Deciding on an arm lift after significant weight loss is a big step, and one of the first questions I’m asked is simply: what does it cost? It’s a fair question, and you deserve a clear answer — but a clear answer isn’t the same as a single number. Below I’ve set out honestly what drives the cost of brachioplasty in Australia in 2026, what a quote should include, and how Medicare and private health cover may (or may not) apply, so you can plan with your eyes open. Your exact quote comes after a consultation, once I’ve assessed your individual anatomy and goals.
Every arm lift is tailored to the person in front of me. Two patients with “loose arm skin” can need quite different operations depending on how much excess skin there is, its quality, whether there’s stubborn fat to address with liposuction as well, and how the incision needs to be planned. For weight-loss patients especially, the arms are often part of a broader upper-body plan rather than an isolated procedure. All of that changes how long you’re in theatre, whether you stay overnight, and what your recovery looks like — and it flows into the cost.
That’s also why a headline price on a website tells you very little. What I can be transparent about are the drivers of cost, so nothing surprises you later.
This is the one I most want to correct, because it’s understandable but wrong. An arm lift is not simply trimming away spare skin, and it’s rarely only about the arm.
The upper body works as a whole. The arm blends into the armpit (axilla), the chest wall, the back and sometimes the bra line — and in more complex weight-loss cases I’ll reshape the chest, and occasionally the breast, in the same operation. It’s not uncommon to address the upper body together in one procedure rather than in isolated pieces. Considering that surrounding anatomy as a connected whole, rather than just tightening the arm on its own, is what produces a result that looks natural and balanced.
The operation is also tailored to how your tissue actually sits. Fullness around the elbow, fullness in the armpit, or an uneven distribution of skin and fat along the arm are each addressed individually, because that’s what gives a smoother, better contour. And the incision runs through an area rich in nerves and lymphatic channels; a careful brachioplasty deliberately protects those lymphatics to help prevent long-term problems such as swelling.
Understanding why an arm lift isn’t simple is really the same thing as understanding why it isn’t cheap.
An arm lift trades loose skin for a scar. That scar is permanent, and I won’t pretend otherwise or promise you an invisible result. What I can do is place it thoughtfully.
There’s a sweet spot between the front and the back of the arm where a scar is much less visible — whether your arm is seen from the front or from behind. A scar placed poorly is not only more obvious from every angle, it can distort the shape of the arm. Getting that placement right is one of the clearest differences between a result you’re happy with and one you’re not, and it’s a real part of what the surgery involves.
For many patients, particularly after major weight loss, very heavy or skin-heavy arms aren’t only about appearance. They can get in the way day to day, affect mobility, and contribute to discomfort through the shoulders, neck and upper back. In my experience, many patients whose arms were genuinely heavy have found meaningful relief from that discomfort once the excess weight is removed.
That functional side matters in its own right — and, as you’ll see below, it’s also part of what a specialist assesses when considering whether a Medicare item number may apply.
A surgical quote is only meaningful if you know what it covers. This is where the cheapest quote can be misleading — not because a lower number is “dangerous,” but because you may be comparing two different things. A bare surgical fee is not the same offer as a fully supported surgical journey.
Your quote with us sets out the fees clearly — surgeon, anaesthetist, surgical assistant and hospital — and it includes the parts of care that genuinely matter to your outcome:
Those inclusions aren’t extras; they’re part of getting a good, lasting result. When you compare quotes, ask each provider what’s inside the number.
If you’re weighing an arm lift alongside other upper-body or body-contouring work, combining procedures in one operation can share the fixed theatre and anaesthetic costs, which is worth discussing at your consultation.
Sometimes — but only under specific medical circumstances, and never for a purely cosmetic arm lift.
The relevant Medicare item number for brachioplasty is 30169, and it applies to a medically indicated arm lift after major weight loss. Broadly, the criteria involve significant, stable weight loss and excess skin that is causing a genuine functional or skin problem — the kind of discomfort and daily impact described above, or recurrent skin irritation — that hasn’t settled with conservative measures, all properly documented. An item number can only be assigned by your specialist after assessment, and you’ll need a GP referral. The full, current criteria are published on MBS Online.
Here’s the part patients most often misunderstand: the Medicare rebate itself is modest. Its real value is that a valid item number is what unlocks your private health fund’s cover of the hospital and theatre costs — and that’s where the meaningful reduction in out-of-pocket expense comes from. Eligibility is a clinical assessment, not something you can request; if your arm lift is cosmetic, no item number applies and the procedure is self-funded.
(If you’ve read our older arm-lift material citing item 30171, please note that item has been retired — 30169 is the current one.)
Private health insurance only contributes when your procedure has a valid Medicare item number and your level of hospital cover includes it. If both apply, your fund may cover much of the hospital and theatre cost, subject to your policy and any waiting periods. Cover varies between funds and policies, so it’s always worth calling your fund, quoting the item number, and confirming exactly what’s included before you commit.
If your arm lift is self-funded, or you have a gap to cover, patients generally approach it in one of a few ways:
I’m not able to give you financial advice, but my team can walk you through what applies to your quote so you can make an informed choice.
Beyond the quote, a few things are worth planning for so they don’t catch you out:
Cost aside, the honest answer to “should I do this now?” matters just as much. There are situations where I’ll gently suggest waiting:
None of these are permanent barriers. They’re simply about timing your surgery for the best, safest result.
The only way to know what your arm lift will cost is a consultation, where I can assess your arms, discuss your goals, confirm whether a Medicare item number may apply, and give you a detailed, personalised quote with everything itemised. You’ll need a GP referral to see me.
If you’re considering an arm lift, I’d welcome the chance to talk it through properly. You can also read more about the procedure and recovery here:
Written by Dr Carmen Munteanu, MD, FRACS (Plas) — Specialist Plastic Surgeon, Melbourne (AHPRA MED0001211281), with over 25 years of surgical experience in breast and body contouring. Last reviewed: July 2026.
This article is general information, not personal medical advice, and doesn’t replace a consultation. All surgery carries risks and possible complications — please read our risks and complications information and discuss your individual circumstances with a qualified specialist. A GP referral is required. This website contains content intended for audiences 18+.