Dermatology in New Zealand
Compare dermatologists practising in New Zealand, registered with the Medical Council of New Zealand.
What dermatology involves
Dermatology covers the diagnosis and treatment of skin, hair and nail conditions. A typical specialist appointment includes a history, full-skin examination, dermoscopy where indicated, and may include biopsy, cryotherapy or treatment planning. Some dermatology services are provided by GPs with extra training, by nurse specialists, or by allied skin-cancer clinics.
Consultation length: New patient appointments are typically 30–45 minutes; follow-ups 15–30 minutes.
Follow-up: Skin checks are usually annual for moderate-risk patients and 3–6 monthly for high-risk patients. Chronic conditions like eczema and psoriasis are reviewed every 3–12 months depending on stability and treatment used.
Common conditions dermatologists treat
- mole and skin-cancer checks (including dermoscopy)
- acne, rosacea and persistent inflammatory skin conditions
- eczema and psoriasis management
- hair loss assessment
- skin-cancer surgical excision and Mohs referral
- paediatric dermatology — birthmarks, eczema, viral skin conditions
Cost & ACC funding
Typical fees: $200–$450 per consultation. Specialist dermatology consultations typically cost $250–$400 with a GP referral. Skin checks at GP-led skin-cancer clinics are usually $150–$250. Some procedures (excision, biopsy) attract additional fees and may be partly funded by Southern Cross or ACC.
ACC cover: ACC funds skin-cancer treatment when the cancer is the result of treatment injury, and surgical complications under treatment-injury cover. Most diagnostic dermatology is privately funded or partially covered by health insurance such as Southern Cross.
Choosing a dermatologist
Dermatologist services in New Zealand are a medical specialty regulated by the Medical Council of New Zealand. Dermatologists hold a vocational scope of Dermatology — a postgraduate fellowship after general medical training — and many are Fellows of the Australasian College of Dermatologists (FACD).
Verify the practitioner on the MCNZ register and check whether they hold a vocational scope of Dermatology. For skin-cancer clinics, ask whether the clinician is a vocationally-registered dermatologist, a GP with extra training, or a nurse specialist — all are legitimate but the level of expertise differs.
Verify any practitioner on the public register at mcnz.org.nz before booking.
Dermatology in your city
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Plan your dermatology treatment
Related care
Other health services frequently considered alongside dermatology:
Dermatology: questions
Do I need a referral to see a dermatologist?
A GP referral is usually required for funded specialist consultations and is recommended for private appointments because dermatologists rely on the GP letter for context. Skin-cancer clinics generally accept self-referrals.
Is dermatology covered by health insurance?
Most major health insurers (Southern Cross, nib, Accuro, AIA) cover specialist dermatology consultations and procedures under their specialist cover. Check whether dermoscopy and Mohs surgery are within your plan limits.
When should I get a skin check?
New Zealand has one of the world's highest melanoma rates. The Cancer Society NZ recommends a baseline skin check for any adult with fair skin, a personal or family history of skin cancer, significant childhood sun exposure, or many moles, and earlier review of any new or changing lesion.
How is suspected skin cancer treated?
A suspicious lesion is usually biopsied — either an excision biopsy that removes the whole lesion or a punch biopsy that takes a sample. Treatment depends on the diagnosis and may involve wide local excision, Mohs surgery, topical therapies, cryotherapy or referral for radiotherapy.