-off is a potentially long wait for non-urgent cases.

General information, not personal medical advice. Last medically reviewed by Dr Goutham Sivasuthan, FRACS, June 2026. AHPRA MED0002000354.

COLONOSCOPY BRISBANE

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