By Penelope Woods, MAudSt, MAudA (CCP), BMus, is a Masters Qualified Independent Audiologist and Hearing Health Advocate serving the Redlands Community.
Great news for hearing health in Australia: on September 12, the nation’s Health Ministers met in Perth and confirmed that audiology would now be formally regulated under the National Registration and Accreditation Scheme.
This means audiologists will join other trusted health professions under the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (Ahpra).
For our community, this is an historic moment. It marks a shift towards greater transparency, consistency and safeguards for every Australian who relies on hearing care.
At A Better Ear, we welcome this decision wholeheartedly. As an independent, family-owned clinic here in the Redlands, we have long stood for evidence-based practice, ethical standards, and care that is centred on the needs of each patient.
Why does this matter? In the past, concerns have been raised about how hearing services are delivered in some settings. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has even issued fines for misleading marketing practices in the sector.
In 2018, two major retail chains were fined $2.5 million after newspaper ads made false and misleading claims aimed at pensioners. That same year, a major government provider paid $37,800 in penalties for sending letters that implied optional services were mandatory.
Patients deserve better – this step into regulation ensures that the same expectations of integrity that already exist in medicine, physiotherapy and nursing will also apply to audiology.
Stronger standards protect against confusion, exploitation, or one-size-fits-all approaches. But also importantly, they support the kind of outcomes we see every day when hearing health is managed properly: greater confidence, improved mood, easier conversations with loved ones, and continued independence in community life. For Australians with hearing loss, it means knowing the advice you receive is guided by your needs, not by sales targets.
Left unaddressed, hearing difficulties can lead to withdrawal, strained relationships, and even increased cognitive load. With regulation, Australians can now expect clearer pathways to care that focus on what matters most – the person, not the product.
This is a victory for patients, for communities, and for every audiologist who believes in accountability and respect. Independent Audiologists Australia, along with many others, have worked tirelessly over many years to see this change achieved.
For us at A Better Ear, it simply reinforces the principles we practise every day: empathy, personalised support, and a commitment to helping people hear – and live – well.
I see this decision as a promise of safer, fairer hearing care for all Australians


