The high levels of pre-election enrolment point to the likelihood that the 2024/25 federal election will have the highest level of overall, Indigenous and youth enrolment of any federal election in Australia’s history.
Youth and Indigenous Australians are two cohorts that have historically been under-represented on the electoral roll. Recent increases in these areas have largely been maintained, with the gap to overall enrolment rates remaining relatively small.
The release of these statistics comes with the federal election window open. A standard House of Representatives and half-Senate federal election can be held on any Saturday between now and 17 May 2025 (with a minimum of five weeks’ notice from announcement).
While slight decreases in enrolment rates have been seen in recent months, this is much less than what has sometimes previously been experienced at this stage of the federal electoral cycle. The trendlines predominantly show the continuation of a high status quo achieved after years of significant enrolment growth – the result of hard work by the AEC.
“Australia’s enrolment is in great shape. It’s never been better leading into a federal election.”
“I am confident the next federal election will once again break enrolment records. It is likely to be the best base for participation in a federal election since federation.”
“What we know for sure is that a greater proportion of young people and Indigenous Australians will be enrolled than ever before for a federal election – and by some margin as well.”
“I’m just so proud of the team for the hard work and innovation to get such a high integrity and complete electoral roll.”
“It is a globally enviable position for Australia’s democracy.”
“We’ve worked hard to introduce initiatives that have led to this success – the inclusion of Medicare Cards as a form of identification and the expansion of direct enrolment initiatives are just two areas that are helping typically under-enrolled cohorts.”
“A relatively flat year on year graph may look boring but this is a case of boring being good news – it shows that after recent years of explosive growth, Australia’s estimated enrolment rates are holding steady. Historically, that hasn’t happened.”
“While we still have work to do to bring the enrolment of some groups of Australians to parity with the national rate, this year’s numbers demonstrate that the high levels of enrolment between elections is being sustained.”
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