InSight+ Issue 9 / 9 March 2026

Since 2023, 137 Urgent Care Clinics have opened across Australia, in all states and territories. They’re usually located within or partnered with a general practice, an Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation or a community health centre.

Last week, an independent report was released evaluating how well they’re working, based on the first 87 clinics to open. This follows an initial report in March 2025.

The evaluation team surveyed patients and staff and interviewed local and peak body stakeholders, managers and clinical staff. They also blended Medicare, emergency department and other public data to map program performance against the program’s measures of success.

The new evaluation reveals millions of visits since the clinics opened, and a high level of satisfaction about the quality of care.

But it also flags concerns about follow-up care, staff workload, opening hours, and access to X-rays and critical blood tests after hours.

What are the urgent care clinics for?

These walk-in clinics aim to alleviate pressure on hospital emergency departments by offering short-term care for urgent but non-life-threatening conditions. These may include illnesses such as gastroenteritis or chest infections or minor injuries from sport or mishaps at home.

All clinics must bulk-bill and offer easy access to X-rays and critical blood tests.

The clinics can also give prescriptions to patients who have run out of long-term medications – but only enough until the patient sees their usual GP.

Patients are either treated on-site or sent on to emergency departments or their GP for further care. Those without a GP need to be given advice about finding one.

Australia now has 137 urgent care clinics. Are they working? - Featured Image
Urgent care clinics aim to alleviate pressure on hospital emergency departments by offering short-term care for urgent but non-life-threatening conditions (Sanya Kushak / Shutterstock).

So, are they working?

The clinics are certainly being used. The report says 1.5 million Australians had visited one of the initial 87 clinics by May 2025. According to the government, there have now been more than 2.5 million presentations since they first opened in 2023.

The evaluation found two-thirds (62%) of visits were for acute illness and just over a quarter (27%) for minor injuries. One in five patients needed X-ray or pathology services.

Wait times were impressive: nine in ten patients are seen within an hour, and 95% of surveyed patients rated their care as good or very good.

Analysis of visits to nearby emergency departments suggest a 4–10% reduction in the sort of low intensity visits the clinics are designed to cover. Early cost-effectiveness analysis suggested this could save A$381 in emergency department costs for each clinic visit.

What kind of issues are there?

Some important concerns about the program have emerged:

  • the small but steady number of “inappropriate presentations”, where patients actually require longer-term care. This highlights the importance of clear communication about what the clinics can and can’t do
  • very few clinics have imaging and/or pathology available after 5–6pm and on weekends. Only 1.1% of all visits were billed in Medicare’s after-hours window (after 8pm, Saturday afternoons, or Sundays and public holidays). Taken together, clinics seem to be operating in the same time window as general practice, leaving after-hours care to locum services or emergency departments
  • the government’s own guidelines require the clinics hand over a patient’s care to their usual GP. But the report found one in every three visits lacked subsequent communication with the patient’s GP. This echoes many doctors’ concerns about fragmentation of care
  • staff surveys showed clinical staff valued their experience at the clinics and opportunities for professional development. But only half the nurses and doctors thought they had a manageable workload – and this was worse in rural and remote areas.

But there’s still information missing

While the report raises concerns about whether clinics are open long enough to meet demand, there is no direct data on clinics’ actual opening hours. So we don’t know in detail what is available and whether this varies between states and territories, and cities and rural and remote areas.

And while we have a general idea of what people are presenting for, the evaluation doesn’t give a detailed breakdown. More specific information would help us understand what kind of “inappropriate” presentations are still happening, and better tailor what care the clinics offer – and how this is communicated to the public.

What should change?

These early findings show urgent care clinics may be filling a gap in health care, particularly in cities. The challenge now is whether they can effectively complement team-based primary care.

The second evaluation shows how the model has evolved. But its lack of detail on opening hours, clinical presentations, workload and staff experience leave more questions than answers.

What is clear is there needs to be a focus on matching opening hours with need, making it clearer to the community what clinics can and can’t do and working harder to keep the patient’s GP in the loop. The 13% of urgent care clinic patients without a regular GP need help to find one.

We can only hope for a bit more clarity in the final evaluation, which is expected later this year.

Grant Russell is a Professor of Primary Care Research at Monash University.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The statements or opinions expressed in this article reflect the views of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official policy of the AMA, the MJA or InSight+ unless so stated. 

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3 thoughts on “Australia now has 137 urgent care clinics. Are they working?

  1. Anonymous says:

    While visiting interstate I developed a minor medical issue and decided to risk an UCC. I had no information about the centre’s history, staffing or standards. After filling in a 4 page registration form which included a question about where would I go if the UCC wasn’t there I sat for about half an hour before being triaged by a nurse. Good thing I didn’t have chest pain. The triage was ok although the nurse didn’t look to confirm my problem. By then I had identified myself as a GP so that might have explaimed her failing triage 101. I then waited 2 hours which was sort of interesting. I noticed the attached GP Practice doctors were bringing their patients across to the UCC for dressings and the like and their patients were jumping ahead of me and the others in the waiting room. I pondered going across the hall to see if the general practice had a spare appointment to accelerate my process but thought I’d better stick to the programme. Eventually I was seen by a very competent doctor and although the amount of gear used would have given a private practice owner a coronary I was successfully treated. My visit which would have taken about 30 minutes in a general practice took 5 hours and included some pathology being sent to a private lab/co-tenant that wasn’t really necessary. My MHR shows Medicare picked up the tab for the pathology despite my not signing any claim forms. My thoughts are every general practice should be funded to add an UCC on the side to enjoy the rivers of gold as it would also give our ever needy politicians some more buildings to open.

  2. Dr David Mountain says:

    Overall, it looks like 2-4% < ED attendances, but in low acuity patients. These are not the pts that jam up ED. ED becomes.dysfunctional.from admitted pts, these pts are rarely admitted.
    Re the costs,
    a) the majority of lts seen in urgent care are GP pts, at least 70% , prob a lot more. So for each potentially diverted low acuity ED pt requires at least 3 and up.to 5-6 UCC visits, at definite additional cost of $750- 1500. by no.economic analysis is.this cost.efficient
    b)ED costs for low acuity pts are much less than the quoted $300 to 650, because EDs always have to be open, and the fixed costs ( heating, buildings, electric, base admin, IT, security etc. have to be their. The average actual cost for additional ED attendancesnis is more like$80-150.
    c) remember all.the urgent care costs are real new additional costs to the system,
    Overall a v expensive, v innefective piece of public policy, except if u are a fed health MFH measuring column inches of media coverage

  3. AG McCall says:

    Very interested to see these results. I went to a ucc with suspected chicken pox. Was initially turned away and told it was dermatitis. Went back to a different site where a pustule swab was taken. I never received information about whether I had chicken pox and the results were not sent to my usual GP. My doctor had a tricky time getting my results from pathology, because by that time, my son caught it. In between all of this, pathology told me they could not give me the results and that they need to be given to a doctor. Surprise! I had chicken pox. Funniest part is the two doctors I saw at the UCC both said they didn’t think it was chicken pox BUT nurse on call-who couldn’t even see me- told me they suspected chicken pox.

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