Medicines continue to become cheaper
The Federal Government is making cheaper medicines even cheaper – with legislation introduced to Parliament that will mean a prescription on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) will cost Australians no more than $25 from 1 January next year.
Dr Gordon Reid with West Gosford Pharmacist, Trent Playford.
6 August 2025
THE last time PBS medicines cost no more than $25 was 2004 – more than 20 years ago.
This is another key cost of living measure delivered by the Federal Government.
Minister for Health Mark Butler said, “The Albanese Government has been focused on delivering cheaper medicines for Australians.
“Cheaper medicines are good for the hip pocket and good for your health.
“For general patients medicines haven’t been this cheap since 2004.
“For pension and concession card holders we’ve frozen your medicine prices at a maximum price of $7.70 until the end of the decade.”
Having already slashed the cost of medicines – with the largest cut to the cost of medicines in the history of the PBS in 2023 – the government is now going even further.
This is a more than 20 per cent cut in the maximum cost of PBS medicines, which will save Australians over $200 million each year.
Making medicines cheaper is a tangible way of helping with the cost of living.
Pensioners and concession cardholders will continue to benefit from the freeze to the cost of their PBS medicines, with the cost frozen at its current level of $7.70 until 2030.
This builds on action already taken to deliver cost of living relief through Cheaper Medicines, including:
Freezing the cost of PBS medicines, with co-payments not rising with inflation for all Australians for the first time in 25 years – (January 2025)
Federal Member for Robertson, Dr Gordon Reid MP said, “The Federal Labor Government is delivering on its election commitments and providing cost-of-living relief to help Australians with the price of their medications.
“As an emergency department doctor, I see firsthand how this government’s policies are helping patients, particularly those with existing conditions to save money with their regular medication costs”, Dr Reid said.
All medicines that pharmacies can discount today can continue to be discounted once the co-payment is cut to $25. The legislation includes specific provisions to protect the availability of discounting.