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[Toyota Owners] Save 12c/L at Participating Ampol Outlets for Healthcare Workers via MyToyota App

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Eligibility
Offer limited to myToyota members only who presents a valid Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) card.
Offer is limited to one transaction per vehicle registered on myToyota during a 24-hour period from the time of the last transaction.
Present the reward with barcode at the participating Ampol register at time of payment and present a valid Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) card and the discount will be applied.
Payment to be made by standard payment methods (cash, debit or credit card).

Related Stores

Toyota Australia
Toyota Australia
Ampol
Ampol

closed Comments

  • +18

    That's quite a lot of requirements to qualify.

    • +2

      Not really. Just have to be a health professional and Toyota owner.

      • Actually don’t need to be a Toyota owner as membership is only conditional on joining.

        • +1

          Thank you.
          Came here to know this.

          Wife had a Toyota but we needed to upgrade for the baby.

          Sweet.

      • +2

        Just to clarify, Toyotas 2001 onwards.

        • +1

          Much sad. Sorely needed the fuel discount for my 20L/100km 1999 Prado…

        • And grey import Toyotas not included :(

      • Oh what a feeling!

  • +20

    Bit of a trick to show an AHPRA card when AHPRA no longer issue cards.

    • -2

      You can search manually on the AHPRA website

      • -1

        0jay is right. Lol, why not just show your hospital ID instead?

        • Because not everyone who works at a hospital can register with AHPRA.

      • -1

        Your can search their website for a card?

      • +2

        search manually on the AHPRA website

        So the instructions should state “log into your AHPRA account and attempt to convince the register operator this is valid”

      • I couldn't find it. Can you sort of help me out here?

          • -1

            @easternculture: yep put my details in but i still see no card.

            • @RQNinja: There is no card.

              • @0jay: "Offer limited to myToyota members only who presents a valid Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) card"

                Exactly! I showed AMPOL CALTEX this exact details and they still showed no card! Should need to report to toyota to fix this

              • @0jay: You're right there is no card. Family member used this promo, just showed their AHPRA registration email/certificate. No probs.

                • @tranter:

                  just showed their AHPRA registration email

                  Contingent on discretion of the operator though.

                  • @0jay: Possibly, will see how it goes the next couple of months. Not sure they care all that much though. Operator just took a quick glance at the email.

                    • +5

                      @tranter: I did it on friday and those operators did not believe me. they were informed of a CARD, I even showed my ID and such ready. NOPE! still did not believe me

                      • @RQNinja: Oh, not good at all. They need to sort it out then.

                        • +1

                          @tranter: I have sent some feedback to mytoyota about this misinformation

                      • @RQNinja:

                        they were informed of a CARD

                        What about an ID card that says you work at a hospital?

    • +1

      LMAO! So they are tricking people into filling up and then chargin them full price. What a rort!

  • +4

    I got nothing against AHPRA but why only AHPRA? Are they the only ones suffering due to Covid-19?

    • +3

      It’s for healthcare workers who are under sustained and unrelenting stress from the beginning of the pandemic (arguably before but this is about Covid)

      • -4

        Yeah I don't agree 100%. The are the only ones at this point with job security. This is more PR than actually trying to help anyone out.

        • You are right about job security though. Health care will always have job security, even if there is only 20 people left on earth.

  • +15

    Roughly 33% of people who work in healthcare (public hospitals) are not clinical professionals, therefore having AHPRA registration.

    From the cleaners, security guards, personal service attendants, kitchen staff, receptionists and admin staff.

    These are the people who make sure clinical professionals can continue to look after patients. Good luck trying to swap between scovid patients in a cubicle without it being cleaned first, or having clinical instruments sterilised before surgery, without them.

    But these people are continually forgotten by "Specials for healthcare" but are paid far less than the clinical professionals, while exposing themselves to the same level of risk.

    • I agree with you, the workers you mention are overlooked way too often, which is not right. But most of the professions you mentioned are technically not healthcare workers in the true sense.

      • +1

        I agree they are not healthcare workers, or clinical professionals.

        My argument is for these specials based on having to deal with covid and burnout from covid. It is still rough for those individuals who are standing beside clinical professionals in healthcare settings but do not get the same recognition.

        • +3

          I agree they are not healthcare workers

          Yes they are healthcare workers. They are not clinical health care workers.

          A healthcare worker is anybody who works in a health care environment.

          • @spaceflight: I was thinking about this comment over dinner and was going to edit it. Thank you for the correction.

            Especially seeing that I fit in that definition.

            How do we define roles in say pathology services. More diagnostic clinical than patient facing clinical?

          • @spaceflight: A lot could be discussed regarding the definition of 'healthcare worker'. For eg. the term 'worker in a healthcare setting' is used on Australian and State government websites to describe a broad range of workers. There are subtle differences, hence the difference in usage to avoid any confusion. In reality the definition may depend on context and for what purposes it's used for. It's pretty obvious who was being targeted in the discount fuel promotion if an AHPRA card is required.

            • @tranter:

              A lot could be discussed regarding the definition of 'healthcare worker'.

              I think it is clear enough that is is clear you are wrong when you said

              But most of the professions you mentioned are technically not healthcare workers in the true sense

              In response to someone saying

              Roughly 33% of people who work in healthcare (public hospitals) are not clinical professionals, therefore having AHPRA registration.
              From the

              All of those people are healthcare workers.

              If you don't believe me you can read what the Victorian government said

              A healthcare worker is anyone who works in a healthcare setting. It includes both clinical and non-clinical workers.
              https://www.coronavirus.vic.gov.au/healthcare-worker-covid-1…

              Seems very clear what the definition is.

              In reality the definition may depend on context and for what purposes it's used for.

              The reality is that a healthcare worker could be cleaners, security guards, personal service attendants, kitchen staff, receptionists and admin staff.
              All of those people can work in the health care sector.

              It's just like saying a professional cleaner who only clams restaurants is not a hospitality worker. Because if there are no restaurants that person doesn't have a job

              It's pretty obvious who was being targeted in the discount fuel promotion if an AHPRA card is required.

              It is targeting clinical healthcare workers.

              • @spaceflight: Google 'directions for healthcare and health support workers WA' and read the definitions. Maybe it's not as clear as you make it out to be :) And that's just one example.

                It certainly wasn't clear for the commenter above who works in the sector and changed their mind over dinner.

                As such, my points stand.

              • @spaceflight: It would appear the offer has been updated and clarified. It now states "present the reward with parcode at the participating Ampol register at the time of payment and present a valid Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) registration certificate or medical/hospital ID and the discount will be applied"

                This tells me it's clearly targeting clinical or non-clinical healthcare workers. All they have to show is some form of ID to confirm they are a Health Care worker. They could potentially be a Security Guard with Hospital ID and claim this.

                I think the broader nod to the industry is a better way to do it rather than just professionals.

        • work in a public health unit, am a contact tracing officer, job is under the health practitioner award, no AHPRA registration. however there are definitely other professions that are more deserving of financial help so I can't complain

  • Are aged care workers not healthcare workers?

  • +1

    You may be able to stack this offer with 5% off AmpolCash or Caltex StarCash physical gift cards.

    I know it says this in the description…

    Payment to be made by standard payment methods (cash, debit or credit card).

    … but I doubt Ampol’s or Caltex’s POS system would distinguish between a card from a financial institution and a AmpolCash or Caltex StarCash gift card, but who knows!

  • Would be faster to go to Costco and fill up cheaper

  • So I guess the "they're only making three cents profit a litre because of the competitions" thing is yet another myth?

  • +1

    I’ve checked this. In Sydney, 7-11 fuel hack is still cheaper.

  • I find that Costco is about 12 cents cheaper but obviously you gotta have costco card! Maybe 7-11 hack is easier for some??

  • Can anyone confirm if this is a national offer.

  • @peterw1 The requirements have broadened, they now state "present the reward with parcode at the participating Ampol register at the time of payment and present a valid Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) registration certificate or medical/hospital ID and the discount will be applied"

  • Bar code generic? Ending with 77 (2)?

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