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  1. Key statistics. The capitals grew by 517,200 people (3.0%) in 2022-23. Capital city growth comprised overseas migration (454,900), natural increase (89,200) and internal migration (-26,900). Melbourne had the largest increase (167,500), Perth had the highest growth rate (3.6%). Regional Australia grew by 117,300 (1.4%).

    • Combined Capital Cities and Regional Areas
    • Population Growth by State
    • Population Growth and Its Components in Capital Cities
    • Population Growth and Its Components in Regional Areas
    • Data Notes
    In 2021‑22, combined capital cities bounced back from the negative population growth recorded in 2020‑21 (Chart 1). While growth in all capital cities recovered, driven by the recovery in net overs...
    Combined regions grew by 1.2 per cent, a moderate increase from 2020‑21 (1.0 per cent). The population of regional areas increased by over 100,000 people in 2021‑22, the largest increase since 2009...
    After falling to record lows in 2020‑21, annual population growth rose in each of the states and territories (except for Tasmania) in the year to June 2022 (Chart 2). For most states this was drive...
    Growth in capital cities overtook growth in regional areas, except New South Wales and the Northern Territory. This turnaround from 2020‑21 is largely due to the return in overseas migrants in 2021...
    In 2021‑22, Brisbane’s population grew by 2.3 per cent, recording the highest growth rate of all capital cities, followed by Perth (1.5 per cent), Adelaide (1.1 per cent) and Melbourne (1.1 per cent).
    Population growth was slowest in Darwin, Hobart, the Australian Capital Territory and Sydney.
    While population growth increased in all capital cities in 2021‑22, the recovery in growth was particularly strong in the centres of Sydney and Melbourne driven by the return of overseas migrants (...
    Growth in regional Australia has remained steady during the pandemic, with growth driven by net interstate migration which accounted for almost half of the increase in 2021‑22 (Chart 4).
    Regional Queensland was the fastest growing regional area in 2021‑22 (1.9 per cent), driven by a combined inflow of internal and overseas migration, which contributed 38,000 people to the populatio...
    Regional South Australia and regional Tasmania were the two slowest growing regional areas.
    The regional cities of Geelong and the Sunshine Coast were the fastest growing areas in regional Australia over the last three years, both growing annually at 2.3 per cent over the period.
    Further detail, including data quality notes, are available from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
    The internal migration figures should be interpreted with some caution as ABS data show a high number of moves in the June to December quarters of 2021, which are unlikely to accurately reflect the...
    Figures in this publication will not exactly match the data presented in the ABS publication National, State and Territory Population. Sub‑state population data does not incorporate the ABS revisio...
  2. Regional Population, Australia, 2020-21 (Australian Bureau of Statistics) This release of substate population data reveals the uneven distribution of COVID-19 on Australias population.

  3. The Estimated Resident Population (ERP) of Australia was 25.7 million people at 30 June 2021, around 34,300 people larger than at 31 March 2021. Population growth for the year ending 30 June 2021 was around 0.2 per cent (46,000 people), down from 1.3 per cent for the year ending 30 June 2020.

  4. Search by map or region list to find statistics about different areas in Australia. Data by region is intended for users interested in the characteristics of regions and for comparing regions across Australia.