Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency - Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practice Board of Australia registration fee remains frozen for 2024/25
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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practice Board of Australia registration fee remains frozen for 2024/25

18 Sep 2024

The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practice Board of Australia (the Board) and the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (Ahpra) have announced a freeze in the annual registration fee for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practice profession for 2024/25.

The registration fee will remain at $154 from 18 September 2024. This will cover the registration period from 1 December 2024 to 30 November 2025.

‘Keeping fees as low as possible, while ensuring we can meet our regulatory obligations and the expectations of the public and practitioners is an ongoing priority of the Board.

‘The Board is pleased to be in a position to freeze fees again this year,’ Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practice Board Chair Ms Iris Raye said.

Registration fees fund our work

Registration fees fund the work of National Boards and Ahpra to keep the public safe by:

  • managing applications for registration,
  • developing professional standards that guide the profession and set expectations
  • investigating and managing concerns about registered health practitioners, including taking immediate action and referring matters to tribunals
  • criminal prosecutions for breaches in advertising and use of title
  • accrediting programs of study that lead to registration and endorsement
  • funding the work of the Health Ombudsman in Queensland and the National Health Practitioner Ombudsman.

The National Scheme is self-funded with each Board responsible for meeting the full costs of regulating their profession.

The fees for each National Board must also reflect the risk and complexity of the individual professions, as well as the resources needed to address them. The National Boards work closely with Ahpra to keep fees as low as possible while continuing to meet regulatory obligations and the expectations of the public and practitioners. There is no ongoing government funding.

For more information
 
 
Page reviewed 18/09/2024