Top 50 largest cities in Australia by population in 2013
**This blog has been updated: read the latest version of Top 50 largest cities and towns in Australia by population.
For more up to date New South Wales information, read our blog on the Top 20 fastest growing suburbs in NSW.
Previously we have looked at the size of Australia’s cities in a variety of ways. The top 33 urban areas in Australia has been one of the most popular blogs on this site, and I keep being asked to update it with the 2011 Census results. That’s not so easy, because the ABS has changed the geography and split up some of the areas into smaller centres. So I thought we could look at another way of sorting the list, which actually may make more sense to most people. This is the ABS :”Urban Centre or Locality” structure.
It seems such an easy question – what is the population of a town or city? But there are so many ways to define it. Many of the boundaries are quite arbitrary, but the urban centre/locality (UCL) way of looking at things is actually fairly intuitive. It groups together areas that are contiguously urban, or built up, to form urban centres, or smaller towns below 1,000 people, called localities. This means that the boundaries move every Census as urban areas expand, which means that over time you’re not comparing the same geographic area, as you are with the fixed boundary method. But on the plus side, it means new growth areas can be picked up, and it can differentiate areas which, while geographically separate, are generally considered part of a greater urban area. Many of the questions I got on the previous blog were about areas which didn’t feature in the list, because they are considered part of the greater urban areas of other cities – some of these can be accessed via the UCL view.
So these are all based on Census counts from 2011, not population estimates.
Most of the list of the largest urban areas in Australia is the same as that presented in last year’s blog, but the numbers may be a little lower, because many of the outlying satellite centres are considered separate by this method. For example, the Central Coast is the 9th largest urban centre in Australia, but is usually considered part of Greater Sydney (and was included with it in the previous blog.). The same can be said for Blue Mountains. In Victoria, Melton, Sunbury and Pakenham, are all satellite centres of Greater Melbourne but are separated out here, and Ellenbrook, usually considered part of Greater Perth.
Note that for those urban areas that cross state boundaries, I have put the state with the most population in the description, and combined the populations – on the ABS website, the ABS splits these up along the state borders.
For updated figures go to our blog: Top 50 largest Australian towns and cities by population, 2014
Here are the top 50 urban centres in Australia in 2013:
1 | Sydney, NSW | 3,908,643 |
2 | Melbourne, Vic | 3,707,529 |
3 | Brisbane, Qld | 1,874,426 |
4 | Perth, WA | 1,627,576 |
5 | Adelaide, SA | 1,103,979 |
6 | Gold Coast – Tweed Heads, Qld | 533,659 |
7 | Canberra – Queanbeyan, ACT | 391,473 |
8 | Newcastle, NSW | 308,307 |
9 | Central Coast, NSW | 297,713 |
10 | Wollongong, NSW | 245,943 |
11 | Sunshine Coast, Qld | 209,263 |
12 | Hobart, Tas | 170,977 |
13 | Townsville, Qld | 157,752 |
14 | Geelong, Vic | 143,921 |
15 | Cairns, Qld | 133,891 |
16 | Darwin, NT | 103,017 |
17 | Toowoomba, Qld | 96,568 |
18 | Ballarat, Vic | 85,936 |
19 | Bendigo, Vic | 82,795 |
20 | Albury – Wodonga, NSW | 77,230 |
21 | Mackay, Qld | 74,221 |
22 | Launceston, Tas | 74,085 |
23 | Maitland (NSW), NSW | 67,133 |
24 | Bunbury, WA | 64,384 |
25 | Rockhampton, Qld | 61,725 |
26 | Bundaberg, Qld | 49,752 |
27 | Hervey Bay, Qld | 48,678 |
28 | Wagga Wagga, NSW | 46,913 |
29 | Melton, Vic | 45,625 |
30 | Coffs Harbour, NSW | 45,580 |
31 | Shepparton – Mooroopna, Vic | 42,742 |
32 | Port Macquarie, NSW | 41,493 |
33 | Tamworth, NSW | 36,132 |
34 | Orange, NSW | 34,991 |
35 | Mildura – Buronga, Vic | 33,434 |
36 | Sunbury, Vic | 33,062 |
37 | Pakenham, Vic | 32,913 |
38 | Dubbo, NSW | 32,326 |
39 | Gladstone, Qld | 32,074 |
40 | Geraldton, WA | 31,348 |
41 | Bathurst, NSW | 31,292 |
42 | Kalgoorlie – Boulder, WA | 30,840 |
43 | Warrnambool, Vic | 29,286 |
44 | Blue Mountains, NSW | 28,770 |
45 | Nowra – Bomaderry, NSW | 27,987 |
46 | Lismore, NSW | 27,475 |
47 | Albany, WA | 26,644 |
48 | Ellenbrook, WA | 25,573 |
49 | Mount Gambier, SA | 25,200 |
50 | Traralgon, Vic | 24,590 |
For the rest of the list, click here to download.
Find detailed demographic information for over 500 Australian communities by visiting the .id Demographic Resource Centre.
A few interesting stats about our top 50 urban areas:
- NSW has 16 entries in the top 50, Victoria and Queensland 11 each, WA 6, Tas and SA 2 each and NT 1 and ACT 1 each.
- The state capital is the largest entry in each state.
- But 5 non-capitals come in ahead of Hobart, and 8 non-capitals come in ahead of Darwin.
- There are 5 urban areas over 1 million, a further 11 over 100,000, and the top 50 neatly cuts off at 25,000.
So what of the smaller places? The ABS defines localities down to 200 people (note that this is the built up area, not the rural surrounding population, this is why places like Taradale in Victoria didn’t make the list – most of the population lives in the rural surrounds, and the “urban” population has fallen below 200 – much to the consternation of the townspeople!
However, because localities are defined by their ENUMERATED population (those counted there on Census night), some places with less than 200 usual residents did make the list. The smallest being Baw Baw Alpine Village, with 23 people. The next smallest were Seventeen Seventy in Queensland, with 75 people, and Willows Gemfields in Queensland with 109 people.
The smallest which properly made the cut, with exactly 200 people, was a tie between Underbool (Vic), Titjikala (NT), and Cecil Plains (Qld).
For all these smaller places, we now have summary profiles available on profile.id – this provides basic Census characteristics for each of these smaller places within your LGA, and enables comparisons of the smaller towns with much larger ones and metropolitan areas. Just select “Summary profiles” in the specialist profiles section of your profile.id site.
Access the Australian Community Profile to find Census results for each Capital City, State, and Australia on topics including population, age, country of birth, languages spoken, occupations, industries, employment, disability, income, qualifications, transport and much more…
Yes, the Top 50 List is certainly addictive! But I think the ‘Urban Centre’ process has some flaws. It also means that Tweed Heads does not feature independently as a major NSW regional centre. In some ways, LGA populations give a better impression of the relative size of regional catchments.
Thanks Robin,
The ABS actually does normally split these by state boundaries when they do the output. So Tweed normally is available (as “Gold Coast-Tweed (Tweed Part)” – I combined the contiguous urban centres that crossed state lines to get a national list in order of population size. The main ones are Albury (45,625)-Wodonga (31,605) and Gold Coast (478,108)-Tweed (55,551). These are the only state-crossing UCLs where both parts would make the top 50 on their own. Others include mostly Murray river towns like Echuca-Moama, Yarrawonga-Mulwala, Barham-Koondrook, and these mostly fall outside the top 50 anyway.
Glenn.. what happened to Caboolture?? Iam sure it is bigger than Nambour??
Strathpine? Redcliffe??
Ipswich??
Caboolture, the suburbs of Redland, Ipswich and Strathpine are all part of the Brisbane urban centre. This is an urban centre view of population – it is created by building up contiguous urban areas. Generally centres with less than a 3km distance between them are merged into a single community, though there are exceptions to this.
Our capital cities now contain many areas which were once separate towns but now form part of the urban area. Eg. the Melbourne urban centre now includes Cranbourne, Berwick, Craigieburn and Werribee. Sydney includes most of the Blue Mountains (it really is continuously urban out to there!), Penrith, Camden and Heathcote. Perth has taken in Midland, Rockingham and Mandurah, and yes, Ipswich is now part of Brisbane.