Deciding to buy a medical practice in Australia is one of the most significant professional and financial decisions a GP can make. Acquiring an existing practice offers immediate patient flow, established systems, and a functioning team, but it also carries risks that must be carefully assessed through thorough due diligence. The right acquisition accelerates your path to profitability. The wrong one can create years of financial and operational challenges.
HCPA, as Regulatory Growth Consultants for healthcare providers across Australia, supports GPs through every stage of the practice acquisition process, from initial valuation and due diligence through to regulatory compliance, staff transition, and post-acquisition growth planning. This guide covers the essential steps, key risks, and practical considerations for buying a medical practice in Australia.
Why Buy an Existing Practice Instead of Starting From Scratch
The primary advantage of acquisition over startup is immediate revenue. An established practice comes with an active patient base, Medicare billing history, existing provider numbers, staff who know the systems, and (in most cases) accreditation that transfers with the business. You skip the three to six month ramp-up period that new clinics face and begin generating income from day one.
However, these benefits come at a premium. Practice purchase prices reflect the value of goodwill (the intangible value of patient relationships, reputation, and future earnings potential) on top of tangible asset values. Understanding how to evaluate whether that premium is justified is the foundation of a sound acquisition decision. For comparison, review our breakdown of GP clinic setup costs to understand what starting fresh would require.
Valuation Methods for Medical Practices
Earnings-Based Valuation
The most common valuation method is a multiple of normalised earnings. This takes the practice’s adjusted net profit (removing owner-specific expenses and one-off items) and applies a multiplier, typically between 1.5 and 4 times annual earnings for GP practices. The multiplier reflects factors such as location, patient demographics, growth trajectory, and practitioner retention risk.
A practice generating $200,000 in normalised annual profit valued at a 2.5x multiple would be priced at approximately $500,000. However, this requires careful scrutiny of what constitutes “normalised” earnings. Seller adjustments that inflate profit, such as removing a market-rate salary for the principal GP, should be challenged during due diligence.
Asset-Based Valuation
This method values the practice based on its tangible assets (equipment, fitout, technology) plus goodwill. It is often used alongside earnings-based valuation as a cross-check. The tangible asset value establishes a floor price, while goodwill represents the premium for an operating business versus a collection of assets.
Due Diligence Checklist
Financial Due Diligence
Request and verify at least three years of financial statements, including profit and loss statements, balance sheets, tax returns, and Medicare billing reports. Key items to review include revenue trends (is the practice growing or declining?), expense ratios compared to industry benchmarks, outstanding debts or liabilities, and any pending legal claims.
Pay particular attention to Medicare billing patterns. A practice with declining consultation volumes may indicate patient attrition, practitioner departures, or increased competition. Conversely, a practice with stable or growing billings and a diversified GP roster represents lower acquisition risk. Understanding GP clinic profitability benchmarks helps you assess whether the practice’s financial performance is healthy.
Regulatory and Compliance Due Diligence
Verify the practice’s accreditation status with the relevant accrediting body (AGPAL or QPA), confirm all practitioner registrations are current with AHPRA, and check the lease terms and transferability. Review any outstanding compliance issues, Medicare audit history, and workplace health and safety records.
The practice must hold valid clinic registration with the relevant state or territory health department. Confirm whether this registration transfers automatically with the business sale or requires a new application. In some jurisdictions, a change of ownership triggers a new registration process that can delay settlement.
Staff and Practitioner Retention
The value of any GP practice is heavily dependent on its practitioners continuing to work there after the sale. If the selling principal GP is the primary revenue generator and plans to leave post-sale, the practice’s goodwill diminishes significantly. Negotiate retention agreements with key GPs and staff as part of the purchase terms.
Review all employment contracts, contractor agreements, and restraint of trade clauses. Ensure you understand each practitioner’s billing contribution, their contractual terms, and any obligations that transfer to you as the new owner.
Legal Structure and Settlement
Most practice acquisitions are structured as either an asset purchase or a share purchase. An asset purchase means you buy the practice’s assets (equipment, goodwill, patient records, contracts) without acquiring the selling entity’s liabilities. A share purchase means you buy the company that owns the practice, inheriting both its assets and liabilities.
Asset purchases are generally preferred by buyers because they provide a clean separation from historical liabilities. However, share purchases may be advantageous in specific circumstances, such as when the practice holds non-transferable contracts or licences. Your solicitor and accountant should advise on the optimal structure based on your specific situation.
Post-Acquisition Transition Planning
A successful acquisition extends well beyond settlement day. Plan for a structured transition period where the selling principal introduces you to key patients, staff, and referral networks. A transition period of three to six months is standard, during which the seller may continue to consult part-time to maintain patient continuity.
Prioritise early actions that build trust with the existing team. Avoid making sweeping operational changes in the first 90 days. Instead, focus on understanding the current systems, identifying quick-win improvements, and demonstrating your commitment to the practice’s continued success. Once settled, use our guide on starting a medical practice for frameworks on building systems and growth strategies that apply equally to acquired practices.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to buy a GP practice in Australia?
GP practice prices vary widely based on location, size, and profitability. Small practices may sell for $150,000 to $400,000, while larger multi-GP clinics in metropolitan areas can exceed $1 million. The price primarily reflects the goodwill value (future earnings potential) plus tangible assets.
What is goodwill in a medical practice sale?
Goodwill represents the intangible value of the practice, including patient relationships, reputation, location advantage, and established systems. It is typically the largest component of the purchase price and reflects the buyer’s expectation of future earnings from the existing patient base.
How do I finance a medical practice purchase?
Major Australian banks offer dedicated medical practice loans with favourable terms for GP buyers. Typical loan-to-value ratios range from 80 to 100 percent for qualified medical professionals, with interest rates competitive against standard commercial loans. Your lender will require a business plan, practice valuation, and evidence of your clinical and management capabilities.
Ready to explore acquisition opportunities? Talk with our consultants for guidance on valuation, due diligence, and regulatory compliance throughout the purchase process.





