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Population Maps

Australia map

Population maps can be generated online using the Australian Bureau of Statistics MapStats program. Maps can be generated for specific population groups at the level of a state, statistical division, local government area, suburb, electoral division and statistical local area.

Maps enable exploration of the extent of concentration and segregation of cities using a range of indicators. A key basis for concentration is economic status. Economic status can be mapped using a number of census variables, including income, occupation, labour force participation, housing costs and educational attainment. The impact of ethnicity on residential distribution can be explored through variables of birthplace, language and ancestry.  Language use indicates that there are regions of Melbourne and Sydney where more than 60% of the population speak a language other than English.[1]

The following maps generated by MapStats illustrate the distribution of selected birthplace groups for Australia’s five major cities.

  Population in 2010 (est.) Overseas born Recent arrivals Born in North-West Europe Born in Southern and Eastern Europe Born in North-East Asia Born in South-East Asia Born in North Africa and the Middle East
Sydney 4.58 million map map map map map map map
Melbourne 4.08 million map map map map map map map
Brisbane 2.04 million map map map map map map map
Perth 1.70 million map map map map map map map
Adelaide 1.20 million map map map map map map map

Please note: All maps download as pdfs of 191kB to 253kB.

Additional population maps may be generated online using MapStats at Australian Bureau of Statistics Census Data.

The program requires users to first select a Locality (for example, a suburb) and then a Topic. Available topics include:

Birthplace: Proportion born overseas in a locality and region of birth

Migrants: Proportion of recent arrivals in a locality (arrivals between 2001 and 2006)

Discussion of population distribution and maps are included in the 2007 and 2009 full reports of the Scanlon Foundation surveys, located on this site. The relevant section of the 2007 report may be accessed by following this link [pdf 3.4MB].

[1] For further discussion, see ‘Residential concentration and dispersal’, chapter 5 in Andrew Markus, James Jupp and Peter McDonald, Australia’s Immigration Revolution, Allen and Unwin, 2009