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Online gonorrhoea test — $39, no appointment needed

Gonorrhoea Test Melbourne

$39 no additional costs for the tests themselves with Medicare

Test for gonorrhoea as part of a full 5-infection STI screen — including chlamydia, syphilis, HIV, and hepatitis. No appointment needed. Walk into any pathology clinic Australia-wide. Most results within 24 hours.

pathology clinics Australia-wide
No appointment needed — walk in
Most results within 24 hours
Specialist GP reviews every referral and result
Completely confidential
Collection Urine sample (chlamydia + gonorrhoea PCR) + blood test (syphilis, HIV, hepatitis) at any pathology clinic. Optional self-collect throat, vaginal, and rectal swabs.
Get Tested — $39 →

You will receive a pathology referral by SMS. Take it to any pathology clinic.

Prefer to speak to a doctor?

Your body. Your choice. Same Specialist GP — online test, phone consultation, or face-to-face.

How it works. Three simple steps from your phone.

Easier than ordering coffee. 2 minutes to order. 10 minutes at pathology. Done.
1
Book an online gonorrhoea test from your phone

Order online

Complete a short 2-minute questionnaire from your phone. Your pathology referral is sent straight to you by SMS. No appointment needed.

2
Australia-wide pathology collection locations across Australia

Visit any pathology clinic

Walk into any of any pathology clinic. Blood test, urine sample, and optional self-collect swabs. No appointment.

Find your nearest clinic →
3
Phone showing gonorrhoea test results

Results by SMS

Most results within 24 hours by SMS. Occasionally up to 3 days. No results after 3 days? Use our results enquiry form and we will chase them up urgently. Tested positive? Our Specialist GP will contact you to arrange treatment over the phone.

Everything you need to know about gonorrhoea test melbourneing

Looking for a gonorrhoea test in Melbourne? Clinic365 offers gonorrhoea testing from $39 — order online and walk into any of hundreds of Melbourne pathology collection centres. No appointment needed. Your nearest options include clinics in the CBD, East Melbourne, South Melbourne, Carlton, Fitzroy, Richmond, St Kilda, South Yarra, Prahran, and across all Melbourne suburbs. Most results are sent by SMS within 24 hours and reviewed by a Specialist GP. Gonorrhoea Test Melbourne is available by telehealth from our Specialist GP.

Gonorrhoea is a bacterial sexually transmitted infection caused by Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It is the second most commonly notified STI in Australia after chlamydia, and notification rates have more than doubled in the past decade. Gonorrhoea is spread through vaginal, anal, and oral sex, and it can infect the urethra, cervix, rectum, throat, and eyes. According to the Australian STI Management Guidelines, gonorrhoea rates are rising across all demographics, with the highest rates among young adults and men who have sex with men.

Many people with gonorrhoea have no symptoms at all, particularly at the throat and rectal sites. When symptoms do occur, they may include a yellow or green discharge from the penis or vagina, pain or burning when urinating, sore throat, or rectal discomfort. In women, gonorrhoea is frequently asymptomatic and can be mistaken for a urinary tract infection. Because symptoms are unreliable, routine screening is the only way to detect most gonorrhoea infections.

Testing for gonorrhoea uses the same urine sample collected for chlamydia, analysed by nucleic acid amplification testing with sensitivity above 95 per cent. However, urine testing only detects urethral gonorrhoea. If you have had oral sex, a self-collected throat swab is strongly recommended. If you have had receptive anal sex, a rectal swab should also be collected. These extragenital sites are where gonorrhoea most commonly hides undetected, and a urine test alone will miss these infections entirely.

Gonorrhoea can be detected from approximately two weeks after exposure. If a positive result is confirmed by nucleic acid amplification testing, the Australian guidelines recommend that a culture specimen also be collected before treatment to test for antibiotic sensitivity. This is important because antibiotic-resistant gonorrhoea is an increasing global concern, and treatment must be guided by the most current resistance data available.

Treatment for gonorrhoea currently involves dual therapy — an an intramuscular antibiotic injection combined with an oral antibiotic. Oral-only treatment is generally not recommended due to resistance concerns. A test of cure is recommended two weeks after treatment to confirm the infection has been cleared. All sexual partners from the past two months should be notified and tested. Untreated gonorrhoea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility in women, epididymitis in men, and can increase susceptibility to HIV infection.

Regular sexual health screening is recommended for anyone who is sexually active, even when no symptoms are present. Most sexually transmitted infections produce no noticeable symptoms in the early stages, which means they can be unknowingly passed to sexual partners. Australian guidelines recommend at least annual screening for sexually active adults, and more frequent testing for those with new or multiple partners. If you have had unprotected sex with a new partner, testing is recommended even if you feel well.

If your test results are positive, your Specialist GP will contact you directly to discuss treatment options and arrange treatment. Most bacterial STIs respond well to a short course of antibiotics and are straightforward to manage when detected early. Partner notification is an important part of treatment — all recent sexual partners should be informed and tested, even if they have no symptoms. Your GP can advise on how to approach this conversation, including anonymous notification options if preferred.

Dr Ed Skinner
Author: Dr Ed Skinner
MBBS, FRACGP · Specialist GP · AHPRA · MED0001674680
Last reviewed: April 2026

Frequently asked questions

Complete a 2-minute questionnaire. You receive a pathology referral by SMS. Walk into any pathology clinic Australia-wide — no appointment needed. Urine sample and blood test take about 10 minutes. Most results within 24 hours by SMS.
No. If you have a Medicare card, the pathology tests themselves are bulk-billed at no additional cost. The $39 covers the consultation and referral.
No. Walk into any pathology clinic Australia-wide with your SMS referral. Most are open Monday to Saturday. No booking needed at most locations.
Yes. Results go directly to you by SMS. We do not notify your regular GP, employer, or insurer. At the pathology clinic, STI tests are processed like any other blood test — staff don't know which specific tests are ordered.
Typically yes. A standard GP visit costs $40–$80 and may not include all five infections. The $39 Clinic365 screen covers chlamydia, gonorrhoea, syphilis, HIV, and hepatitis — with a Specialist GP reviewing your results.
Avoid urinating for at least 1 hour before your visit (for accurate urine testing). No fasting is needed. Bring your SMS referral and Medicare card. The visit takes about 10–20 minutes.
Gonorrhoea is not typically transmitted by kissing. It is spread through vaginal, anal, and oral sex. Throat gonorrhoea is common in people who have given oral sex and is almost always symptom-free.
Gonorrhoea can be detected by PCR from 2 weeks after exposure. Symptoms, if they appear, usually develop within 2–7 days — but many people have no symptoms at all, especially at throat and rectal sites.
Yes. Antibiotic-resistant gonorrhoea is a growing concern in Australia and globally. This is why gonorrhoea treatment should always be arranged by a doctor — your Specialist GP will use the most current treatment guidelines.
Yes. Untreated gonorrhoea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease in women and epididymitis in men, both of which can lead to infertility. Early detection and treatment prevents these complications.