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Australia

Household income quartiles

Households form the common 'economic unit' in our society. Household Income is one of the most important indicators of socio-economic status. Australia-wide, First Nations households often report lower incomes than the average of all households, which is a strong indicator of disadvantage. However this does vary from place to place.

Income quartiles break the total households of Australia into four equal groups for each Census and track changes in smaller populations against these thresholds. This enables visualisation at a glance of both the First Nations incomes in a local area against the total population, and compared to First Nations households in a wider geographic area. Due to the equal sized nature of the four quartiles over time, it also allows direct comparison of change over time, so you can see whether First Nations are increasing or decreasing relative to incomes in the state.

Household income quartiles datasets should be viewed in conjunction with the raw Household income as well as related topics such as Qualifications and Occupations.

A detailed explanation of how Household Income quartiles are calculated and interpreted is available in specific data notes.

Q:

Derived from the Census question:

'What is the total of all wages/salaries, government benefits, pensions, allowances and other income the person usually receives?'

Household income - Quartile group dollar ranges
Calculated from income data for AustraliaWeekly income by Census year
Household income ranges2021201620112006200119961991
Lowest group$0 to $867$0 to $743$0 to $625$0 to $539$0 to $413$0 to $336$0 to $300
Medium lowest$868 to $1,740$744 to $1,431$626 to $1,229$540 to $1,025$414 to $784$337 to $633$301 to $557
Medium highest$1,741 to $2,949$1,432 to $2,433$1,230 to $2,208$1,026 to $1,700$785 to $1,350$634 to $1,074$558 to $923
Highest group$2,950 and over$2,434 and over$2,209 and over$1,701 and over$1,351 and over$1,075 and over$924 and over

NOTE: Not all elements on this page could be displayed due to insufficient data in Australia for the selected variables. Try selecting alternate variables or contact us at demographics@id.com.au.

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