Defibrillators from medibc
A defibrillator (AED, or automated external defibrillator) is the single piece of equipment that most changes the odds in a sudden cardiac arrest. As an authorised Zoll supplier, MediBC stocks workplace and public-access AEDs, plus the pads, batteries, cabinets and signage to keep them rescue-ready.
New to AEDs? Start with our defibrillator buying guide for how to choose and what each model offers, or check your obligations in our defibrillator requirements guide. Current pricing is shown on each product page.
Read more: choosing a defibrillator (AED)Read less
How to choose an AED
An AED analyses the heart and only allows a shock if one is needed, and it talks the rescuer through each step, so no training is required to use one. When choosing, consider whether you want a semi-automatic unit (you press a flashing shock button) or a fully automatic unit (it delivers the shock itself after a spoken warning), whether you need real-time CPR feedback, and the warranty and consumable life. AEDs are used alongside CPR, not instead of it.
The Zoll range we stock
- Zoll AED Plus — semi or fully automatic with Real CPR Help feedback; a strong all-round workplace and public-site unit.
- Zoll AED Pro — for first responders and trained operators who need manual control.
- Zoll AED 3 and AED 3 BLS — colour-screen units with the latest Real CPR Help dashboard.
- Genuine Zoll pads, batteries, wall cabinets and signage to keep your AED ready.
Are defibrillators mandatory in Australia?
In most of Australia an AED is not legally required, but work health and safety duties make providing one best practice. South Australia is the exception: under the Automated External Defibrillators (Public Access) Act 2022, AEDs are mandatory in many publicly accessible buildings. See our requirements guide for the detail by state.
Can anyone use a defibrillator?
Yes. No training or medical background is required — the unit gives spoken prompts and will only shock a heart rhythm that needs it. In an emergency, call 000, start CPR, and use an AED as soon as one is available. This information is general only and is not medical advice.



