GPScout › Telehealth › Qoctor
Qoctor review
Qoctor undercuts the cohort on starting price ($14.99) by a wide margin, but the public-facing information is thinner than every other operator we reviewed. Hours, Medicare position, service breadth, doctor disclosure — none of these are vi…
ABN not publicly displayed · Founded year not stated · Owner: Not publicly disclosed
Pricing
| Service | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Telehealth appointment | From $14.99 | |
| Detailed pricing | Not publicly published | available within the booking flow |
Services offered
- Online doctor consultations
Medicare position
Not explicitly stated; assume privately billed. The 12-month face-to-face rule applies — Medicare rebates on standard telehealth consults are only available where you've had an in-person consult with this provider (or another GP at the same clinic) within the past year. Pure-telehealth-only services like Qoctor typically can't bulk-bill standard consults because they don't operate in-person clinics. Mental Health Care Plans (MHCPs) are an exception where eligible.
Doctors
Named clinician: none on the public site
No named doctors found on the public pages we reviewed (homepage + pricing page returned 404).
You can verify any individual Australian doctor's AHPRA registration at ahpra.gov.au/search.
Third-party signals
No public third-party reviews aggregated yet.
Pros
- $14.99 starting price — the cheapest entry point in this cohort by a substantial margin
Watch-outs
- Hours and Medicare position not publicly stated on the homepage
- Doctor names + AHPRA numbers not visible on the pages we reviewed
- Service breadth not detailed pre-booking
- Dedicated pricing page returned 404 at the time of this review
Best for
Price-sensitive users willing to navigate the booking flow to see service breadth and detailed pricing.
Editorial verdict
Qoctor undercuts the cohort on starting price ($14.99) by a wide margin, but the public-facing information is thinner than every other operator we reviewed. Hours, Medicare position, service breadth, doctor disclosure — none of these are visible on the homepage or via a dedicated pricing page (which 404'd at the time of this review). That doesn't make Qoctor a bad service — but it makes them hard to compare against InstantScripts (transparent across the board) or Doctors on Demand (transparent on the 24/7 + repeat-script side). We'd recommend Qoctor for users comfortable digging into the booking flow to evaluate the product, and we'll revisit this review once Qoctor's detailed pricing and doctor disclosure become publicly accessible.
Compare against
Last updated 2026-05-20. Source URLs: https://www.qoctor.com.au/.