Liposuction-only
For fat-dominant (pseudogynaecomastia) cases with good skin quality.
- Small incisions, often hidden in natural contours
- Compression garment worn post-op
- Suited when gland is minimal
Gynaecomastia surgery reduces enlarged male breast tissue to improve chest contour. Learn who it may suit, when to consider liposuction, gland excision or skin reduction, how recovery works, risks to consider, and how to arrange a confidential consultation anywhere in Australia.
Liposuction-only, gland excision, combined approaches and when skin reduction is needed.
Compression garments, timeline to work and safe return to training.
What influences fees in Australia and how to compare itemised quotes confidently.
The right approach depends on whether the issue is mainly fat, glandular tissue, loose skin, or a combination. A good consultation is assessment-led, not sales-led, so you understand the cause, likely scars and realistic recovery before you proceed.
For fat-dominant (pseudogynaecomastia) cases with good skin quality.
For true gynaecomastia with firm gland under or around the nipple.
Liposuction plus gland removal for mixed fat and gland cases.
For significant skin excess after weight change or long-standing enlargement.
Confusion usually starts when patients compare prices without understanding the cause or technique. This structure helps you move from “what does it cost?” to “what do I actually need and what will recovery look like?”
A clear pathway helps you decide if surgery is the right tool for your situation, what technique makes sense, and how to time recovery around life and training.
Is it fat, gland, loose skin or mixed? New hard lumps, nipple discharge or one‑sided firm changes warrant GP review first.
Discuss technique, scars, risks, anaesthesia, facility and written costs. Bring your work and training timelines.
Compression garments, driving, sleep, return to work and a phased return to chest workouts.
Follow your aftercare plan and attend scheduled follow‑ups to monitor healing and contour.
This page is built around the real questions men ask about gynaecomastia: cause, technique, cost, scars and when to seek medical assessment first. It’s designed to reduce friction and help you book the right consultation with confidence.
We also cover referral and consent requirements in Australia so you can move forward safely and in line with current regulations.
Before you commit, ask for a written, itemised quote. For more detail on inclusions and what drives price, open the dedicated guide below.
Arrive prepared. Use these blocks to self-qualify, plan downtime and ask higher‑value consultation questions for gynaecomastia surgery.
Typically healthy, stable‑weight men bothered by chest fullness or gland prominence.
Expect swelling, bruising, compression and activity restrictions in early weeks.
Arrive informed for a more valuable consultation and clearer consent.
Know the trade‑offs and coverage rules before you proceed.
All surgery has risks. Commonly discussed: bleeding, infection, seroma, poor scarring, asymmetry, contour irregularities, nipple sensation changes and anaesthetic risks.
Incisions are necessary. Areolar-edge and hidden contour incisions are common; skin reduction adds more scars.
Some cases may meet strict criteria and attract Medicare/private health support. A GP referral and adequate documentation are essential.
Use these resources to verify credentials and prepare for a high‑value consultation.
What to check before you book: training, hospital accreditation, case volume and aftercare.
Surgeon selection guideVerify AHPRA registration, endorsements and specialist recognition.
Credential checksKnow Australia’s GP referral requirement, cooling‑off rules and informed consent steps.
GP referral · Informed consent · Clinic red flagsStraightforward answers to common questions about male breast reduction in Australia.
Male breast reduction to reduce enlarged tissue and improve chest contour. Techniques include liposuction, gland excision, skin reduction or a combination.
No. True gynaecomastia is glandular; pseudogynaecomastia is fat‑dominant. Many men have a mix of both.
Healthy, stable‑weight men bothered by chest fullness who accept the reality of scars, swelling and recovery. Seek GP review first for new, hard or one‑sided lumps or nipple discharge.
Costs vary by technique, anaesthesia, facility and aftercare. Always request an itemised written quote. See our cost guide for details.
Bleeding, infection, seroma, scarring, asymmetry, contour irregularities, nipple sensation changes, delayed healing and anaesthetic risks.
Early recovery is weeks; swelling, firmness and scar maturation can take months. A compression garment is commonly used.
Yes. In Australia, a GP or non‑cosmetic medical specialist referral is required to consult the practitioner who will perform cosmetic surgery.
Yes. Incisions are necessary. Scars are often around the areola or in natural contours, but visibility varies. Review the scars guide for examples and care tips.
Ask about technique suitability, recovery timing, written quotes or booking a consult. If you’re in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide or elsewhere in Australia, we can help you move from research to a clearer next step.
Clarify whether your case is fat, gland, skin or a combination.
Consultation direction and planning support wherever you’re based.
Plan with confidence using these Australia‑wide resources.
Week‑by‑week expectations and milestones.
Cosmetic surgery recovery timelineComplications, warning signs and questions to ask.
Risks & complicationsUnderstand fees and payment options.
Cosmetic surgery cost AustraliaHow body contouring may complement chest surgery.
Liposuction Australia