Physiotherapy

Physiotherapy

Why Choose PhysioWorks for Physiotherapy in Brisbane?

physiotherapy Brisbane movement assessment with physiotherapist in a modern clinic

Clear assessment helps guide the right treatment plan.

PhysioWorks provides physiotherapy Brisbane patients trust when they want a clear diagnosis, practical treatment, and a structured plan to reduce pain and return to activity. Whether you need help with injury, pain, sport, work, or long-term movement goals, our team focuses on explaining what matters and guiding you towards the next best step.

Many people first find us while comparing clinics, services, or practitioners. If that is you, it helps to know that PhysioWorks offers physiotherapy, sports physiotherapy, exercise physiology, and massage services in Brisbane across a connected clinic network.

We aim to make your care easier to follow. That means listening carefully, assessing properly, explaining your options clearly, and helping you move forward with confidence rather than confusion.

Why choose PhysioWorks for physiotherapy Brisbane?

People choose PhysioWorks when they want a clear diagnosis, practical treatment, and a structured plan to return to activity. That may mean hands-on treatment, guided rehabilitation, exercise planning, or help deciding which service is the best fit for their problem.

  • Clear diagnosis and explanation of your problem
  • Personalised treatment plan tailored to your goals
  • Practical steps to reduce pain and improve movement
  • Support for return to sport, work, and daily activity
  • Access to physiotherapy, massage, and exercise physiology

How is PhysioWorks different?

PhysioWorks stands out because we focus on the full patient journey, not just the first appointment. A good assessment matters, but so does helping you understand what is driving your pain, what to do next, and how to build confidence with movement again.

Our practitioners work with people managing everyday problems such as lower back pain, neck pain, knee pain, shoulder pain, sports injuries, post-operative rehabilitation, balance concerns, muscle tightness, and exercise progression. We also make it easier to move between services when you need broader support, such as physiotherapy plus exercise physiology or physiotherapy plus massage.

What can you expect at PhysioWorks?

You can expect a thorough discussion about your symptoms, movement, goals, and contributing factors. Your practitioner will then assess the relevant body region, explain what they find, and outline a treatment plan that makes sense for your stage of recovery.

For many people, that includes a mix of education, hands-on care where suitable, movement advice, and progressive rehabilitation. Depending on your needs, this may also include injury rehabilitation, sports physiotherapy, or a transition into exercise-based rehabilitation. Broader guidance from Healthdirect also supports the value of physiotherapy in managing pain, injury, and physical function. Read Healthdirect’s overview of physiotherapy.

physiotherapy Brisbane guided movement exercise with physiotherapist coaching technique

Personalised guidance can improve confidence and movement quality.

Who may benefit from PhysioWorks care?

PhysioWorks may suit you if you want more than a quick appointment and generic advice. We commonly help active adults, workers, older adults, and athletes who want a clear plan for recovery, pain reduction, movement improvement, or return to sport and activity.

You may also benefit if you are unsure which service you need. Our broader PhysioWorks Brisbane clinics and clinic network make it easier to find a suitable pathway.

Is PhysioWorks right for you?

PhysioWorks is a good fit if you want a clinic that explains things clearly, gives practical next steps, and supports your progress over time. If your problem needs imaging, GP review, or another provider, a physiotherapist can also help guide that decision rather than leaving you guessing.

What should you do next?

If you are comparing options, start by choosing the service that best matches your main concern. If you need help deciding, call your nearest clinic or book online and we can help direct you towards the right practitioner. You can also read more about our Brisbane physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, and Brisbane massage therapists.

When pain, injury, or reduced confidence is affecting your work, sport, or daily life, a timely assessment can help you avoid delay and get a clearer plan sooner.

What makes a good physiotherapy clinic in Brisbane?

A good physiotherapy clinic explains your problem clearly, matches treatment to your goals, and gives you a realistic plan for recovery. It should also make it easy to access the right service, whether you need hands-on care, rehabilitation, exercise support, or help with a common problem such as lower back pain, neck pain, or shoulder pain.

physiotherapy Brisbane recovery walking confidently with physiotherapist in clinic

A clear plan can help you return to confident movement.

Book your appointment – 24/7

Choose your preferred PhysioWorks clinic and book online.

Brisbane Physiotherapists

Our physiotherapists assess and treat sports injuries, back and neck pain, joint problems, muscle strains, tendon injuries, post-operative rehabilitation, and movement issues. They also help with sports injury physiotherapy, injury rehabilitation, and day-to-day musculoskeletal care.


Brisbane Exercise Physiologists

Our exercise physiologists help people improve strength, fitness, function, and long-term health through targeted exercise programs for injury recovery, chronic conditions, and performance goals. They commonly assist with guided exercise prescription and exercise-based rehabilitation.


Brisbane Massage Therapists

Our massage therapists help with muscle tightness, recovery, relaxation, and soft tissue tension. They often work alongside physiotherapy and exercise physiology when a broader treatment plan is helpful, including remedial massage, deep tissue massage, and general muscle recovery support.

Remedial Massage Therapists

Our remedial massage therapists help relieve muscle tension, improve flexibility, reduce soft tissue pain, and support recovery from training loads, desk posture, and everyday physical stress.

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References

  1. Healthdirect Australia. Physiotherapy. Healthdirect. Accessed April 8, 2026.
  2. Lin I, Wiles L, Waller R, et al. What does best practice care for musculoskeletal pain look like? Eleven consistent recommendations from high-quality clinical practice guidelines. Br J Sports Med. 2020;54(2):79–86. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2018-099878

Early warning signs of an injury can include swelling, joint pain, tenderness, weakness, bruising, or reduced movement. If you notice these symptoms after sport, exercise, work, or daily activity, your body may already be signalling that a tissue has been overloaded or damaged.

Early action can help limit aggravation, reduce recovery time, and lower the risk of a small problem becoming a bigger one. This page explains the most common injury warning signs, when to take them seriously, and what to do next.

  • joint pain that does not settle
  • tenderness over a specific area
  • swelling, bruising, or heat
  • reduced range of motion
  • weakness or instability
Patellofemoral pain syndrome assessment of teenage boy’s knee

Early warning signs of injury can include swelling, pain, and reduced movement after activity.

What are the early warning signs of an injury?

The early warning signs of an injury are your body’s way of telling you that tissues have been overloaded, irritated, or damaged. Common warning signs include pain, swelling, tenderness, weakness, bruising, reduced range of motion, and difficulty using the area normally.

Joint pain

Do not ignore joint pain, especially in the knee, ankle, shoulder, elbow, or wrist. Joint pain after a twist, fall, awkward landing, or heavy load may suggest a ligament, cartilage, tendon, or bone-related problem rather than simple muscle soreness. If joint pain lasts more than 48 hours, or you cannot trust the joint, organise an assessment.

Tenderness

Tenderness matters when one clear spot hurts to touch and the same point on the other side does not. This may suggest local tissue damage such as a muscle injury, tendon irritation, bone stress, or a ligament tear. Sharp tenderness over bone, a tendon attachment, or deep inside a joint deserves extra care.

Swelling

Swelling is one of the most common early signs of injury. It often appears after a sprain, strain, impact, or overload event. Sometimes the swelling is obvious. At other times, the area simply feels tight, full, or puffy. Rapid swelling can point to a more significant tissue injury, especially after sport.

Reduced range of motion

If the joint or body part suddenly stops moving as freely as the other side, injury should be suspected. Reduced movement may result from swelling, pain, muscle guarding, or joint irritation. Compare one side to the other, but stop if the test increases pain sharply.

Weakness

Weakness after injury often shows up when you try to grip, push, squat, lift, hop, or bear weight. One side may feel unstable, uncoordinated, or much less powerful than the other. This is common in muscle strains, tendon injuries, and ligament sprains.

Bruising or colour change

Bruising usually means that some bleeding has occurred within the tissues. It can appear soon after an injury or develop over the next 24 to 72 hours. Bruising does not always mean the injury is severe, but it does suggest tissue damage that should not be ignored.

Red flags: get assessed promptly

  • severe pain or rapidly worsening symptoms
  • rapid swelling after a twist, fall, or collision
  • inability to walk, grip, lift, or push off properly
  • joint instability, buckling, or giving way
  • significant bruising, deformity, or pain over bone
  • pins and needles, numbness, or unusual weakness
  • little or no improvement after several days of sensible first aid

When should you worry about an injury?

You should worry about an injury when pain is severe, swelling builds quickly, you cannot use the area normally, or the joint feels unstable. You should also act promptly if you heard a pop, cannot weight bear, notice deformity, or develop numbness, tingling, or major weakness.

If you are unsure whether an injury is minor, Healthdirect has a helpful overview of sprains and strains. However, a physiotherapy assessment is often the fastest way to work out what tissue is involved and what to do next.

Common injuries linked to these warning signs

Early warning signs can appear across many different injuries. Common examples include:

What should you do straight after an injury?

Straight after an injury, stop the aggravating activity, protect the area, use compression if appropriate, and settle symptoms without completely shutting movement down. Early management should reduce unnecessary irritation while still supporting safe recovery.

Immediate injury care: simple step-by-step guide

  1. Stop the activity. Do not keep pushing through pain if the body part feels unstable, weak, or sharply painful.
  2. Protect the area. Reduce the load on the injured tissue for the first day or two. Crutches, taping, or a brace may help in some cases.
  3. Use compression. A compression bandage can help manage swelling and improve support.
  4. Elevate when helpful. Elevation may help settle throbbing and swelling in the early phase.
  5. Use ice carefully if it helps pain. Some people find short bouts of ice helpful for comfort, but it should not replace sensible injury management.
  6. Avoid HARM factors early. Alcohol, unnecessary running, aggressive massage, and heat can aggravate some fresh injuries. See the HARM Protocol for more detail.
  7. Get a diagnosis if the signs are concerning. This is especially important if you cannot weight bear, movement is severely limited, or the joint feels unstable.

If you want a broader step-by-step plan, read more about soft tissue injury healing and acute sports injury care.

How can physiotherapy help after an injury?

Physiotherapy can help by identifying the injured tissue, grading severity, settling pain and swelling, restoring movement, rebuilding strength, and guiding a safe return to work, sport, or normal activity. Early guidance often helps people avoid doing too much, too soon, or too little for too long.

Your physiotherapist may assess whether the problem is more likely to involve muscle, tendon, ligament, bone, or joint structures. Then, treatment can progress from protection and symptom control into mobility, strength, balance, load management, and return-to-activity planning.

FAQs about early warning signs of an injury

Can you still walk on a serious injury?

Yes, sometimes you can. People can still walk on some fractures, ligament tears, tendon injuries, or significant muscle strains. Walking does not always mean the injury is minor. If your pain is strong, your gait changes a lot, or the area feels unstable, get it checked.

Is swelling always a sign of injury?

Swelling is very common after injury, but not every injury swells visibly. Some tissues sit deeper, so you may feel fullness, pressure, or stiffness instead. Even without obvious swelling, pain, weakness, tenderness, or reduced movement can still point to an injury that needs treatment.

How long should you wait before getting an injury assessed?

You do not always need to wait. If the injury is severe, painful, unstable, or stops you from normal function, get it assessed early. For milder problems, sensible first aid for 24 to 48 hours may be reasonable. If it is not clearly improving, book an assessment.

What is the difference between soreness and injury pain?

General soreness usually feels broad, mild to moderate, and improves as you warm up or recover after exercise. Injury pain is more often sharp, local, tender, swollen, weak, or linked to a specific movement, twist, impact, or overload event. Injury pain also tends to change how you move.

Should you massage a fresh injury?

Usually not in the first stage if the area is very fresh, swollen, bruised, or highly irritable. Aggressive early massage can aggravate some injuries. Fresh injuries often respond better to protection, compression, sensible movement, and a clear plan. Later on, hands-on treatment may become more appropriate.

What if an injury is not improving after a few days?

If your injury is not improving after a few days, the tissue may need a more specific diagnosis and a better loading plan. Ongoing pain, swelling, weakness, or instability can mean the injury is more significant than first thought, or that your recovery strategy needs adjusting.

What to do next

If you have noticed early warning signs of an injury, do not ignore them and hope they settle on their own. Protect the area, reduce the aggravating load, and organise an assessment if the symptoms are significant, worsening, or not clearly improving.

PhysioWorks can help identify what tissue is involved, explain how serious the injury is likely to be, and guide your next steps so you can recover with more confidence.

Book your appointment – 24/7

Choose your preferred PhysioWorks clinic and book online.

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References

  1. Dubois B, Esculier JF. Soft-tissue injuries simply need PEACE and LOVE. Br J Sports Med. 2020;54(2):72-73. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2019-101253
  2. Martin RL, Davenport TE, Fraser JJ, et al. Lateral ankle ligament sprains revision 2021 clinical practice guidelines linked to the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health from the Academy of Orthopaedic Physical Therapy of the American Physical Therapy Association. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2021;51(4):CPG1-CPG80. doi:10.2519/jospt.2021.0302
  3. Bleakley C, McDonough S, MacAuley D. The use of ice in the treatment of acute soft-tissue injury: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Am J Sports Med. 2004;32(1):251-261. doi:10.1177/0363546503260757

How Much Treatment Will You Need?

The number of physiotherapy sessions you will need depends on your diagnosis, symptom severity, how long the issue has been present, and your recovery goals. Some conditions improve quickly, while others require a structured plan over several weeks or months.

Early assessment often helps reduce recovery time. If you are unsure about your symptoms, you may find it helpful to review early warning signs of an injury or explore common back pain, knee pain, and shoulder pain conditions.

Quick Guide

This gives you a rough idea of what to expect. Your plan will be tailored to you.

  • 1–2 sessions: Mild flare-ups, reassurance, and a clear self-management plan
  • 3–6 sessions: Moderate injuries needing guided rehab and progression
  • 6+ sessions: Persistent pain, complex injuries, or return-to-sport programs

These are general guides only. Your physiotherapist will tailor your plan based on your specific needs.

What affects how much treatment you will need?

The number of sessions depends on how irritable your condition is, how long it has been present, and what you need to return to. A recent minor strain usually improves faster than long-standing pain or recurrent injuries.

Your physiotherapist will assess your movement, strength, flexibility, tissue healing stage, work demands, and training load. This helps determine whether you need short-term symptom relief or a more structured rehabilitation plan.

What happens at your physiotherapy assessment?

Your first session focuses on identifying the cause of your symptoms and what is driving them. Physiotherapy may help reduce pain, improve movement, and guide your recovery plan, as outlined by Healthdirect’s physiotherapy overview.

After assessment, your physiotherapist will explain your diagnosis, expected recovery timeframe, and recommended treatment frequency. They may also guide you toward relevant information such as lower back pain, knee treatment, or shoulder impingement.

How long does physiotherapy usually take?

Recovery time varies depending on the condition and individual factors:

  • Minor injuries: often improve within 1–2 weeks
  • Moderate injuries: typically require 3–6 weeks of guided rehabilitation
  • Persistent or complex conditions: may take 6–12+ weeks or longer

Your progress will depend on consistency with your exercises, activity modification, and how your body responds to treatment.

Why can delayed treatment mean a longer recovery?

Delaying treatment can lead to longer recovery times. Pain, stiffness, and weakness may become more established, and movement patterns can change.

Symptoms lasting longer than three months are often classified as persistent pain. These cases usually need a broader rehabilitation approach that includes education, gradual loading, and confidence-building strategies.

If your symptoms have been ongoing, you may benefit from reviewing core stability or back pain FAQs.

What might your treatment plan include?

Your treatment plan may include a combination of hands-on therapy, exercise, and education. Most plans aim to improve:

  • joint, ligament, and soft tissue mobility
  • muscle strength, endurance, power, and speed
  • balance and proprioception
  • movement control and confidence
  • injury prevention and load management
  • return to work, exercise, or sport

Some people may also benefit from techniques such as dry needling, depending on the condition and recovery stage.


Common questions about treatment plans

Will one session fix the problem?

Some people feel relief after one session, especially with recent injuries. However, lasting results usually depend on following your exercise program and progressing your rehabilitation.

Can I recover with exercises only?

In many cases, yes. Exercises and load management are key. However, hands-on treatment and guidance may help you progress more effectively.

What if my pain keeps returning?

Recurring pain may indicate incomplete recovery or ongoing contributing factors such as strength deficits or training load issues.

How often will I need appointments?

Early sessions are usually closer together, then spaced out as you improve and become more independent.

Do chronic problems take longer?

Persistent conditions often take longer due to reduced load tolerance and movement adaptations. A gradual and structured plan is usually required.

What if I am not improving?

If progress is slower than expected, your physiotherapist will reassess your condition and adjust your treatment plan. You can also review what to do if your treatment experience falls short.

What to do next

If your symptoms are not improving, are recurring, or are limiting your daily activities, a physiotherapy assessment can help clarify your diagnosis and guide your recovery.

Booking early helps you understand your recovery timeline and plan your next steps.

Book your appointment – 24/7

Choose your preferred PhysioWorks clinic and book online.

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Get free physiotherapy tips, exercise videos, recovery advice, and blog updates.

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References

These references support current physiotherapy approaches to treatment planning and recovery timelines.

  1. Healthdirect. Physiotherapy. Accessed March 2026.
  2. Healthdirect. Chronic pain. Accessed March 2026.
  3. Ojha HA, Snyder RS, Davenport TE. Timing of physical therapy initiation and outcomes. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2016.

Will My Physiotherapist Refer Me for X-Rays or Scans?

Physiotherapist X-ray referral discussion reviewing musculoskeletal scan results with patient
Discussing whether imaging changes treatment

Can a physiotherapist refer you for an X-ray or scan?

Yes. In Australia, physiotherapists can request some diagnostic imaging for musculoskeletal problems. This may include selected X-rays, ultrasound scans and MRI scans. However, Medicare rebates depend on the scan type, the clinical reason, and who requests the imaging.

In many cases, your physiotherapist will assess you first, explain whether imaging is likely to change your treatment, and advise whether a GP request may reduce your out-of-pocket cost. This is especially relevant for MRI, where Medicare funding usually requires a GP or medical specialist pathway.

Quick answer: A physiotherapist can request some scans, but you may need a GP referral or request for Medicare-funded imaging. Most muscle, joint and spinal problems do not need imaging at the first appointment unless warning signs are present.

For common problems such as back pain, knee pain, shoulder pain or nerve pain, a clinical assessment often gives more useful early information than a scan alone.

When is imaging actually needed?

Imaging is most useful when it answers a clear clinical question or changes your treatment plan. Your physiotherapist will screen for warning signs and consider whether the scan result is likely to improve decision-making.

A scan may be considered when there is:

  • suspected fracture after trauma
  • significant swelling, deformity or loss of function
  • progressive weakness, numbness or nerve signs
  • unrelenting night pain or unusual symptoms
  • poor progress after a reasonable trial of treatment
  • a need to clarify surgical, medical or injection planning

Do I need a scan now?

  • Often no: mild pain, improving symptoms, no trauma and no major weakness.
  • Maybe: symptoms are not improving, function is limited, or swelling is significant.
  • More urgent: trauma, suspected fracture, progressive weakness, severe night pain or concerning neurological signs.

Routine early imaging does not always improve outcomes for common musculoskeletal pain. Instead, education, exercise, load management and hands-on care often remain the main first steps.

How do Medicare rebates work for physiotherapy imaging?

Medicare rules can be confusing because diagnostic imaging uses a request system, and rebates depend on the Medicare Benefits Schedule item. Physiotherapists may request some imaging services that attract Medicare benefits, but Medicare does not cover every physiotherapist-requested scan.

Some physiotherapist-requested X-rays may attract a Medicare rebate. Many ultrasound scans requested by a physiotherapist are billed privately. MRI scans almost always require a GP or medical specialist request to access Medicare funding.

Medicare rebate facts for physiotherapy imaging

X-rays: Some X-rays requested by physiotherapists may attract a Medicare rebate, depending on the body area and item number.

Ultrasound: Many physiotherapist-requested diagnostic ultrasound scans are privately billed by radiology clinics.

MRI: Medicare usually does not cover MRI scans ordered by physiotherapists. A GP or medical specialist request is commonly needed for Medicare-funded MRI access.

Cost tip: If imaging is needed, your physiotherapist can advise whether seeing your GP first may reduce your out-of-pocket cost.

How do physiotherapists decide if you need a scan?

Your physiotherapist considers your symptoms, injury history, physical findings, goals and previous imaging. They also consider whether the result would change your treatment.

The decision usually depends on three practical questions:

  • Safety: Are there warning signs that need imaging or medical review?
  • Value: Will the scan add useful information beyond the assessment?
  • Action: Will the result change your treatment, referral or recovery plan?

If imaging is required, your physiotherapist may request it directly, coordinate with your GP, or recommend medical specialist review in more complex cases.

Common imaging options

Scan type Often used for Medicare pathway note
X-ray Fractures, joint changes and some spinal presentations Some physiotherapist-requested X-rays may attract rebates
Ultrasound Tendons, bursae, swelling and some soft tissue concerns Often privately billed when requested by a physiotherapist
MRI Ligaments, cartilage, discs, nerves and complex soft tissue concerns Usually needs a GP or medical specialist request for Medicare funding
CT Complex bone, trauma or spinal questions Usually coordinated through medical referral pathways

Physiotherapists may also use real-time ultrasound retraining. This is different from diagnostic imaging. It helps assess muscle activation and guide exercise technique during rehabilitation.

Do scans always explain pain?

No. Imaging findings such as disc bulges, tendon changes and mild joint wear can appear in people who have no pain. This is one reason your symptoms, movement, strength and function matter.

Your physiotherapist can help interpret imaging in context. The goal is to connect the scan result with your clinical picture, not treat every finding on a report as the main problem.

Before arranging a scan, ask these questions

  • Will this scan change my treatment?
  • Is there a warning sign that makes imaging important now?
  • Would a GP request reduce my out-of-pocket cost?
  • Has my physiotherapist assessed whether imaging is needed at this stage?
  • What will we do differently if the scan shows a particular finding?

Related articles

Physiotherapist scan referral FAQs

Can a physiotherapist refer me for an X-ray?

Yes. Physiotherapists in Australia can request some X-rays for musculoskeletal problems. Some X-rays may attract a Medicare rebate, depending on the body area and item number. Your physiotherapist can explain whether direct imaging or a GP pathway is more suitable.

Can a physiotherapist refer me for an MRI?

A physiotherapist may request an MRI, but Medicare usually does not fund MRI scans requested by physiotherapists. If MRI is clinically needed, your physiotherapist may recommend GP or medical specialist involvement to help with Medicare-funded access where appropriate.

Can a physiotherapist refer me for an ultrasound?

Physiotherapists can request some ultrasound scans, especially for soft tissue concerns such as tendon injury, swelling or bursitis. However, many physiotherapist-requested ultrasound scans are privately billed. Ask the imaging clinic about costs before your appointment.

When is imaging needed for pain?

Imaging is most useful when trauma, warning signs, significant weakness, severe swelling or poor progress suggest that scan results may change your care. Many common muscle, joint and spinal problems improve with physiotherapy without needing early imaging.

Can scans always explain pain?

No. Many imaging findings are common in people without pain. Your physiotherapist interprets scan results alongside your symptoms, movement, strength and function. This helps avoid over-focusing on findings that may not be driving your current problem.

Should I see a physiotherapist or GP first?

Either can be appropriate. A physiotherapist can assess musculoskeletal pain and advise whether imaging is needed. A GP may be the better first step if you feel unwell, have broader medical symptoms, need medication review, or require Medicare-funded imaging access.

Physiotherapist scan referral pathway discussion with reassured adult patient
Planning the right imaging pathway

What to do next

If you are unsure whether an X-ray or scan is needed, a physiotherapy assessment is a sensible starting point. Your physiotherapist can screen for serious problems, assess movement and function, and explain whether imaging is likely to change your care.

Most people with common problems such as back pain, knee pain and rotator cuff injuries do not need a scan before starting treatment. When imaging is needed, your physiotherapist can help coordinate the right pathway with your GP, radiology provider or medical specialist.

Book your appointment – 24/7

Choose your preferred PhysioWorks clinic and book online.

Follow PhysioWorks

Get free physiotherapy tips, exercise videos, recovery advice, and blog updates.

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References

  1. Australian Physiotherapy Association. Physiotherapy scope and diagnostic imaging FAQs. Australian Physiotherapy Association. Accessed May 28, 2026.
  2. Services Australia. Refer or request Medicare services. Services Australia. Accessed May 28, 2026.
  3. Department of Health and Aged Care. Medicare Benefits Schedule Note IN.0.6: Requests for R-type Diagnostic Imaging Services. Medicare Benefits Schedule. Accessed May 28, 2026.
  4. Crowell MS, Mason JS, McGinniss JH. Musculoskeletal imaging for low back pain in direct access physical therapy compared to primary care: an observational study. Int J Sports Phys Ther. 2022;17(2):237-246. doi:10.26603/001c.31720
  5. Cattrysse E, Swinnen E, Kossi O, et al. Impact of direct access on the quality of primary care musculoskeletal physiotherapy: a scoping review from a patient, provider, and societal perspective. Archives of Physiotherapy. 2024.

Sick Leave Certificates from Your Physiotherapist

sick leave certificate physiotherapist discussing work capacity and return-to-work duties

Planning safe work duties after injury.

Can My Physiotherapist Provide a Sick Leave Certificate?

Yes. A physiotherapist may provide a sick leave certificate for an injury or movement-related condition within their scope of practice. This usually applies when pain, injury, reduced movement, or physical restrictions affect your ability to work, study, drive, lift, sit, stand, or perform normal duties safely.

A sick leave certificate issued by your physiotherapist can help you manage work duties safely after an injury. It may also outline whether you are unfit for work, fit for modified duties, or ready for a staged return to normal duties.

Quick answer: A physiotherapist can assess your physical capacity and issue a certificate when your injury affects safe work or study duties. For general illness, fever, respiratory symptoms, medication needs, or broader medical concerns, see your GP.

These certificates may be used for employers, schools, sporting organisations and return-to-work programs. Some people also call them “medical certificates”, “sick notes” or “fit notes”.

When Can a Physiotherapist Issue a Sick Leave Certificate?

Your physiotherapist can issue a certificate when your injury or condition:

  • involves muscles, joints, bones, nerves, movement, or physical function
  • limits normal work, school, sport, or daily duties
  • requires temporary rest, modified duties, or staged return-to-work planning
  • needs clear work restrictions, such as lifting, sitting, standing, driving, or walking limits

Common reasons include back pain, neck pain, sprains, muscle injuries, post-surgery recovery, sports injuries, nerve pain, headaches, jaw pain and other musculoskeletal conditions.

A physiotherapist may also provide functional information for WorkCover physiotherapy, CTP physiotherapy, insurance claims, and workplace rehabilitation planning.

What Conditions Are Not Suitable for a Physio Certificate?

Physiotherapists work within a defined clinical scope. If your main issue is a general medical condition, your physiotherapist will recommend seeing your GP or another suitable medical practitioner.

See your GP if you have fever, flu-like symptoms, respiratory illness, infection, medication needs, chest symptoms, unexplained illness, or another non-musculoskeletal concern. A GP is also more suitable when your employer, insurer, award, or workplace policy specifically requests a doctor’s certificate.

Physio Certificate or GP Certificate?

  • Physio: injury, pain, movement limits, lifting limits, work capacity, modified duties.
  • GP: general illness, fever, infection, medication, medical investigations, broader health concerns.
  • Workplace policy: check HR if your employer has specific certificate rules.

What Will My Sick Leave Certificate Include?

Your certificate outlines what you can and cannot safely do. It should focus on your work capacity rather than unnecessary medical detail.

It may include:

  • whether you are unfit for work or fit for light or modified duties
  • specific restrictions, such as lifting limits, sitting tolerance, standing tolerance, driving limits, or walking limits
  • the recommended time frame for these restrictions
  • a review date
  • a staged plan for your safe return to normal duties

Your privacy is protected. A diagnosis is not usually required for a certificate to be useful. In many cases, capacity, restrictions, and review timing are more relevant to the workplace.

How Do I Get a Sick Leave Certificate from My Physiotherapist?

You need an appointment so your physiotherapist can assess you and document your condition. During the session, explain your injury, symptoms, normal duties, and the tasks you cannot currently perform safely.

Bring useful information, such as:

  • your job title and usual duties
  • lifting, standing, driving, walking, sitting, or computer requirements
  • which tasks increase your symptoms
  • any current restrictions from your employer, doctor, insurer, or case manager
  • your preferred return-to-work goal

If appropriate, your physiotherapist may issue your sick leave certificate during the same appointment. Remote sessions may be suitable via TeleHealth physiotherapy in some cases. However, some injuries require an in-person assessment.

Legal Requirements: What Does Fair Work Say?

Fair Work Ombudsman guidance states that an employer can ask for evidence to confirm that an employee was unfit for work. Medical certificates and statutory declarations are examples of acceptable evidence. Fair Work also states that the evidence needs to convince a reasonable person that the employee was genuinely entitled to sick or carer’s leave.

The Fair Work guidance does not say evidence must always come from a doctor. However, workplace policy, awards, enterprise agreements, employment contracts, insurers, or HR processes may set extra requirements. If you are unsure, check with your workplace before booking.

Fair Work Ombudsman guidance: Notice and medical certificates.

How Long Can a Physio Sign Me Off For?

Physiotherapists commonly issue certificates for short time frames after assessment. This may cover a few days, a short period of modified duties, or a staged return-to-work plan. Longer periods may need review appointments, updated assessment findings, GP input, or insurer involvement.

Will My Employer Accept a Physiotherapist Certificate?

Many workplaces may accept a physiotherapist sick leave certificate for physical injuries and musculoskeletal conditions. However, acceptance depends on your workplace policy, award rules, enterprise agreement, insurer requirements, and the reason for leave.

If you are unsure, check your workplace policy or speak with HR. This is especially important for longer absences, non-injury illness, complex claims, or certificates linked to insurance or compensation.

WorkCover, CTP and Insurance Certificates

Physiotherapists can provide functional information for WorkCover, CTP and other insurance claims. This may include:

  • capacity for work and recommended duties
  • rehabilitation goals and expected timelines
  • progress updates
  • return-to-work planning
  • recommendations for modified duties

These details may sit alongside reports from your GP, specialist doctor, insurer, employer, or case manager for coordinated injury management.

How Physiotherapy Helps You Return to Work

A sick leave certificate is only one part of your recovery. Your physiotherapist can assess your injury, treat symptoms, guide safe movement, and plan a graded return to work.

Your physiotherapy plan may include hands-on physiotherapy techniques, targeted exercise for strength and mobility, staged return-to-work planning, and ergonomic advice to reduce repeat strain.

Good Certificate Planning Should Answer

  • What work tasks are currently unsafe?
  • Which duties can you perform safely?
  • How long should restrictions apply?
  • When should your capacity be reviewed?
  • What treatment or exercise plan supports your return?

When Should I See My GP Instead?

See your GP if:

  • you feel unwell with fever, chest symptoms, infection, or general illness
  • you need medication, imaging, blood tests, or medical investigations
  • your symptoms are not clearly injury-related
  • your employer or insurer specifically requests a doctor’s certificate
  • your condition needs broader medical care

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a physiotherapist issue a sick leave certificate?

Yes. A physiotherapist can issue a sick leave certificate for musculoskeletal, injury-related, and movement-related conditions within their scope of practice. They need to assess you first and decide whether a certificate is clinically appropriate for your work or study demands.

What conditions can a physiotherapist provide a sick leave certificate for?

Physiotherapists may provide certificates for muscle, joint, bone, nerve, post-operative, or movement-related problems that limit your ability to perform normal tasks safely. Common examples include back pain, neck pain, sprains, strains, nerve pain, headaches, jaw pain, and sports injuries.

How do I get a sick leave certificate from my physiotherapist?

Book a physiotherapy appointment and explain your injury, symptoms, work duties, and current restrictions. Your physiotherapist will assess your condition and decide whether a certificate is appropriate. If suitable, the certificate may be issued during the appointment.

Do employers accept sick leave certificates from physiotherapists?

Many workplaces may accept physiotherapist certificates for physical injuries. However, workplace policy, awards, enterprise agreements, HR rules, and insurer requirements may vary. Check with your employer if you are unsure, especially for longer absences or non-injury-related illness.

Why choose a physiotherapist for a sick leave certificate?

A physiotherapist can assess your physical capacity and provide practical work restrictions. This may help your employer understand what duties are safe, what tasks should be modified, and when your capacity should be reviewed.

Can a physiotherapist help me return to work?

Yes. Your physiotherapist can help plan treatment, exercises, modified duties, and a graded return-to-work pathway. This can support safer recovery and reduce the risk of aggravating the injury when you resume normal duties.

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What Should I Do Next?

If an injury is affecting your work capacity, book a physiotherapy assessment. Your physiotherapist can assess your condition, explain safe work options, and issue a sick leave certificate when it is appropriate.

If your symptoms are not injury-related, or your employer requires a GP certificate, book with your GP instead.

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