Need Dominion Medical Centre in Mt Roskill, Auckland? Start here for the practical route: phone the clinic, book through Vensa, use the patient portal, request repeat prescriptions, check consultation fees, prepare for enrolment, understand flu vaccine walk-in times, check lab-result follow-up, plan parking and avoid confusing it with Dominion Road Surgery.
This page is built around verified patient usefulness, clear next-step routing, mobile UX and entity clarity. It is not medical advice, and it is not the official clinic website. Confirm appointments, fees, enrolment, prescriptions, lab-result instructions and urgent-care directions directly with Dominion Medical Centre.
Emergency? In New Zealand, call 111 for life-threatening symptoms or ambulance, police or fire emergency help. For free non-emergency health advice when you are worried or unsure, call Healthline 0800 611 116.
What should you do first for Dominion Medical Centre?
Most visitors are not looking for a long directory listing. They need a safe next step: call, book online, enrol, request a prescription, check fees, ask about results, or choose after-hours help. Use this route first.
Call 111. Do not wait for Vensa, a Jotform request, email, portal message or a routine appointment.
Phone 09 620 4986. Explain whether the issue is urgent, routine, injury-related, prescription-related or for a family member.
Use the official online booking route or Vensa where suitable. The official booking form lists self-service as the preferred method.
Use the official forms only for suitable non-emergency tasks. Phone if symptoms, medicine, results or urgency are unclear.
Dominion Medical Centre quick answer for Mt Roskill patients
Dominion Medical Centre is a General Practice service at 349 Mt Albert Road, Mt Roskill, Auckland 1041. The listed phone number is 09 620 4986, the fax number is 09 620 1349, and Healthlink EDI is dommcmtr.
Current public information lists weekday hours as Monday to Friday 9am–5pm. The official website also shows the clinic operating 9am–1pm and 2pm–5pm, so patients should treat the lunch period as a practical timing caution and confirm directly before travelling around midday or near closing time.
Healthpoint lists Dominion Medical Centre as welcoming new patients to enrol and lists online appointment access through Vensa. The official website also includes online booking, prescription, payment, message, online advice and patient-portal links.
Patient tools for booking, prescriptions, lab results and flu vaccine timing
These tools do not diagnose, suggest treatment or decide whether you need medicine. They only help you choose a safer contact route: 111, Healthline, Dominion Medical Centre phone, Vensa, the official booking forms, patient portal or routine preparation.
Tool 1: next-step finder
Choose your situation. The result will show a practical contact route.
Your route will appear here
Select both fields. The tool will show general routing guidance only.
- Emergency symptoms should go to 111.
- Same-day concerns are usually better handled by phone.
- Routine online tasks may suit Vensa or official forms.
Tool 2: repeat prescription readiness checker
Use this before requesting a repeat prescription so you do not leave medicine planning too late.
Prescription guidance will appear here
Healthpoint notes repeat prescriptions are generally for patients known to a practice with stable conditions, and not for patients unknown to the practice.
Tool 3: appointment preparation builder
Choose your appointment type. The checklist helps you ask reception the right question.
Your checklist will appear here
This helps reduce common mistakes such as using online forms for urgent symptoms, confusing Dominion Medical Centre with Dominion Road Surgery, or booking too short for multiple concerns.
Opening hours, phone, email and contact route
Healthpoint lists Dominion Medical Centre hours as Monday to Friday 9am–5pm. The official website shows Monday to Friday 9am–1pm and 2pm–5pm, which is useful for patient planning because it suggests a practical lunch-period break or reduced access window.
Public holiday information on Healthpoint lists the clinic as closed for major New Zealand public holidays, including Waitangi Day, Easter holiday dates, ANZAC observed day, King’s Birthday, Matariki, Labour Day and Auckland Anniversary. Confirm directly around holidays because closure notices and observed dates can change.
How to book appointments at Dominion Medical Centre
Healthpoint lists appointment access through www.vensa.com and the official Dominion Medical Centre website. The official booking form lists two booking methods: self-service, marked as preferred, and a reception message option with a two-working-day response time.
This is important for users: a message request is not the same as a confirmed urgent appointment. If you feel unwell today, have worsening symptoms, are worried about a child or older person, or need a same-day response, phone the clinic.
Check emergency risk first
Call 111 for severe or life-threatening symptoms. Do not wait for online forms, Vensa, the patient portal or an email reply.
Use self-service booking for routine needs
Use Vensa or the official booking route for stable, non-urgent GP appointments when online booking is appropriate.
Phone when you need same-day guidance
Phone if symptoms are new, worsening, urgent, injury-related, medicine-related, child-related or unclear.
Remember the two-working-day message response
The official booking form notes a two-working-day response time for message reception. Do not use that route for urgent health problems.
Ask for enough appointment time
The official fees page says charges are based on a standard 15-minute appointment and additional fees apply if time exceeds the scheduled duration.
Vensa booking, patient portal and online forms
Dominion Medical Centre’s official website links to book online, prescriptions, pay online, message the clinic, online advice and a patient portal. Healthpoint also lists Vensa as an appointment access route.
Online tools are useful for routine tasks, but they should not replace phone contact when symptoms are urgent, medicine is changing, results are worrying, a child or older person is unwell, or the situation may need clinical triage.
Good uses for online tools
- Routine appointment booking where available.
- Prescription requests that are stable and suitable.
- Online payment or admin forms.
- Non-urgent patient portal tasks.
Phone instead when
- You have urgent, sudden or worsening symptoms.
- You need same-day advice.
- Your medicine changed or symptoms changed.
- You need an abnormal result explained.
- You are unsure whether a nurse, GP, urgent care or emergency route fits.
Fees and cost questions patients should check first
Dominion Medical Centre’s official fees page lists common consultation, repeat script, casual, overseas, admin, medical check, nursing and procedure charges. Healthpoint also lists enrolled-patient fees by age and Community Services Card status.
Fees can change and may depend on enrolment, CSC status, appointment type, materials, medical checks, standard vs extended time, nurse service, repeat script, casual status or overseas status. Confirm directly before booking if cost matters.
Ask reception before booking
- Am I being charged as enrolled, casual, overseas or non-enrolled?
- Does my Community Services Card apply to this visit?
- Is this a standard 15-minute appointment or will extra time be charged?
- Will nursing, ECG, dressing, smear, injection, liquid nitrogen, spirometry or procedure fees apply?
How to avoid avoidable costs
- Ask whether one appointment is enough for multiple issues.
- Bring your CSC, ID and relevant documents.
- Confirm whether a form or medical check has a separate fee.
- Ask about additional fees before any special procedure.
- Use the right route for repeat scripts rather than booking the wrong service.
Repeat prescriptions: when online is safe and when to phone
Healthpoint explains general repeat-prescription safety for primary care: repeat prescriptions are usually for patients well known to the practice with stable conditions, while repeat prescriptions are not given to patients unknown to the practice. It also notes that narcotics and other medicines that could be misused may have strict monitoring.
Dominion Medical Centre’s official website links to a prescription request form. Use that route only for suitable repeat-prescription tasks. Phone if the medicine is new, changed, causing symptoms, overdue for monitoring, related to a new diagnosis, or needs a medical discussion.
Before requesting a repeat
- Check how many days of medicine you have left.
- Confirm whether the medicine is stable and regular.
- Know whether blood tests, blood pressure or review is due.
- Check pharmacy or collection preference.
- Request early before weekends and public holidays.
Phone instead when
- You are not known to the practice.
- The medicine is controlled, narcotic or misuse-sensitive.
- The dose changed or symptoms changed.
- You need a referral, medical certificate or new assessment.
- You are nearly out and need same-day advice.
Flu vaccine walk-in timing and cost notes
Dominion Medical Centre’s official website says 2026 flu immunisations are available from 1 April 2026. It lists walk-in times as Monday to Friday, 10am–12pm or 2pm–4pm.
The official note says flu vaccine is free for people aged 65+ and for people with chronic conditions. It lists self-funded prices as $35 standard, $40 cell-based, and $45 Fluad for 50+. Confirm current stock, eligibility, fee and timing before visiting, especially near holidays or vaccine-supply changes.
Walk-in timing
Monday to Friday, 10am–12pm or 2pm–4pm, according to the official 2026 flu note.
Funding note
Listed as free for 65+ and chronic conditions. Confirm directly if you are unsure about eligibility.
Practical tip
Do not combine flu vaccine timing with urgent symptoms. Phone first if you are unwell or need clinical advice.
Lab results, normal-result policy and when to call
Dominion Medical Centre’s official website says it is not able to contact everyone about test results and does not routinely contact patients if results are normal. It says the practice will endeavour to contact patients if there is a significant abnormal result.
The official website also says patients should keep contact details updated. It says if results are critical and you have not heard back, you should phone to check with a nurse. It also notes some results can take up to a week, rare tests can take longer, and nurses may not be able to interpret results in detail, meaning a doctor appointment may be needed.
Good result-follow-up habits
- Ask when results are expected before leaving the clinic.
- Keep phone and email details updated with reception.
- Phone if you were told the test was important and have not heard back.
- Book with the doctor if results need interpretation or treatment planning.
Do not wait if symptoms worsen
- Phone the clinic for worsening symptoms during opening hours.
- Call Healthline if worried and unsure outside hours.
- Call 111 for severe or life-threatening symptoms.
- Do not rely on “no news” if you were told to follow up.
Enrolment, new patients and casual-patient warning
Healthpoint lists Dominion Medical Centre as welcoming new patients to enrol. The official website also has an online enrolment form. The enrolment form asks whether the patient is a New Zealand citizen, permanent resident or has a two-year work visa, and says people who only want to be casual non-registered patients should phone the clinic.
Enrolment matters because it can affect consultation fees, continuity of care, online access and repeat-prescription safety. Before relying on online forms, phone if you are unsure about eligibility, visa status, casual status, overseas fees, or whether your family members can enrol together.
Before trying to enrol
- Ask whether enrolment is still open today.
- Prepare ID and eligibility documents.
- Ask whether your visa or residency status meets enrolment rules.
- Ask what to do if you want casual care only.
- Ask when portal or Vensa access can be used.
Good questions for reception
- “Are you accepting new enrolments today?”
- “What documents should I bring?”
- “Will I be charged enrolled, casual or overseas fees?”
- “Can I book before enrolment is completed?”
- “How do I transfer my old records?”
GP services, screening, minor injury care and what not to assume
Healthpoint lists Dominion Medical Centre services including immunisation, adult and child medical care, health screening, cervical screening, minor accident and injury care, minor surgery, repeat prescriptions, lab results, liquid nitrogen, spirometry and peak-flow testing, and Well Child/Tamariki Ora information.
A service appearing on a clinic listing does not mean it is available instantly, online-only or without preparation. Some services may need a specific GP, nurse appointment, longer appointment, materials, lab processing, referral, eligibility check or extra fee.
GP appointments
Best for routine care, new concerns, follow-ups, long-term conditions and medication reviews.
Minor injury care
Phone first if an injury is urgent, severe, bleeding heavily or may need urgent care referral.
Immunisations
Healthpoint lists multiple vaccine categories. The official website has a 2026 flu vaccine walk-in note.
Cervical screening
Ask whether screening is self-test, clinician-taken, nurse-led, funded or requires a specific appointment.
ECG and lung-function tests
Official fees list ECG and spirometry charges. Ask whether a GP or nurse appointment is required.
Minor surgery and procedures
Official fees list skin biopsies, minor surgery, liquid nitrogen and infusions. Ask about consent, cost and appointment length.
After-hours care when Dominion Medical Centre is closed
Dominion Medical Centre’s official resources page lists Healthline 0800 611 116 and ambulance emergency support through 111. Healthpoint also says the practice partners with Practice Plus to provide virtual GP services as an extension of the regular medical-centre team.
After-hours choices depend on severity. If symptoms are severe or life-threatening, call 111. If you are worried or unsure and it is not clearly an emergency, call Healthline. For after-hours virtual GP options, check the current Practice Plus or clinic instructions before relying on availability.
Call 111 immediately
Use 111 for severe breathing trouble, chest pain, stroke signs, collapse, major injury, severe allergic reaction, uncontrolled bleeding, life-threatening mental health crisis or any situation that feels unsafe.
Call Healthline when unsure
Healthline is useful when the clinic is closed and you need free health advice but it is not clearly a 111 emergency.
Practice Plus
Healthpoint says Dominion Medical Centre partners with Practice Plus for virtual GP services. Confirm current availability and fees before booking.
Plan routine care ahead
Routine repeats, forms, stable follow-ups, non-urgent results and portal tasks should be planned before weekends, holidays and travel.
Dominion Medical Centre vs Dominion Road Surgery and Dominion Clinic
This is a major wrong-result risk. Dominion Medical Centre is the Mt Roskill clinic at 349 Mt Albert Road. It is not the same as Dominion Road Surgery on Dominion Road, and it is not Dominion Clinic in Wellington.
Dominion Medical Centre
Use this guide for the Mt Roskill GP clinic, phone 09 620 4986, address 349 Mt Albert Road.
Dominion Road Surgery
This is a different Auckland clinic on Dominion Road with different contact details, opening style and enrolment status.
Dominion Clinic
This is a Wellington preventive health clinic, not Dominion Medical Centre in Mt Roskill.
Pharmacy or lab
Use pharmacy or lab providers for collection and dispensing questions. Use the GP clinic for prescription authorisation and medical review.
After-hours service
Use Healthline, Practice Plus or official after-hours links for non-emergency help outside clinic hours.
Emergency care
Use 111 for life-threatening symptoms. Do not use a routine GP or portal route for emergencies.
What to say when you phone reception
Reception cannot diagnose you, but clear wording helps route your request. Do not hide urgency inside a vague message. Use short, practical sentences.
Same-day concern
“I feel unwell today. Symptoms started [time/day]. They are getting better/worse. Should I book, speak to someone, or use urgent care?”
Routine appointment
“I need a routine GP appointment for [reason]. Is online self-service booking suitable, or should I book by phone?”
Multiple issues
“I have several concerns. Do I need more than a standard 15-minute appointment?”
Repeat prescription
“I need a repeat prescription. I am known to the practice. My medicine has/has not changed. Is the prescription form suitable?”
Lab result
“I had a test on [date]. I was told to follow up / I am worried. Should I speak with a nurse or book with the doctor?”
New patient
“Are you still enrolling new patients, and what documents do I need for the online enrolment form?”
Patient checklist before you call, book or attend
A simple checklist prevents repeat calls and missed information. Prepare before phoning, especially if you are booking for a child, older person, new patient, repeat prescription, abnormal result, procedure or flu vaccine.
Before calling
- Write the main reason in one short sentence.
- Note when symptoms started and whether they are sudden, severe or worsening.
- Have medicine names, allergies and key conditions ready.
- Know whether the issue is GP, nurse, prescription, result, flu vaccine, enrolment or admin related.
- Have your NHI number ready if available.
Before visiting
- Confirm appointment time and whether it is face-to-face, phone or online.
- Bring ID and Community Services Card if relevant.
- Bring forms, hospital letters, specialist notes or test details.
- Bring medicine details and pharmacy preference for prescriptions.
- Allow enough time for Mt Roskill traffic, parking and check-in.
Common mistakes that cause delays or wrong contact routes
- Using online forms for emergency symptoms: call 111 for life-threatening symptoms.
- Confusing Dominion Medical Centre with Dominion Road Surgery: this page is for 349 Mt Albert Road, Mt Roskill.
- Expecting instant response from message reception: the official booking form lists a two-working-day response time for that route.
- Booking too short: official fees say standard appointment charges are based on 15 minutes and extra time can cost more.
- Assuming normal results will always be phoned: official lab-result policy says normal results are not routinely communicated.
- Using repeat prescriptions when not known to the practice: Healthpoint says repeats are not given to patients unknown to the practice.
- Forgetting CSC or overseas status: fees differ depending on enrolment, CSC, casual and overseas status.
- Arriving around lunch without checking: the official site shows 9am–1pm and 2pm–5pm, so confirm access around midday.
Address, parking and map for Dominion Medical Centre
Dominion Medical Centre is at 349 Mt Albert Road, Mt Roskill, Auckland 1041. Healthpoint lists free onsite parking with disability parking. Still plan extra time for Mt Roskill traffic, parking, check-in and any forms.
Check that your map is taking you to Mt Albert Road, not Dominion Road Surgery or Dominion Clinic.
Nearby Auckland and New Zealand medical centre guides
If Dominion Medical Centre is not the right clinic for your enrolment, location, appointment timing or after-hours need, these related guides can help you continue your search without starting over.
Medical Centre Near Me
Use this broader guide when you are comparing GP clinics, after-hours options and nearby medical-centre routes.
Find nearby clinicsMt Roskill patient route
Use the location and entity section to avoid confusing this clinic with Dominion Road Surgery or Dominion Clinic.
Check clinic identityRepeat prescription checklist
Use the prescription section if you are unsure whether an online request is safe or a GP review is needed.
Open prescription guideDominion Medical Centre frequently asked questions
What is Dominion Medical Centre’s phone number?
The listed phone number is 09 620 4986. Use this for appointments, urgent same-day concerns, fees, enrolment, prescriptions, lab-result questions and service-routing help.
Where is Dominion Medical Centre located?
Dominion Medical Centre is located at 349 Mt Albert Road, Mt Roskill, Auckland 1041.
What are Dominion Medical Centre opening hours?
Healthpoint lists Monday to Friday 9am–5pm. The official website also shows 9am–1pm and 2pm–5pm, so confirm directly before travelling around midday, near closing time or public holidays.
Can I book online at Dominion Medical Centre?
Yes. Healthpoint lists Vensa and the official website as appointment routes, and the official website includes online booking and patient-portal links. Use online booking for suitable routine needs only.
Is Dominion Medical Centre accepting new patients?
Healthpoint lists the practice as welcoming new patients to enrol, and the official website has an online enrolment form. Confirm directly because enrolment status can change.
What are the enrolled-patient fees?
Official fees list enrolled 0–13 as free, 14–17 as $13.50, and adult enrolled consultations as $25 without CSC or $20 with CSC. Healthpoint lists the same adult enrolled fee pattern. Confirm directly before booking.
How do repeat prescriptions work?
Dominion Medical Centre has an official prescription request route. Healthpoint notes repeats are generally for patients well known to a practice with stable conditions, and not for patients unknown to the practice or medicines requiring careful monitoring.
Does Dominion Medical Centre call every patient with normal lab results?
The official lab-result policy says the practice is not able to contact everyone about results and does not routinely contact patients if results are normal. It says significant abnormal results are followed up, and patients should call if critical results are expected and they have not heard back.
Is Dominion Medical Centre the same as Dominion Road Surgery?
No. Dominion Medical Centre is at 349 Mt Albert Road, Mt Roskill. Dominion Road Surgery is a different Auckland clinic with different contact details and patient processes.
What should I do if Dominion Medical Centre is closed?
For emergencies, call 111. For non-emergency health advice when worried or unsure, call Healthline on 0800 611 116. Healthpoint says Dominion Medical Centre partners with Practice Plus for virtual GP services, so check current availability and fees when after-hours virtual GP care is suitable.
Is this the official Dominion Medical Centre website?
No. This is an independent patient information guide. For appointments, fees, prescriptions, enrolment, clinical advice and urgent instructions, use the official website or phone the clinic directly.
Sources, accuracy note and independent-guide disclaimer
This guide summarises public information from Dominion Medical Centre’s official website, Healthpoint, Healthpages and official New Zealand health resources. It is written to improve patient usefulness, next-step clarity, mobile readability and entity clarity. Clinic information can change.
Independent guide: Medical Centre NZ is not Dominion Medical Centre. This page does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always confirm current appointment availability, fees, enrolment rules, holiday closures, prescription rules, lab-result follow-up and urgent-care instructions directly with the clinic.
- Official Dominion Medical Centre website
- Official Dominion Medical Centre fees page
- Official Dominion Medical Centre resources page
- Healthpoint listing for Dominion Medical Centre
- Healthpages listing for Dominion Medical Centre
- Vensa booking page for Dominion Medical Centre
- Healthline — Health New Zealand
- 111 emergency service — New Zealand Government
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026. Review again before publishing future edits, especially fees, enrolment status, public-holiday closures, Vensa availability, flu vaccine pricing, after-hours instructions and prescription wording.
Final recommendation
For routine GP care, phone Dominion Medical Centre or use Vensa/online booking when the task is suitable. For same-day symptoms, abnormal results, medicine changes or unclear needs, phone the clinic directly. For after-hours uncertainty, use Healthline or the current Practice Plus/after-hours route. For emergency symptoms in New Zealand, call 111 immediately.