National ranking · Updated April 2026
Best skin specialist in Australia (2026)
Independent ranking of the top skin specialist in Australia for 2026. Ranked on reviews, pricing, service coverage, and specialisation.
Written by Compare Skin Specialists editorial team · Updated 15 April 2026 · 2 min read
Who are the best skin specialist in Australia?
The top-rated skin specialist in Australia for 2026 is Sinclair Dermatology (4.8/5 across 940 reviews), with MoleMap and All Saints Skin Clinic rounding out the top three. Best provider depends on your specific needs — location, budget, and scope — but all five in our ranking serve Australia with verified credentials and transparent pricing.
★ Key takeaways
- ✓ #1 overall: Sinclair Dermatology (4.8/5, 940 reviews).
- ✓ All 5 ranked providers have verified credentials and transparent pricing.
- ✓ Prices vary widely — always compare 3 quotes before committing.
- ✓ Major cities (Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane) have the deepest provider pools.
- ✓ Regional Australia: expect slower response times but often lower prices.
The national top 5
#1
Sinclair Dermatology
Melbourne · 4.8/5 (940 reviews) · $$$ — Specialist fees
Melbourne dermatology practice led by Prof Rod Sinclair, hair and skin specialist.
Highlights: Hair specialist · Research-led · Multi-doctor · East Melbourne
#2
MoleMap
Sydney · 4.7/5 (3200 reviews) · $280-$420
National skin cancer screening service with full-body imaging and dermatologist review.
Highlights: Mole mapping · AI screening · National · Dermatologist reviewed
#3
All Saints Skin Clinic
Melbourne · 4.7/5 (720 reviews) · $$$ — Premium
Melbourne premium cosmetic dermatology with focus on results-driven anti-ageing.
Highlights: Premium · Anti-ageing focus · Doctor-led · Toorak
#4
Skin Club
Melbourne · 4.6/5 (1840 reviews) · $$ — Cosmetic focus
Doctor-led cosmetic clinic chain. Botox, fillers, laser across multiple Melbourne locations.
Highlights: Doctor-led · Multi-clinic · Cosmetic focus · Mentone, Toorak, CBD
#5
Skin Cancer Doctors
Brisbane · 4.5/5 (2100 reviews) · Bulk-billed
Bulk-billed skin cancer clinics nationwide. Same-day excisions.
Highlights: Bulk-billed · Same-day surgery · National · No referral needed
How we rank
We use a transparent weighted scoring model updated quarterly:
- 40% aggregated public reviews (Google, Productreview.com.au, industry directories)
- 25% price transparency and itemised quoting
- 20% service coverage (geography, availability, specialisations)
- 10% credentials, registration, and insurance
- 5% complaint history (Fair Trading, industry ombudsman)
We do not accept payment to feature or rank providers. Where referral fees apply, they are fully disclosed in our footer and do not affect ranking position.
Frequently asked questions
Who are the best skin specialist in Australia?
The top-rated skin specialist in Australia for 2026 is Sinclair Dermatology (4.8/5 across 940 reviews), with MoleMap and All Saints Skin Clinic rounding out the top three. Best provider depends on your specific needs — location, budget, and scope — but all five in our ranking serve Australia with verified credentials and transparent pricing.
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.
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