10-year moratorium


10-year moratorium


Last updated 3 January 2024

The 10-year moratorium, also known as Section 19AB of the Health Insurance Act1973 (Cwlth), is Australian Government legislation. To access Medicare rebates, overseas trained doctors or foreign graduates of an accredited medical school are required to work in a priority area for at least 10 years. This time may also be reduced depending on the rurality of where you work.

Doctors affected by the 10-year moratorium can only apply to train on the rural pathway on the Australian General Practice Training (AGPT) Program.

FAQs

The 10-year moratorium applies to doctors who either obtained their primary medical qualification overseas (International Medical Graduates [IMG]) or obtained their primary medical in Australia or New Zealand and were not a permanent resident or Australian or New Zealand citizen at the time they enrolled in their degree (foreign graduates of an accredited medical school [FGAMS]).

Note: The 10 year moratorium does not apply to doctors who obtained their primary medical qualification in New Zealand and were a New Zealand or Australian permanent resident at the time of enrolment.

Section 19AB applies for a minimum of 10 years from the date a doctor first gains medical registration in Australia, which includes provisional or limited registration, as listed on the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) Register of Practitioners. The moratorium ends at the 10-year mark, provided the doctor is a permanent resident or citizen of Australia. For temporary residents, the moratorium continues until they become permanent residents or Australian citizens.

 
 

The moratorium may be able to be reduced through moratorium scaling.

If you are subject to the 10-year moratorium and you have exceptional circumstances which would prevent you from training on the rural pathway, you can submit a request for a rural pathway exemption.

Note: A rural pathway exemption only applies for the duration of the training program. It is not an exemption to the 10-year moratorium (Section 19AB of the Act).  

Applications for rural pathway exemptions must be made by the close of AGPT applications for the intake in which you are applying. Applications received after this date will not be considered for that intake. 

Please see the rural exemption webpage for more information.

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