Major Medicare change kicks in today for millions of Aussies

Medicare sign
Medicare users will have to call during certain times from today in a major shake-up of the system. (Source: Getty)

People wanting to call Medicare will need to do it between certain times from today in a major shakeup of the system's phone lines. The government body used to answer calls around the clock from Monday to Sunday.

But it's now switched to a 15-hour window on weekdays and a 12-hour window on weekends. A Medicare spokesperson told Yahoo Finance winding back the telephone line hours would improve the system overall.

"This change will allow us to reallocate staff to priority Medicare work, such as processing claims and answering calls on other 24-hour lines," the spokesperson said.

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"Medicare customers can continue using our online self-service 24 hours a day.

"The new Medicare claims tracker has helped reduce phone enquiries, with customers checking the status of their claims online more than 1.8 million times in an average of 12 seconds per check."

The phone lines from today will only work from 7am to 10pm Monday to Friday, and 7am to 7pm on Saturday and Sunday.

Do you have a Centrelink story? Email stew.perrie@yahooinc.com

This was changed after an internal investigation found there were virtually no calls coming outside of those times.

"We regularly evaluate our business practices to make sure we’re delivering our services efficiently and effectively," the spokesperson explained to Yahoo Finance.

"A review of the 24-hour Medicare program and Medicare telephone claims lines found they have an exceptionally low call volume after hours and on weekends."

When the clock struck midnight to ring in the new year, a big change was ushered in for Centrelink users.

Prior to 2025, the maximum period you could get a medical certificate to make you exempt from your Centrelink obligations was 13 weeks.

However, that has now been increased to 24 months "for some job seekers with requirements".

"You can provide a medical certificate to patients unable to participate in work or other activities due to an illness or injury," Services Australia said.

"We use the medical certificate to assess if your patient can get an exemption from their payment requirements.

"How long the exemption period is will depend on our assessment."

Peopler queue to enter Centrelink on March 24, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia
Aussies can now get up a medical certificate to exempt them from their Centrelink obligations for up to two years. (Source: Getty) · Quinn Rooney via Getty Images

If you're on a system like JobSeeker, you will have mutual obligations you need to abide by in order to receive the payment.