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A person can act on your behalf for Medicare purposes when any of the following applies:
- they’re your appointed Power of Attorney (POA)
- a court or tribunal has appointed them as your guardian and administrator
- we’ve accepted them as your authorised representative
- they’re your authorised third party.
The POA or guardianship and administration order must show your representative can act on your behalf for financial matters.
They can’t manage your Medicare business online through myGov.
The person who is acting for you can manage your Medicare business in the following ways:
- in person
- over the phone
- by mail.
They can also manage some of your business by email.
Authorised third party
You can give us permission to release your compensation information to a third party. They can also complete and sign relevant documentation on your behalf. Use the Medicare Compensation Recovery Third party authority form.
An authorised third party also includes legal representatives.
A legal representative is a person who has been legally appointed by law to act on the injured person’s behalf.
You can appoint a legal representative with one of the following:
- a Last Will and Testament confirming the executor or executrix of the estate
- Letters of Administration or Probate where the injured person dies intestate, without a Last Will and Testament in place
- Public Trustee documentation
- a Court order.
Removing a Medicare representative
You can call us to remove a Medicare acting arrangement.
Contact numbers available on this page.
Medicare program
Use this line if you need help with a claim, enrolments, safety nets, ordering a new card or have a Medicare general enquiry. Let us know if you need an interpreter and we’ll arrange one for free.
There are other ways you may want to contact us.