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title: "Male Cosmetic Surgery Costs & Medicare Rebates (2026)" slug: "male-cosmetic-surgery-costs-medicare" description: "Procedure-by-procedure cost guide for men's cosmetic surgery in Australia — with Medicare eligibility for each. Over 400 surgeons assessed." date: "2026-04-03" category: "male-cosmetic-surgery" tags: ["male cosmetic surgery costs", "men plastic surgery prices", "medicare male surgery", "gynaecomastia cost", "hair transplant cost australia"] relatedSlugs: [ "cosmetic-surgery-for-men-australia-guide", "gynaecomastia-surgery-australia", "hair-transplant-australia-vs-overseas", "cosmetic-surgery-costs-australia-guide", "cosmetic-surgery-finance-options-australia", "medicare-private-health-insurance-cosmetic-surgery" ] status: "review" ahpraCompliant: true

Male Cosmetic Surgery Costs and Medicare Rebates in Australia (2026)

[IMAGE: Cost overview infographic showing price ranges for the most common male cosmetic procedures]

The question every bloke asks first: "How much is this going to set me back?" Fair enough. Cosmetic surgery is a significant financial decision, and the price ranges you find online are often vague or misleading.

This guide gives you realistic, all-in cost ranges for every common male procedure in Australia — surgeon, anaesthetist, hospital, and the extras. We've also mapped which procedures can attract a Medicare rebate, because for men, there are more options than you might think.

All prices are indicative and based on our assessment of over 400 surgeons across Australia.

Male Cosmetic Surgery Costs: Procedure-by-Procedure Guide

Gynaecomastia Surgery (Male Breast Reduction)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $3,000–$8,000 | | Anaesthetist | $1,000–$2,500 | | Hospital/facility | $1,500–$4,000 | | Compression garment | $100–$250 | | Total | $6,000–$12,000 |

Medicare: May qualify under MBS items 31525/31526 if clinical criteria are met (persistent glandular tissue, documented symptoms). Medicare rebate is modest ($500–$1,200) but private health insurance can cover the hospital component, potentially saving $2,000–$5,000. Full details in our gynaecomastia guide.

Rhinoplasty (Nose Surgery)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $6,000–$15,000 | | Anaesthetist | $1,500–$3,000 | | Hospital/facility | $2,000–$5,000 | | Splint/packing | Included | | Total | $10,000–$22,000 |

Medicare: The functional component (deviated septum, breathing obstruction) may attract a rebate. The cosmetic component won't. If both functional and cosmetic work are performed, the surgeon splits the billing. A functional septoplasty alone is significantly cheaper than combined functional and cosmetic rhinoplasty.

Hair Transplant (FUE)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Procedure fee (all-inclusive) | $8,000–$30,000 |

Hair transplant pricing is usually quoted all-inclusive. The wide range reflects the number of grafts: a 1,500-graft procedure for early recession sits at the lower end, while a 4,000+ mega-session for advanced loss hits the top. Some clinics charge per graft ($4–$8 per graft), others have flat-rate packages.

Medicare: No rebate. Hair transplants are classified as cosmetic regardless of the psychological impact. No private health insurance contribution either.

For a detailed comparison of Australian vs overseas options, see our hair transplant guide.

Liposuction

| Component | Cost Range (per area) | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $2,500–$6,000 | | Anaesthetist | $1,000–$2,500 | | Hospital/facility | $1,500–$3,000 | | Compression garment | $150–$400 | | Total (per area) | $4,000–$10,000 |

Common areas for men: abdomen, flanks, chest (often with gynaecomastia surgery). Treating multiple areas in the same session saves on anaesthesia and hospital fees — a two-area procedure doesn't cost double, more like 1.5x.

Medicare: No rebate for cosmetic liposuction. Rare exceptions exist for lipodystrophy (abnormal fat distribution from medical conditions).

Blepharoplasty (Eyelid Surgery)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $3,000–$7,000 | | Anaesthetist | $800–$2,000 | | Hospital/facility | $1,000–$3,000 | | Total | $5,000–$12,000 |

Upper eyelid surgery is more common and generally less expensive than lower eyelid surgery. Combined upper and lower sits at the higher end of the range.

Medicare: May qualify if excess skin measurably obstructs your visual field. An ophthalmologist or optometrist can perform a visual field test to document the impairment. If the criteria are met, Medicare and private health insurance can contribute meaningfully.

Otoplasty (Ear Reshaping)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $3,000–$6,000 | | Anaesthetist | $800–$1,500 | | Hospital/facility | $1,000–$2,500 | | Total | $6,000–$10,000 |

Medicare: Generally no rebate for adults seeking cosmetic correction. Children may qualify under specific circumstances.

Abdominoplasty (Tummy Tuck)

| Component | Cost Range | |-----------|-----------| | Surgeon's fee | $6,000–$14,000 | | Anaesthetist | $2,000–$3,500 | | Hospital (1–2 nights) | $3,000–$7,000 | | Compression garment | $200–$500 | | Total | $12,000–$25,000 |

Medicare: May qualify after significant weight loss (typically 50+ kg) if excess skin is causing documented functional problems — infections, rashes, mobility issues. This is a medical indication, not cosmetic. Your surgeon and GP need to provide clinical documentation.

Non-Surgical Treatments

| Treatment | Cost per Session | Sessions Needed | Annual Cost | |-----------|-----------------|-----------------|-------------| | Anti-wrinkle injections | $300–$800 | 3–4 per year | $900–$3,200 | | Jawline filler | $1,200–$3,000 | 1 per year | $1,200–$3,000 | | Chin filler | $800–$1,500 | 1 per year | $800–$1,500 | | Under-eye filler | $600–$1,200 | 1 per year | $600–$1,200 | | CoolSculpting (per area) | $600–$1,500 | 2–3 total | $1,200–$4,500 | | PRP for hair loss | $500–$1,500 | 3–4 initial, then maintenance | $1,500–$6,000 first year |

Medicare: No rebate for any cosmetic non-surgical treatment.

[IMAGE: Medicare eligibility summary table for male cosmetic procedures — visual quick-reference]

The Medicare Summary for Men

Here's the quick-reference view:

| Procedure | Medicare Possible? | Conditions | |-----------|-------------------|------------| | Gynaecomastia | Yes | MBS 31525/31526, clinical criteria met | | Rhinoplasty (functional) | Yes | Deviated septum, breathing obstruction | | Blepharoplasty | Yes | Documented visual field obstruction | | Abdominoplasty (post-weight-loss) | Yes | Significant weight loss, functional symptoms | | Liposuction | Rarely | Only for specific medical conditions | | Hair transplant | No | Never | | Otoplasty (adults) | No | Rarely | | All non-surgical | No | Exception: medical Botox for migraines/hyperhidrosis |

How to maximise your rebate:

  1. Start with your GP — get a referral and have them document your symptoms
  2. Your surgeon assesses Medicare eligibility at consultation
  3. Get an itemised quote with MBS item numbers
  4. Call your private health insurer with the item numbers and hospital details
  5. Calculate: total quote minus Medicare rebate minus insurance = your out-of-pocket

Even when Medicare applies, expect to pay 60–80% of the total cost out of pocket. You can check item numbers on the MBS Online database and verify your surgeon's registration on the AHPRA register. The rebate helps, but it doesn't come close to covering the full amount. Plan your finances accordingly.

Our Medicare and insurance guide walks through the full mechanics.

Why Prices Vary So Much

A few things drive the spread between the low and high end of each range:

Surgeon qualifications. FRACS-qualified plastic surgeons with years of experience in a specific procedure charge more than general cosmetic practitioners. You're paying for training depth and consistency. Our AHPRA and FRACS checklist explains why this matters.

Location. Sydney and Melbourne surgeons typically charge 15–25% more than those in Brisbane, Adelaide, or Perth. Higher overheads, higher demand. That doesn't mean regional surgeons are less skilled — but location affects pricing.

Facility type. A fully accredited private hospital with overnight stay is more expensive than an accredited day surgery facility. Both can be appropriate depending on the procedure.

What's included. Always compare quotes on a like-for-like basis. Some quotes are all-inclusive (surgeon, anaesthetist, hospital, garments, follow-ups). Others list only the surgeon's fee — and you discover the rest later. Ask for a full breakdown.

Procedure complexity. A straightforward liposuction on one small area costs less than a multi-area procedure combined with gynaecomastia excision. Your individual anatomy and goals affect the surgical plan and therefore the price.

Paying for It

Since most male procedures don't attract Medicare rebates, you'll need a payment strategy:

  • Savings — The cheapest option. No interest, no stress. Our budgeting guide has a practical savings plan.
  • Medical finance — TLC, MediPay, and similar providers offer structured payment plans. Convenient but you'll pay interest.
  • Personal loan — Often better rates than medical finance if your credit is good.
  • Hybrid approach — Save what you can, finance the rest.

We've compared every option side-by-side in our finance guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the cheapest male cosmetic procedure? Non-surgical treatments are the lowest cost: anti-wrinkle injections from $300 per session. For surgical procedures, otoplasty and gynaecomastia tend to sit at the lower end ($6,000–$10,000 total).

Can I get a tax deduction for cosmetic surgery? Almost never. The ATO classifies it as a personal expense. Our tax deductibility guide covers the narrow exceptions.

Is it cheaper to combine procedures? Yes. Combining gynaecomastia surgery with liposuction of the flanks, for example, saves on anaesthesia and hospital fees. A combined procedure doesn't cost double — typically 1.3–1.6x the cost of the primary procedure alone.

How far in advance should I start planning financially? For procedures in the $10,000–$20,000 range, 6–12 months of dedicated saving gets most people there. Get a consultation early so you have a real number to work toward — the consultation itself typically costs $200–$400.

Do prices go up every year? Hospital and anaesthesia fees tend to increase annually with inflation. Surgeon fees may also adjust. A quote is typically valid for 3–6 months. If you're saving over a longer period, factor in a 5–10% buffer for price adjustments.


Want to Know Your Specific Cost?

Pirk has assessed over 400 surgeons across Australia. We can help you understand the realistic total cost for your procedure and present you with options for qualified surgeons based on your location and budget.

Start your free surgeon assessment | Chat with a Pirk concierge


Disclaimer: Pirk is not a medical provider. We're here to support your decisions and help help you compare qualified, registered health practitioners. All procedures are performed by qualified surgeons or registered health practitioners, and any medical advice should always come directly from your treating provider. We guide you through the journey, but all medical decisions are made between you and your surgeon.