Need Kopata Medical Centre in Lower Hutt? Start here for the practical route: call, book through ManageMyHealth, request a repeat prescription, check opening hours, understand fees, find after-hours care, prepare for a GP visit, or decide whether you need Healthline, Lower Hutt After Hours, Hutt Hospital ED or 111.
This page is designed for verified patient usefulness, clear next-step routing, mobile readability and entity clarity. It is independent, not the official clinic website, and it does not provide diagnosis or treatment advice.
Emergency warning: In New Zealand, call 111 for life-threatening symptoms or emergency help. For free non-emergency health advice when you are worried or unsure what to do, call Healthline 0800 611 116.
What should you do first for Kopata Medical Centre?
A patient searching for Kopata Medical Centre is usually trying to make a decision fast. Use these cards before reading the full guide.
Call 111. Do not wait for a portal message, email reply, routine appointment or after-hours queue.
Phone 04 569 9009. Explain timing, severity and whether symptoms are worsening.
Call Healthline 0800 611 116, or use Lower Hutt After Hours if urgent physical care is needed.
Use ManageMyHealth if registered, or call the clinic. Prescriptions usually need two working days.
Kopata Medical Centre quick answer for Lower Hutt patients
Kopata Medical Centre is a general practice at 60–62 Bloomfield Terrace, Hutt Central, Lower Hutt 5010. The official website lists the phone number as 04 569 9009 and the email address as reception@kopatamc.co.nz.
The official contact page lists opening hours as Monday to Friday, 8am–5:30pm, with Saturday and Sunday closed. The official homepage also states the practice is closed on weekends and public holidays.
Appointments cannot be booked by email. The official contact page says patients should call 569-9009 for appointments. The homepage also says ManageMyHealth can be used to access health records, order repeat prescriptions and book appointments after registration.
Kopata Medical Centre patient tools before you call
These tools do not diagnose symptoms, suggest treatment or decide whether you need medicine. They only help you choose a safer contact route: 111, Healthline, clinic phone, ManageMyHealth, Lower Hutt After Hours or routine appointment preparation.
Tool 1: next-step finder
Choose your situation and timing. The result will show a contact route, not medical advice.
Your route will appear here
Select both fields. The tool will show general contact-route guidance only.
- Emergencies should go to 111.
- Same-day concerns are usually better handled by phone.
- Routine online tasks may suit ManageMyHealth after registration.
Tool 2: repeat prescription route checker
Use this before requesting a repeat so you do not leave medicine planning too late.
Prescription guidance will appear here
The official prescription page says prescriptions can be ordered via ManageMyHealth, the script line, or email, and patients should allow two working days.
Tool 3: appointment preparation builder
Pick your appointment type. This helps you ask reception the right question.
Your checklist will appear here
This helps reduce mistakes such as booking too short, forgetting medicine details, using email for appointments, or leaving prescription requests too late.
Opening hours, phone, email and contact route
Kopata Medical Centre’s official contact page lists weekday hours from 8am to 5:30pm, Monday through Friday, with weekends closed. The official homepage also says the clinic is closed on weekends and public holidays.
The contact page says appointments cannot be booked by email and patients should call the clinic on 569-9009. This is a key patient-safety detail. Email may be useful for certain non-urgent administrative contact, but appointment booking and urgent symptoms should not depend on email.
How to book the right Kopata Medical Centre appointment
Kopata Medical Centre’s official website states that appointments cannot be booked by email. Patients should call the practice for appointments, while ManageMyHealth can be used for suitable online appointment booking after registration.
The official fees page says consultations are booked in 15-minute blocks and will cover one or two issues. If the appointment runs over, an extra charge may apply. Longer consultations can be booked in advance, and extra charges apply.
Decide whether the issue is emergency, urgent or routine
Call 111 for emergency symptoms. Phone the clinic for same-day or urgent concerns during opening hours. Use Healthline if the clinic is closed and you are worried but it is not clearly an emergency.
Use phone when the situation needs explanation
Phone if symptoms are new, worsening, unclear, urgent, medicine-related, form-related, injury-related, or you are unsure whether you need a GP, nurse, after-hours clinic or hospital care.
Use ManageMyHealth for suitable routine tasks
ManageMyHealth may help with health records, appointments and repeat prescriptions. Do not use routine portal messaging for emergencies.
Ask whether a longer appointment is needed
If you have many concerns, a medical certificate, long-term-condition review, complex medicine question, driver licence medical or mental wellbeing issue, ask reception whether a longer appointment is needed.
Prepare before attending
Bring medication details, allergies, recent letters, ID if requested, Community Services Card if relevant, and any forms. Ask reception before visiting if symptoms may need special arrival instructions.
What to say when you call reception
Reception cannot diagnose you, but clear information helps the team route your request. Use short, useful details instead of a vague “I need a doctor.”
For same-day symptoms
“I feel unwell today. Symptoms started [time/day]. They are getting better/worse. Should I book here, use after-hours, or call Healthline?”
For routine appointment
“I need a routine GP appointment. Is ManageMyHealth suitable, or should this be booked by phone?”
For prescriptions
“I need a repeat prescription. It is routine/urgent. Should I use ManageMyHealth, script line option 1, or email scripts@kopatamc.co.nz?”
For medical certificates
“I need a medical certificate. The website says to call for an appointment. How much time should I book?”
For nurse services
“I need immunisation, wound care, blood pressure, ECG, cervical screening, liquid nitrogen or diabetes checks. What appointment type and fee applies?”
For wellbeing support
“I would like to ask about the Health Improvement Practitioner or Health Coach. Is this available and how do I book?”
ManageMyHealth, repeat prescriptions and online-service limits
Kopata Medical Centre’s homepage says ManageMyHealth can be used to access health records, order repeat prescriptions and book appointments. It says patients need an email address that is unique to them, and patients not already registered can use the registration link.
The official prescription page says repeat prescriptions can be ordered through ManageMyHealth, by calling the script line on 04 569 9009 option 1, or by emailing scripts@kopatamc.co.nz. It says patients should allow two working days for prescriptions to be filled.
Good uses for ManageMyHealth
- Routine appointment access after registration.
- Repeat prescription requests when two working days is acceptable.
- Viewing health records and selected results.
- Reducing phone waiting for simple routine actions.
Phone instead when
- You need same-day or urgent advice.
- You are nearly out of medication.
- Your medicine has changed or caused new symptoms.
- You have not seen your doctor in the last six months.
- You are not registered on ManageMyHealth or cannot access it.
Prescription details many patients miss
The prescription page says prescriptions are sent directly to the nominated pharmacy. If no pharmacy is specified, the prescription will be sent to Unichem Kopata Pharmacy next door to the practice. If ordering for someone else, include your name and relationship to the patient. Prescription requests for patients 14 and over incur a fee, and prescriptions ordered but not collected still incur the full charge.
Fees and charges patients usually search for first
Fees can change, and final costs depend on age, enrolment, Community Services Card status, non-funded status, service type, appointment length, materials and payment method. Use these as public fee examples from Kopata Medical Centre’s official fees page, then confirm directly before booking.
The official fees page says consultation charges apply to both face-to-face and phone consultations, fees apply to follow-up appointments and test-result discussions, ACC consultations incur the same charge as standard consultation fees, and a 1.2% surcharge applies to credit card and Paywave transactions.
Ask reception before booking
- Am I being charged as enrolled or non-funded?
- Does my Community Services Card apply to this appointment?
- Is this GP, nurse, ACC, prescription, medical certificate, ECG, blood test or travel immunisation pricing?
- Will extra time, materials, forms, liquid nitrogen, dressings or procedures add a charge?
- What payment method avoids the credit card or Paywave surcharge?
Avoid avoidable cost problems
- Request repeats early so the two-working-day timing is not a problem.
- Ask for a longer appointment if you have several issues.
- Cancel with at least two hours’ notice where possible.
- Pay on the day to avoid account follow-up costs.
- Ask the admin team early if you need to discuss payment options.
After-hours care for Kopata Medical Centre patients
Kopata Medical Centre’s after-hours page says to dial 111 for emergencies and to call Healthline 0800 611 116 for general health enquiries. It lists Lower Hutt After Hours as open every day from 8am to 10pm at Verve on Connolly, 1/2 Connolly Street, Hutt Central, with phone 04 567 5345.
The same after-hours page also lists Lower Hutt Hospital & ED at Hutt Hospital, High Street, Lower Hutt, Wellington 5010, with phone 04 566 6999. Healthpoint also notes after-hours care via Lower Hutt After Hours Medical Centre until 10pm and then Hutt or Wellington ED.
Call 111 immediately
Use 111 for severe, sudden, life-threatening, unsafe or rapidly worsening symptoms, or if you cannot decide whether it is an emergency.
Call Healthline
Use Healthline 0800 611 116 for free non-emergency health advice when you are worried, unsure, cannot access a GP, or need medicine advice.
Lower Hutt After Hours
Use for urgent after-hours physical care that is not a 111 emergency. The official clinic page lists Verve on Connolly and phone 04 567 5345.
Hutt Hospital ED
Use ED for emergency or serious hospital-level care. If unsure whether you need an ambulance or ED, call 111 or Healthline depending on severity.
Restricted enrolment and what new patients should confirm
Healthpoint lists Kopata Medical Centre as accepting some new patients to enrol, but with restrictions. This means a patient should not assume enrolment is open for everyone, every address or every situation.
Phone the clinic before preparing paperwork or changing GP practice. Ask whether enrolment is currently available, whether any restrictions apply, which documents are needed, and what fees apply if you are not yet enrolled.
Before trying to enrol
- Confirm enrolment is still available.
- Ask what restrictions apply.
- Ask what ID or eligibility documents are needed.
- Ask whether you can book before enrolment is complete.
- Ask how to register for ManageMyHealth.
For families and whānau
- Ask whether each family member needs a separate enrolment process.
- Prepare children’s immunisation or previous GP details if relevant.
- Confirm consent rules when booking for another adult.
- Tell reception if you need accessibility help or a support person.
GP services, nursing services and wellbeing support
Kopata Medical Centre’s services page says the clinic offers general practitioner services across life stages, from six-week newborn checks to driving licence medical checks. It says patients who require a medical certificate should call to make an appointment.
The services page also lists nurse services including immunisations, wound care, blood pressure checks, ECGs, cervical smears and HPV swabs, liquid nitrogen, pregnancy tests, diabetes checks and smoking cessation. It also lists a Long Term Conditions clinic, a Health Improvement Practitioner and an onsite Health Coach.
GP consultations
Use for routine health concerns, medical certificates, driver licence medicals, referrals, test-result discussion and long-term condition review when appropriate.
Nurse appointments
Ask about immunisations, wound care, blood pressure, ECG, cervical screening, liquid nitrogen, pregnancy tests, diabetes checks and smoking cessation.
LTC clinic
The official services page describes a Thursday clinic for wellbeing check-ins, long-term conditions and elderly patients needing extra care.
Health Improvement Practitioner
The services page says the HIP can assist with mental and emotional wellbeing such as stress, grief, sleep problems, anxiety, low mood, chronic pain, family violence and parenting. It lists this as a free half-hour appointment.
Health Coach
The Health Coach can help with lifestyle questions such as exercise, healthy eating, diabetes, smoking cessation, weight management and living well with long-term conditions. The services page lists this as a free 30–45 minute appointment.
Accessibility support
Healthpoint lists wheelchair access, wheelchair accessible toilet, mobility parking, longer appointment time, support to make decisions and assistance to move around.
Clinic, prescription email, pharmacy, after-hours or ED — which one should you use?
This is where many medical-centre pages lose users. A person searching Kopata Medical Centre may actually need the GP clinic, ManageMyHealth, script line, Unichem Kopata Pharmacy, Lower Hutt After Hours, Healthline, Hutt Hospital ED or emergency services.
Use Kopata Medical Centre
For GP appointments, nurse appointments, enrolment, fees, medical certificates, records questions and general clinic routing.
Use ManageMyHealth
For suitable routine online booking, health-record access and repeat prescription actions after registration.
Use script line or scripts email
For repeat prescriptions, the clinic lists script line option 1 and scripts@kopatamc.co.nz. Include name, date of birth, medication and pharmacy.
Use the pharmacy
For collection, stock or dispensing questions, contact the pharmacy directly. If no pharmacy is nominated, the clinic says scripts go to Unichem Kopata Pharmacy next door.
Use after-hours or Healthline
For non-emergency after-hours care, use Lower Hutt After Hours or Healthline depending on the situation.
Use 111
For severe symptoms, serious injury, life-threatening problems or any situation where waiting is unsafe.
Patient checklist before you call, book or attend
A clear checklist reduces repeat calls, missed details and wrong-route decisions. Kopata Medical Centre’s own preparation page encourages patients to write down symptoms, list wider concerns, write questions, bring a support person if helpful, ask for a recap and ask reception about ManageMyHealth.
Before calling
- Write your main reason in one short sentence.
- Note when symptoms started and whether they are improving or worsening.
- Have medicine names, allergies and important conditions ready.
- Know whether you need GP, nurse, prescription, certificate, ECG, blood test or after-hours care.
- Ask whether you need a longer appointment if there is a lot to discuss.
Before visiting
- Confirm the appointment time and whether it is in-person or phone.
- Bring ID, Community Services Card and eligibility documents if relevant.
- Bring forms, letters, discharge summaries or test details.
- Bring a medicine list and recent pharmacy changes.
- Ask for a recap and next steps before leaving the appointment.
Common mistakes that cause delays or wrong routing
- Trying to book by email: the official contact page says appointments cannot be booked by email.
- Leaving prescriptions too late: the prescription page says to allow two working days.
- Forgetting pharmacy details: prescription requests should include the pharmacy, or the script may be sent to Unichem Kopata Pharmacy next door.
- Ordering for someone else without details: include your name and relationship to the patient when ordering on behalf of another person.
- Assuming all repeats are automatic: the official page says prescription issuing is at the doctor’s discretion and a GP consultation may be required if you have not been seen in the last six months.
- Booking one short appointment for many concerns: the official fees page says consultations are booked in 15-minute blocks and usually cover one or two issues.
- Not cancelling early enough: the official fees page says cancellations require at least two hours’ notice, and late cancellations or no-shows may incur a consultation charge.
- Using this page as medical advice: this page is an independent guide only.
Kopata Medical Centre address and map
Kopata Medical Centre is listed at 60–62 Bloomfield Terrace, Hutt Central, Lower Hutt 5010. Check the official website, appointment reminder and map before travelling, especially near closing time, public holidays or after-hours periods.
Contact details, accounts and complaints
The official contact page includes routes for updating contact details, invoicing and accounts, and feedback or complaints. It says complaints will be treated confidentially. Use these routes for administration and service feedback, not urgent symptoms.
If you need to update phone number, address or emergency contact details, the contact page says to include your full name, date of birth and new details, and to say whether any family members such as children also need the update.
Kopata Medical Centre frequently asked questions
What is Kopata Medical Centre’s phone number?
The phone number listed by Kopata Medical Centre is 04 569 9009.
Where is Kopata Medical Centre located?
Kopata Medical Centre is listed at 60–62 Bloomfield Terrace, Hutt Central, Lower Hutt 5010.
What are Kopata Medical Centre opening hours?
The official contact page lists Monday to Friday from 8am to 5:30pm, with Saturday and Sunday closed. The official homepage also says weekends and public holidays are closed.
Can I book an appointment by email?
No. The official contact page says appointments cannot be booked via email and patients should call 569-9009.
Does Kopata Medical Centre use ManageMyHealth?
Yes. The official homepage says ManageMyHealth can be used to access health records, order repeat prescriptions and book appointments after registration.
How do I order a repeat prescription?
The official prescription page says prescriptions can be ordered via ManageMyHealth, by calling 04 569 9009 option 1, or by emailing scripts@kopatamc.co.nz. Include your name, date of birth, medication required and pharmacy.
How long do repeat prescriptions take?
The official prescription page says to allow two working days for prescriptions to be filled. Prescription requests for patients 14 and over incur a fee.
What after-hours care is listed for Kopata patients?
The official after-hours page lists Lower Hutt After Hours at Verve on Connolly, 1/2 Connolly Street, Hutt Central, open every day 8am–10pm, phone 04 567 5345. For emergencies call 111.
Is Kopata Medical Centre accepting new patients?
Healthpoint lists the practice as accepting some new patients to enrol, but with restrictions. Confirm directly with the clinic because enrolment status can change.
Is this the official Kopata Medical Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient guide. For appointments, clinical advice, fees, urgent instructions and prescription decisions, use the official Kopata Medical Centre website or phone the clinic directly.
Sources, accuracy note and independent-guide disclaimer
This guide summarises public information from Kopata Medical Centre, Healthpoint, Lower Hutt after-hours information, Healthline and New Zealand emergency guidance. Clinic information can change. Always confirm appointment availability, fees, portal access, enrolment, prescription rules, public holiday changes and urgent-care instructions directly with the clinic.
Independent guide: Medical Centre NZ is not Kopata Medical Centre. This page does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is designed to help patients find official contact routes and prepare better questions.
- Official Kopata Medical Centre website
- Official contact and opening hours page
- Official prescriptions page
- Official fees page
- Official services page
- Official after-hours page
- Official preparing for your visit page
- Healthpoint listing for Kopata Medical Centre
- Healthline — Health New Zealand
- 111 emergency service — New Zealand Government
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026. Re-check official pages before major edits, especially fees, after-hours details, enrolment status, prescription timing and public holiday hours.
Final recommendation
For routine GP care at Kopata Medical Centre, phone 04 569 9009 or use ManageMyHealth if registered and the task is suitable. For urgent same-day concerns, phone the clinic. For after-hours non-emergency advice, call Healthline or use Lower Hutt After Hours if appropriate. For emergency symptoms in New Zealand, call 111 immediately.