Hearing Help for Seniors in Australia
Hearing changes slowly, so it often goes unmentioned for years. The TV creeps up a notch, phone calls become a strain, and busy rooms turn into hard work. There is more help than most people realise, from free hearing checks and the government’s Hearing Services Program to fitted hearing aids and honest cheaper alternatives. These guides explain how it all works in Australia, so you can compare calmly and choose what fits. This section is buying and family decision support, not medical advice. If your hearing worries you, see your GP or an audiologist.
Where to start
New to this? Start with the signs a parent needs a hearing check, or book a free hearing test and find out where you stand. Already know hearing aids are on the cards? Check whether the Hearing Services Program covers you, then compare the clinics before you book anywhere.
Choosing hearing aids
Hearing Aids in Australia: A Simple Buying Guide
The whole journey from hearing test to fitting, explained in plain English.
Read the guide about Hearing Aids in Australia: A Simple Buying Guide →
What Hearing Aids Really Cost in Australia
Real clinic prices from July 2026, self-funded and through the Hearing Services Program.
Read the guide about What Hearing Aids Really Cost in Australia →
Hearing Aid Clinics in Australia Compared
Amplifon, Audika, Specsavers and the independents: who owns whom, and why it matters.
Read the guide about Hearing Aid Clinics in Australia Compared →
Getting Hearing Aids Funded in Australia
The Hearing Services Program: who qualifies, what’s free and how to apply.
Read the guide about Getting Hearing Aids Funded in Australia →
Questions to Ask at the Audiologist
Eight plain questions that can save you thousands, asked before you sign anything.
Hearing Aid Brands Explained
Phonak, Oticon, Signia, ReSound: what the names on the quote actually mean.
Behind-the-Ear vs In-Ear: Styles Explained
What each style is like to live with, from glasses to stiff fingers.
Read the guide about Behind-the-Ear vs In-Ear: Styles Explained →
Rechargeable vs Battery Hearing Aids
The choice you live with every day. Stiff fingers, travel and power cuts included.
App-Controlled Hearing Aids: Are They Worth It?
What the phone apps do, and whether you need one at all.
Read the guide about App-Controlled Hearing Aids: Are They Worth It? →
AirPods Pro as Hearing Aids: An Honest Look
Apple’s earbuds double as hearing aids now. Who they suit, and the catches.
Read the guide about AirPods Pro as Hearing Aids: An Honest Look →
Hearing Aids vs Hearing Amplifiers
The $200 gadget and the fitted aid are different things. Here’s the difference.
Affordable Hearing Aids Without an Audiologist
What you can buy off the shelf in Australia, and the catches to know first.
Read the guide about Affordable Hearing Aids Without an Audiologist →
Legitimate Cheaper Alternatives to Hearing Aids
Amplified phones, TV listeners and personal amplifiers that do help.
Read the guide about Legitimate Cheaper Alternatives to Hearing Aids →
Some links in our buying guides are affiliate links. If you buy through them we may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. We only recommend products we would suggest to our own family.
Which option suits best
| What you need | Better fit |
|---|---|
| A lasting fix for diagnosed hearing loss | Clinic-fitted hearing aids, with the Hearing Services Program checked first. Start with the buying guide |
| Mild loss, an iPhone, and no rush to commit | AirPods Pro used as hearing aids |
| The TV is the main battle | A TV streamer or a soundbar |
| Phone calls are the main struggle | A phone made for hearing difficulties |
| Help with the cost | The Hearing Services Program, or the cheaper alternatives |
| A parent who insists their hearing is fine | A kind conversation and a free hearing check. Our refusal guide can help |
Understanding hearing loss and living with hearing aids
Free Hearing Tests in Australia
Free at the big chains, no GP referral needed. What happens at the appointment.
Why Untreated Hearing Loss Matters
The links with mood, memory and staying connected, calmly explained.
The First Month with Hearing Aids
The first weeks sound strange. Why people give up, and how not to.
How to Clean and Look After Hearing Aids
A five-minute routine that prevents most repairs. Wax and moisture are the enemies.
Read the guide about How to Clean and Look After Hearing Aids →
Hearing Aids and the TV
Streamers, loops and subtitles, and when a soundbar is all you need.
Technology for Hearing Loss: A Starter Guide
The wider toolkit beyond hearing aids, from flashing doorbells to alerts.
Read the guide about Technology for Hearing Loss: A Starter Guide →
Helping a parent
Signs a Parent Needs a Hearing Check
The everyday signs, and how to raise it kindly.
When a Parent Refuses Hearing Aids
What helps, what backfires, and the middle paths worth trying.
Going with a Parent to the Hearing Appointment
How to be useful in the room without taking over.
Read the guide about Going with a Parent to the Hearing Appointment →
Thoughtful Tech Gifts for a Parent with Hearing Loss
Gifts that make listening easier, from TV headphones to amplified phones.
Read the guide about Thoughtful Tech Gifts for a Parent with Hearing Loss →
FAQ: Hearing help in Australia
Do I need a GP referral to get my hearing tested?
No. The main clinic chains offer free basic hearing checks for adults and you can book directly. If you qualify for the Hearing Services Program, a full assessment can be free too. Our free hearing tests guide explains the difference.
How much do hearing aids cost in Australia?
Self-funded, anywhere from a couple of thousand dollars to more than ten thousand for a pair. Through the government’s Hearing Services Program, though, many pensioners and veterans pay nothing at all for fully subsidised aids. Our costs guide shows the real clinic numbers.
Are cheap hearing amplifiers as good as hearing aids?
No. An amplifier makes everything louder, including the background noise, while hearing aids are programmed to your specific loss. As a stopgap an amplifier can still help. Our comparison guide explains when.
Can AirPods Pro really work as hearing aids?
For mild to moderate hearing loss, yes, within limits. You need an iPhone, and the battery lasts about six hours at a time. Our honest look at the feature covers who it suits and who should see an audiologist instead.
What if my parent refuses hearing aids?
It’s one of the most common family standoffs, and pushing usually backfires. Start with a free hearing check and let the results do the talking. Our refusal guide covers the approaches that work.
Before you finish
Download the free Family Tech Safety Checklist to help check phone safety, passwords, scam messages, emergency contacts and medical alarm details.
Where to go next
Hearing is one part of staying independent at home. This guide sits in our Independent Living section, alongside our medical alarms guides. If a fall or a health event is the bigger worry, start there.
If phone calls are the sticking point, our Phones section can help, starting with the best phones for hearing difficulties.
For a printable pack covering alarms, emergency contacts and home safety, see The SeniorTech Toolkit.
More hearing guides
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The First Month with Hearing Aids: Why People Give Up and How Not To
New hearing aids sound tinny, your own voice sounds strange, and week two is when most people quit. Here is…
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Hearing Aids and the TV: Streamers, Loops and When a Soundbar Is Enough
Four ways to hear the TV clearly with hearing aids, from free subtitle tricks to brand streamers, with rough Australian…
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Going with a Parent to the Hearing Appointment: How to Help Without Taking Over
How to support a parent at a hearing appointment: prepare together, take notes while they decide, raise the funding questions,…
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How to Clean and Look After Hearing Aids
The daily and weekly routine that keeps hearing aids working: wiping, wax guards, domes, drying and battery care, with honest…
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When a Parent Refuses Hearing Aids: What Actually Helps
What helps when a parent refuses hearing aids, what backfires, and the gentler first steps that work, from free checks…
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Behind-the-Ear vs In-Ear Hearing Aids: Styles Explained
The five hearing aid styles explained in plain English: handling, glasses, wax, power and discretion, and which preferences are worth…
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Legitimate Cheaper Alternatives to Hearing Aids in Australia
The gadgets that genuinely help with hearing loss for a fraction of the price of hearing aids, where to buy…
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Why Untreated Hearing Loss Matters
What untreated hearing loss can mean for wellbeing, mood and memory, explained calmly with the actual evidence, plus easy first…
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Rechargeable vs Battery Hearing Aids: Which to Choose
Rechargeable or battery hearing aids? How each works day to day, what batteries cost in Australia, and which type suits…
