BACKGROUND: Specialised heart failure (HF) care improves outcomes for patients with HF. To understand the risk profiles of HF outpatients referred to a specialised clinic, we evaluated referral reasons, predicted risk, and the presence of guideline-recommended referral criteria at a large specialised HF clinic. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study including outpatients with HF (≥ 18 years old) referred from November 2021 to November 2022. We calculated 1-year predicted mortality with the use of the Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM) and the I-NEED-HELP referral criteria. We compared median SHFM-predicted mortality with referral reasons and the I-NEED-HELP criteria by means of Kruskal-Wallis, Wilcoxon rank-sum, chi-square, and Fisher exact tests. RESULTS: Among 245 consecutive HF outpatients included, median SHFM-predicted 1-year mortality was 4% (interquartile range [IQR] 2%-8%). Reasons for referral included evaluation for advanced therapies (29%), medication optimisation (23%), diagnostic evaluation (19%), post-hospitalisation/emergency department visit (14%), ongoing HF management (12%), patient request (2%), and transition to adult care (1%). The median SHFM-predicted 1-year mortality did not differ significantly by referral reason ( CONCLUSIONS: Patients referred to a specialised HF clinic have a wide risk range. The difference in predicted mortality among patients meeting any vs no I-NEED-HELP criteria appears clinically insignificant. Incorporating model-predicted risk at the time of referral can guide triage and patient prioritisation.