Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
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Key findings
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (First Nations) people are overrepresented as both victim-survivors and perpetrators of family and domestic violence (that is, violence that occurs within family or intimate relationships) (Cripps 2023). ‘Family violence’ is the preferred term for family and domestic violence within First Nations communities, as it covers the extended families, kinship networks and community relationships in which violence can occur (Cripps and Davis 2012). Family violence can lead to severe social, cultural, spiritual, physical and economic impacts for First Nations communities, especially for women and children (HRSCSPLA 2021).
The National Plan to End Violence against Women and their Children 2022–2032 (the National Plan) has recognised First Nations people as a priority group in their efforts to address, prevent and respond to gender-based violence in Australia (DSS 2022). The National Plan supports measures designed to achieve Target 13 in the National Agreement on Closing the Gap, which is to reduce the rate of all forms of family violence against First Nations women and children by at least 50% by 2031, as progress towards zero (DSS 2022).
In recognition of the high rates of violence First Nations women and children experience, the Australian Government developed:
- a dedicated action plan aimed at reducing the rate of First Nations child abuse and neglect and its intergenerational impacts, namely the Safe and Supported: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander First Action Plan 2023–2026 (DSS 2023)
- the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Action Plan 2023-2025, which aligned with the National Agreement on Closing the Gap (DSS 2024a).
A standalone First Nations National Plan Our Ways – Strong Ways – Our Voices: National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Plan to End Family, Domestic and Sexual Violence 2026–2036 was released in February 2026. This national plan will guide actions towards ending violence against First Nations women and children and will be underpinned by a Monitoring and Evaluation Framework to measure progress toward agreed outcomes (DSS 2026).
This topic page focuses on the prevalence, nature, responses to, and outcomes of, family and sexual violence among First Nations people. For information on these issues for all people in Australia and other population groups, see relevant topic pages across this report.
The Australian Government defines Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as people who: are of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent; identify as being of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin; and are accepted as such in the communities in which they live or have lived. In most data collections, a person is considered to be First Nations if they identified themselves, or were identified by another household member, as being of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin.
The AIHW uses ‘non-Indigenous Australians’ when describing people who are not identified as being of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin, except where people whose Indigenous status is ‘not stated’ have been included with the non-Indigenous group. In this case, ‘other Australians’ will be used.
Capturing accurate data on First Nations people is essential for improving policy formulation, program development and service delivery. The Australian Government is working with First Nations organisations and people to improve the access, relevance and governance arrangements relating to First Nations data (NIAA 2023).
What do we know?
Family violence against First Nations people must be understood as both a cause and effect of social disadvantage and intergenerational trauma (Closing the Gap Clearinghouse 2016).
Factors associated with family violence
There are many factors that may contribute to the risk and experience of family violence. They can include gendered drivers of violence (such as rigid gender norms), demographic factors (such as age and socioeconomic background), mental health history, history of incarceration, alcohol and other drug use, and access to support (DSS 2022; WHO 2010). Meanwhile, factors such as cultural identity, family and kinship, country and caring for country, knowledge and beliefs, language and self-determination are protective towards First Nations people’s health and wellbeing (AIHW 2023).
First Nations people can face unique risk factors that contribute to family violence, with the main underlying drivers intersecting and cumulative.
See also Factors associated with FDSV.
Ongoing impacts of colonisation
Colonisation involves cultural dispossession and the removal of traditional custodians from lands. The ongoing impacts of colonisation for First Nations people include personal, collective and intergenerational trauma, individual and systemic racism and oppression, and the disruption of traditional cultures, relationships and community norms about violence. The dispossession of First Nations people also contributed to racialised structural inequalities of power and the normalisation and perpetration of racist social norms and practices. These risk factors can contribute to and be exacerbated by socio-economic disadvantage, poor physical and mental health, and destructive coping behaviours among First Nations people (Our Watch 2018; Cripps and Davis 2012; DSS 2022; Langton et al. 2020).
Gendered factors
The gendered drivers of violence against First Nations women include the intersection of racism and sexism, and the impacts of patriarchy on gender roles, and interpretation of what constitutes violence against women that can differ from western norms (Our Watch 2018; Langton et al. 2020).
Barriers to reporting or seeking assistance for family violence
Estimates suggest that around 90% of violence against First Nations women and most cases of sexual abuse of First Nations children are undisclosed (Willis 2011). First Nations people can face a range of barriers to reporting violence and accessing formal support, including:
- a lack of supports to build understanding of legal rights and options and how to access support
- discriminatory practices and lack of cultural competency across the support sector
- a different awareness and interpretation of what constitutes violence
- a lack of access to transportation and/or communication channels, especially for those living in rural and remote areas
- fear of child removal if disclosing family violence
- fear that parental separation will threaten cultural connection and community cohesion
- fear of reprisal by perpetrator or ‘payback’ – a form of First Nations customary law aimed at resolving grievances that could lead to violent retribution against the victim-survivor
- fear of losing social or community-controlled housing
- fear of not being believed and misidentification of victim-survivors as perpetrators due to defensive violence
- mistrust of mainstream legal and support services to understand and respect the needs, autonomy and wishes of victim-survivors
- mistrust of First Nations-run service providers to maintain client confidentiality
- community pressure not to report violence to avoid increased incarceration of First Nations men
- communication barriers
- racism and discrimination
- poverty and social isolation
- shame and embarrassment
- belief that support should be sought from kin or people within their inner circle, and/or that the incident is a private matter (Fiolet et al. 2019; Backhouse and Toivonen 2018; Willis 2011; Langton et al. 2020).
The 2021 National Community Attitudes towards Violence against Women Survey (NCAS) included responses from just over 440 First Nations people. While the sample was not representative of all First Nations people in Australia, particularly those living in very remote areas and those who do not speak English, the findings provide insights from survey respondents that relate to barriers to reporting and seeking support among First Nations people. Of First Nations respondents to the NCAS:
- Less than half (44%) agreed that violence against First Nations women is taken seriously by the police and just over 1 in 3 (36%) agreed it is taken seriously by the government.
- Just over half agreed that when First Nations women report violence, fair treatment would be provided by the courts (55%) and police (53%), while just under half (49%) agreed that decisions about the custody of children would be fair.
- Less than half agreed that when First Nations men were accused of violence, fair treatment would be provided by the courts (45%), police (40%) and in decisions about the custody of children (41%) (Coumarelos et al. 2024).
See also How do people respond to FDSV?
What data are available?
Data about the prevalence of family violence among First Nations people come from national surveys and administrative datasets. Some administrative data are available to report on the responses to and impacts of family violence.
The current leading source of data for First Nations people is the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey. However, as the survey is designed to collect data on a broad range of topics, it is unable to produce the breadth of data on family violence available in the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Personal Safety Survey. Information on Indigenous status is not collected in the ABS Personal Safety Survey.
The terminology used for First Nations people in this topic page can vary depending on what is used within the data source.
It is difficult to obtain robust data on experiences of family violence for First Nations children. Due to the sensitive nature of the subject, most large-scale population surveys focus on adults.
The Australian Child Maltreatment Study (ACMS) was a cross-sectional survey on the experience of child maltreatment conducted in 2021. While the ACMS did not exclude First Nations people, it was determined that it was not ethically or methodologically appropriate to disaggregate data by Indigenous status for the survey (Haslam et al. 2023).
As part of the National Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Child Sexual Abuse 2021–2030, the Australian Government has committed to conducting a second wave of the ACMS. This will include specific methods to capture representative data for First Nations people, with a focus on ages 16–24 to produce estimates for recent (past 12 months) child maltreatment (National Office for Child Safety 2021).
- Aboriginal Families Study
- ABS Criminal Courts
- ABS National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey (NATSIHS)
- ABS National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (NATSISS)
- ABS Recorded Crime, Offenders
- ABS Recorded Crime, Victims
- AIC National Homicide Monitoring Program
- AIHW National Hospital Morbidity Database
- AIHW Specialist Homelessness Services (SHS) Collection
- ANROWS Technology-facilitated Abuse study
- Child Protection National Minimum Data Set
- Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children (LSIC)
- Suicides of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Victoria
For more information about these data sources, see Data sources and technical notes.
What do the data tell us?
Physical assault by a family member
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2 in 3
First Nations people aged 15 and over in 2018–19 who had experienced physical harm in the last 12 months reported the perpetrator was an intimate partner or family member
Source: ABS National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey
The latest National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey (NATSIHS, 2018–19) showed that 2 in 3 (67% or 20,800) First Nations people aged 15 and over who had experienced physical harm in the 12 months before the survey reported the perpetrator was a family member (a former or current intimate partner or other family member) (ABS 2019).
ABS Recorded Crime collections are based on crimes recorded by police in each state and territory and published according to the Australian and New Zealand Standard Offence Classification (ANZSOC). Only a select set of crimes are considered for inclusion in the ABS family violence data in the Recorded Crime collections, with individual incidents only included in family violence collections when:
- the relationship of offender to victim falls within a specified family or domestic relationship (spouse or domestic partner, parent, child, sibling, boyfriend/girlfriend or other family member to the offender) and/or
- a family and domestic violence flag has been recorded, following a police investigation and does not contradict any recorded detailed relationship of offender to victim information (see Data sources and technical notes).
The ABS Recorded Crime collections refer to these crimes as “family and domestic violence-related”, while this topic page refers to these crimes as perpetrated “by a family member”.
Recorded Crime – Victims data included in this topic page are only available for New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia. Based on ABS data quality assessment, Indigenous status data for Victoria, Western Australia, Tasmania and the ACT is not of sufficient quality for national reporting. A new crime recording system was introduced in the Northern Territory in November 2023, impacting Indigenous status data quality for the 2023 and 2024 reference periods. As such, 2023 and 2024 Indigenous status data has not been published while these issues are being reviewed.
Recorded Crime – Offenders data included are available for these jurisdictions as well as the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory.
As of 30 June 2021, the proportion of First Nations people living in these jurisdictions include:
- 4.2% (or 340,000) in New South Wales
- 2.9% (or 52,100) in South Australia
- 31% (or 76,500) in the Northern Territory
- 5.2% (or 273,000) in Queensland
- 2.1% (9,500) in the Australian Capital Territory (ABS 2023).
Across jurisdictions with published police-recorded crime data (New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia), in 2024 the victimisation rate of assault by a family member ranged from 1,600 per 100,000 (or 5,600) First Nations people in New South Wales to 5,400 per 100,000 (or 3,000) First Nations people in South Australia (ABS 2025d; Figure 1).
Figure 1: First Nations victims of crimes perpetrated by a family member, for selected states and territories, 2016–2024
Figure 1 shows the rate, number and proportion of First Nations victims of crimes perpetrated by a family member over time for New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and the Northern Territory.
Police-recorded sexual assault
Across jurisdictions with published police-recorded crime data (New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia) in 2024, the victimisation rate of sexual assault ranged from 338 per 100,000 (or 990) First Nations people in Queensland to 485 per 100,000 (or 1,700) First Nations people in New South Wales (ABS 2025d).
Between 2016 and 2024, First Nations victimisation rates for sexual assault varied between states and territories and over time (Figure 2; ABS 2025d).
Figure 2: First Nations victims of sexual assault, for selected states and territories, 2016–2024
Figure 2 shows the rate and number of First Nations victims of sexual assault for New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and the Northern Territory over time.
For sexual assault by a family member, the victimisation rate ranged from 121 per 100,000 (or 66) First Nations people in South Australia to 229 per 100,000 (or 820) First Nations people in New South Wales. Between 2014 and 2024, these rates varied between states and territories and over time (Figure 1; ABS 2025d).
The use of technology
Increasingly, mobile and digital technologies are utilised by perpetrators to facilitate family violence. When interpersonal harms are conducted via technology, such as online harassment, image-based abuse and monitoring behaviours, they are considered technology-facilitated abuse (TFA).
Data on the prevalence of TFA among First Nations people are available from a nationally representative survey of about 4,600 adults in 2022. The survey used random probability-based sampling methods and weighting to allow results to be generalisable to the adult population in Australia (Powell et al. 2022). The survey found that among First Nations respondents:
- 7 in 10 (70%) reported experiencing TFA at least once in their lifetime, compared with 1 in 2 (51%) for all respondents
- 2 in 5 (42%) reported having engaged in TFA perpetration in their lifetime, compared with about 1 in 4 (23%) for all respondents (Powell et al. 2022).
Another form of TFA is sexual extortion. Sexual extortion is a type of blackmail in which the perpetrator threatens to release explicit material of the victim unless they meet specific demands (Wolbers et al. 2025). A 2024 survey of Australian adolescents and online panel members aged 16 to18 years found that 17% of First Nations respondents had a lifetime experience of sexual extortion (Wolbers et al, 2025).
For more information on TFA, see Stalking and surveillance and for more information on sexual extortion, see Children and young people.
What are the responses to family violence?
Responses to family violence include a mix of informal responses (such as contact with friends and family) and formal responses (such as assistance from police, legal services, specialist crisis services, child protection services or health professionals). This section focuses on formal responses due to data availability. For more information on responses to family violence for the general population, see How do people respond to FDSV?
Other than kin and people within the victim-survivor’s inner circle, community-led informal support that prioritise cultural healing also play an important role in First Nations family violence response. Cultural healing processes acknowledge culture as a key protective factor for First Nations people’s health and wellbeing (Backhouse and Toivonen 2018; AIHW 2023). For example, the cultural practices of storytelling and ‘Dadirri’ (‘deep listening’) allow victim-survivors to share their stories in a culturally safe setting, while others are encouraged to listen deeply by connecting with the victim-survivor’s story, reflecting on silence, understanding their pain and respecting their strength (Cripps 2023).
Despite the lack of data on the effectiveness of First Nations-specific family violence responses, existing research have identified effective specialist family violence responses should include:
- community involvement, engagement and acceptance
- cultural competency
- integrated service delivery
- planning for long-term sustainability
- holistic, flexible and trauma-informed approaches
- building on existing culturally appropriate initiatives and community capabilities (Closing the Gap Clearinghouse 2016; SNAICC et al. 2017).
Police
The ABS collates national statistics on crimes recorded by the police relating to victims and offenders of family violence (see Box 3 and Data sources and technical notes for details). Although information on family violence is available from these administrative data sets, a high proportion of family violence is not disclosed to police for a range of reasons, see Barriers to reporting or seeking assistance for family violence. The fear of the consequences of seeking help from police was highlighted in the Parliamentary Inquiry into family, domestic and sexual violence, as it is known that some First Nations victim-survivors were previously criminalised due to misidentification as perpetrators or unrelated offences (such as unpaid fines) when police attended the family violence situation (HRSCSPLA 2021).
A large proportion of assault victims are victims of family violence
Across jurisdictions with published data (New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia) in 2024, the ABS Recorded Crime – Victims data collection found that most First Nations assault victims:
- were victims of family violence-related assault (67–74%)
- identified perpetrators of the assault as partners, including de facto, spouse, boyfriend or girlfriend (27–34%) (ABS 2025d).
Sexual assault victims are most likely to be female and under 18 years old
Most First Nations victims of sexual assault were female (66–85%) in 2024.
Across jurisdictions with published data (New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia) in 2024, First Nations victims of sexual assault were predominantly female, ranging from 66% in South Australia to 85% in Queensland (ABS 2025d).
Except for South Australia, the rate of sexual assault was higher for First Nations people aged under 18 than those aged 18 and over (based on age at report), ranging from 1.5 times as high in Queensland to 2.8 times as high in New South Wales. This is consistent with the pattern for all people in these jurisdictions, but with higher rate ratios, where the rate of sexual assault was 1.8 to 3.2 times as high for people aged under 18 than those aged 18 and over (based on age at report) (ABS 2025d).
Perpetrators of family violence are most likely to be male
The ABS Recorded Crime – Offenders data collection also contains information about people committing offences related to family violence. Data for First Nations offenders are available for New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory only. First Nations offender rates are expressed per 100,000 of the First Nations population aged 10 years and over (for more information on this collection, see Data sources and technical notes).
The FDV offender rate was higher for First Nations males than females, ranging from 2.6 times as high in New South Wales to 3.9 times higher in the Northern Territory (Figure 3; ABS 2025c).
The Indigenous status of perpetrators of violence against First Nations women is not available for reporting. Note that such violence is perpetrated by men of all cultural backgrounds, not just First Nations men (Our Watch 2018).
Figure 3: First Nations offenders of family violence, for selected state and territories, by sex, 2023–24
Figure 3 shows the rate and number of First Nations offenders of family violence for the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland and South Australia.
Perpetrators of sexual assault are usually known to the victim
First Nations victims of sexual assault are likely to know the perpetrator. Across jurisdictions with published data (New South Wales, Queensland and South Australia), the proportion of First Nations victims who knew their perpetrators ranged from 66% in Queensland to 87% in New South Wales in 2023 (ABS 2024).
Legal
Family and domestic violence protection orders
A common legal response to family violence in Australia is to obtain a personal safety intervention order (PSIO) or family and domestic violence protection order (DVO). First Nations people are over-represented within the DVO system as both applicants and respondents (see Box 4).
A domestic violence order (DVO) is a civil order issued by a court that forbids a perpetrator of family violence from committing further abuse against the victim-survivor. It is a criminal offence to breach a DVO. A Queensland study analysed the DVOs that were established in civil courts and those that were referred to criminal courts during 2013–14. The people named as perpetrators in these DVOs were offered the opportunity to self-report their Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status.
In 2013–14, almost 23,500 people were named as perpetrators in DVOs issued in Queensland, of whom 1 in 5 (21%) identified as First Nations people. First Nations women were slightly more likely to be named as perpetrators than non-Indigenous women (23% of First Nations perpetrators and 20% of non-Indigenous perpetrators).
DVOs taken out against First Nations people were more likely to have been lodged by the police. Of all DVOs lodged in Queensland, 79% were initiated by the police, and in cases where the perpetrator identified as First Nations, 90% were initiated by the police. In 2013–14, about 6,900 people were defendants facing criminal charges for contravening a DVO in Queensland, of whom 1 in 3 (34%) identified as First Nations people. The proportion of defendants found guilty was similar for First Nations defendants (89%) and all defendants (88%). However, a higher proportion of First Nations defendants received a custodial order (43%), compared with all defendants (27%).
For more information on DVOs, see Legal systems.
Source: Douglas & Fitzgerald 2018.
Most First Nations defendants who go to court for family violence offences are found guilty
Data from the ABS Criminal Courts, Australia, 2023–24 data set are available for First Nations defendants who had one or more family violence cases finalised in criminal courts in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory. Finalised defendants include all individuals for whom charges have been formally completed by a court. These defendants may be acquitted, found guilty, or had their cases withdrawn or transferred. To avoid double counting of defendants who were transferred and subsequently finalised by another method, transfers are excluded in the calculation of proportions (ABS 2025b).
The proportion of First Nations defendants who were found guilty were:
- 93% (7,200) in Queensland
- 87% (3,200) in the Northern Territory
- 75% (7,800) in New South Wales
- 75% (270) in Tasmania
- 67% (65) in the Australian Capital Territory
- 46% (680) in South Australia (Figure 4; ABS 2025b).
Figure 4: First Nations defendants of family violence offences finalised in criminal courts, by method of finalisation, for selected states and territories, 2023–24
Figure 4 shows the number of First Nations defendants of family violence offences finalised in criminal courts by method of finalisation for New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory.
Acts intended to cause injury was the most common principal offence among First Nations family violence defendants
Acts intended to cause injury are acts intended to cause non-fatal physical injury or mental harm to another person and where there is no sexual or acquisitive element. This includes behaviours such as physical assault and stalking (ABS 2011).
Across jurisdictions with available data, in 2023-24, among First Nations family violence defendants, the most common principal offence was acts intended to cause injury ranging from 45% of defendants in Tasmania to 67% in South Australia. The exception was Queensland, where 62% of First Nations family violence defendants had a principal offence of breach of violence orders (ABS 2025b).
Hospitalisations
Information on the cause/s of injury (such as assault) is not available in national emergency department data. Therefore, hospitalisations data do not include presentations to emergency departments, and underestimate overall hospital activity related to family violence. These hospitalisations also relate to more severe (and mostly physical) experiences of family violence.
Data on hospitalisations of First Nations people involving treatment for family violence assault (‘family violence hospitalisations’) come from the AIHW National Hospital Morbidity Database (NHMD). An expanded scope for identifying family violence in admitted patient care data was developed and implemented for reporting in 2025. Data reported using the expanded method are not comparable to previous versions of this webpage and/or hospitalisations data reported for the National Plan Outcomes or Closing the Gap. See Health services for more information on how FDV hospitalisations are measured.
Among First Nations people, in 2023–24:
- There were about 4,400 family violence hospitalisations (3,400 females and 1,000 males).
- The rate of family violence hospitalisations among females (668 per 100,000) was 3.5 times as high as the rate for males (193 per 100,000).
- The rates of family violence hospitalisations fluctuated slightly in the 5 years to 2023–24, with a decrease during the COVID-19 pandemic between 2020–21 and 2021–22 (461 to 379 per 100,000 First Nations people, respectively). In 2023–24, the upward trend observed from 2022–23 continued (Figure 5).
These patterns are similar to the total population rates of FDV hospitalisations in the same time period (see Health services).
Figure 5: Family violence hospitalisations among First Nations people, by sex, 2019–20 to 2023–24
Figure 5 shows the number and rate of family violence hospitalisations among First Nations men and women over time.
Most hospitalisations involving assault were a result of family violence
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Nearly 3 in 4 hospitalisations involving assault of First Nations people in 2023–24 were due to family violence
Source: AIHW National Hospital Morbidity Database
Of hospitalisations involving assault of First Nations people in 2023–24, nearly 3 in 4 (72%, or 4,400) were due to family violence. Among hospitalisations involving treatment for family violence assault (‘family violence hospitalisations’):
- More than 2 in 5 (43% or 2,700) were due to assault by a spouse or domestic partner.
- 1 in 4 (25% or 1,500) were due to assault by an ‘other’ family member (excludes partner and parent).
- 4.4% (or 270) were due to assault by a parent (AIHW 2025a).
This varied by age group, with First Nations people most likely to be treated in hospital for an assault by:
- a parent, for children aged 0–14 years (58%)
- their spouse or domestic partner, for those aged 15 to 54 years (proportions ranged from 34%–51%)
- an ‘other’ family member, for those aged 55–64 (43%) and 65+ years (40%) (AIHW 2025a).
For First Nations females aged 15 and over, a spouse or domestic partner was the most commonly reported perpetrator for family violence hospitalisations (56%, or 2,300). The highest rate of hospitalisations for assault by a spouse or domestic partner was reported for females aged 35–44 (1,200 per 100,000 population) (Figure 6).
For First Nations males aged 15 and over, an ‘other’ family member (that is, other than a spouse, domestic partner or parent) was the most commonly reported perpetrator for family violence hospitalisations (30%, or 540 cases). The highest rate of assault by an ‘other’ family member was reported for males aged 35–44 (245 per 100,000 population) (Figure 6).
Figure 6: Family violence hospitalisations among First Nations people, by relationship to perpetrator, 2023–24
Figure 6 shows the number and rate of family violence hospitalisations among First Nations people, by relationship to perpetrator.
Related data are included in the National Plan Outcomes measures:
Note, data reported here are not comparable with the National Plan Outcomes measures due to differences in the scope of data reported (see Health services for more information).
Most hospitalisations involving treatment for family violence were due to assault by bodily force
In 2023–24, of family violence hospitalisations among First Nations people:
- about 58% (or 2,000) of those for females and 39% (385) of those for males, were due to assault by bodily force (excluding sexual assault by bodily force)
- one-third (32%) of those for females were due to assault with an object: 21% (740) with a blunt object and 10% (355) with a sharp object
- almost half (48%) of those for males were due to assault with an object: 27% (270) with a sharp object and 21% (210) with a blunt object
- hanging, strangulation and suffocation was specified as the cause of injuries for 190 (5.6%) of those for females (AIHW 2025a).
Head and/or neck injuries were the most common injuries inflicted by a family member
This section is restricted to only cases of hospitalisation in which the injury caused by the assault was the main reason for admission (or principal diagnosis). For more information, see Health services.
In 2023-24, among hospitalisations of First Nations people aged 15 and over for assault-related injuries perpetrated by any family member, injuries to the head or neck accounted for:
- 70% (2,000) of hospitalisations for females (310 for brain injury)
- 56% (430) of hospitalisations for males (71 for brain injury) (Figure 7; AIHW 2025a).
Figure 7: Family violence hospitalisations among First Nations people, by type of injury and sex, 2023–24
| Type of injury | Male | Female |
|---|---|---|
| Head and/or neck | 56.0% | 70.4% |
| Trunk | 21.5% | 24.6% |
| Shoulder, arm and/or hand | 36.2% | 33.2% |
| Hip, leg and/or foot | 17.0% | 21.4% |
| Burns | 1.0% | 0.9% |
For more information, see Data sources and technical notes.
Source:
AIHW NHMD
|
Data source overview
First Nations people living in Remote and very remote areas were more likely to be hospitalised due to family violence than those living in Major cities
In Remote and very remote areas in 2023–24, the rate of family violence hospitalisations was:
- about 2,500 per 100,000 (or 1,900) for First Nations females, compared with 350 per 100,000 (or 780) for those living in Inner and outer regional areas and 275 per 100,000 (or 580) in Major cities
- 780 per 100,000 (or 600) for First Nations males, compared with 94 per 100,000 (or 215) for those living in Inner and outer regional areas and 67 per 100,000 (or 145) in Major cities (AIHW 2025a).
First Nations people were more likely to have a family violence hospitalisation than non-Indigenous Australians
In 2023–24, the age-standardised rate of family violence hospitalisations for First Nations people (485 per 100,000) was 26 times the rate for non-Indigenous Australians (19 per 100,000).
The age-standardised rate of family violence hospitalisations for:
- First Nations females (750 per 100,000, or 3,400) was 27 times as high as for non-Indigenous females (28 per 100,000, or 3,600)
- First Nations males (220 per 100,000, or 1,000) was 23 times as high as for non-Indigenous males (9.6 per 100,000, or 1,200) (AIHW 2025a).
Specialist homelessness services
Specialist homelessness services (SHS) provide assistance to people who are experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness, including clients who have experienced family violence. Data on people receiving support from SHS agencies are drawn from the AIHW Specialist Homelessness Services Collection (SHSC).
Family violence is one of the main reasons First Nations clients seek assistance
Of the 282,000 clients who received SHS support in 2024–25 and whose Indigenous status was known, about 82,900 (29%) were First Nations people. Of these First Nations clients:
- 25% (20,400) cited family violence as their main reason for seeking assistance
- 28% (23,300) requested assistance for family violence (AIHW 2025d).
The rate of First Nations SHS clients who experienced family violence increased from 277 per 10,000 people in 2016–17 to 328 per 10,000 people in 2024–25 (Figure 8; AIHW 2025e), and was consistently higher for females than males.
Changes over time should be interpreted with caution – changes in the number of First Nations clients over time may reflect improved reporting of Indigenous status among people receiving SHS support; changes in practice may result in a decrease in FDV client numbers since 2017–18 (AIHW 2025d).
Figure 8: First Nations specialist homelessness services clients who have experienced family violence, by sex, 2016–17 to 2024–25
Figure 8 shows the rate and number of First Nations specialist homelessness services clients who have experienced family violence over time by sex.
In 2024–25, the rate of First Nations SHS clients who experienced family violence was highest for females aged 25–34 (800 per 10,000 people). Among First Nations male SHS clients, those aged 0–9 had the highest rate (392 per 10,000 people) (Figure 9; AIHW 2025e).
Figure 9: First Nations specialist homelessness services clients who have experienced family violence, by age group, 2024–25
Figure 9 shows the rate and number of First Nations specialist homelessness services clients who have experienced family violence by age group for the latest year of data.
For more information on family violence among SHS clients, see Housing.
Child protection
First Nations children are over-represented in Australia’s child protection system due to multiple overlapping factors caused by colonisation, systemic racism, and inequality in social determinants of health and wellbeing (SNAICC et al. 2023).
In 2023–24, around 57,800 (146 per 1,000) First Nations children (aged 0–17 years) came into contact with the child protection system. This rate increased from 145 per 1,000 children in 2019–20 to 151 per 1,000 in 2020–21 and has been steadily decreasing since (AIHW 2025b).
There were 42,100 children who were the subjects of substantiations of maltreatment in 2023–24. Of these children, around 13,000 were First Nations (33 per 1,000) and 27,500 were non-Indigenous (5.1 per 1,000). For First Nations children:
- Emotional abuse was the most common primary type of abuse substantiated (51%), followed by neglect (29%), physical abuse (11%) and sexual abuse (7.7%).
- The rate of substantiations of child maltreatment was higher for infants aged less than one year (60 per 1,000) and lowest for adolescents aged 15–17 years (15 per 1,000) (Figure 10; AIHW 2025b).
Figure 10: First Nations children who were the subject of substantiations, by age, 2023–24
Figure 10 shows the rate and number of First Nations children who were the subject of substantiations, by age group.
At 30 June 2024, around 2 in 5 children on care and protection orders or in out-of-home care were First Nations people (42% or around 25,000 children and 5% or around 20,000 children, respectively) (AIHW 2025b).
See Child protection for more information.
What are the impacts and outcomes of family violence?
Family violence has been associated with a range of negative health impacts, including higher rates of miscarriage, pre-term birth and low birthweight, as well as other long-term health consequences for women and children (WHO 2011). See Health outcomes, Behavioural outcomes and Economic and financial impacts for more information.
There are limited national longitudinal data on the impacts and outcomes of family violence in First Nations communities, particularly for children.
Burden of disease
Burden of disease measures the impact of living with and dying prematurely from a disease or injury. According to the First Nations component of the 2018 Australian Burden of Disease Study (ABDS, see Box 6):
- Child abuse and neglect contributed to 5.1% of the total disease burden and around 80 deaths for First Nations people.
- Among First Nations women, intimate partner violence (IPV) contributed to 4.5% of the total disease burden and around 30 deaths (AIHW 2022a).
The Australian Burden of Disease Study (ABDS) 2018 estimated the impact of various diseases, injuries and risk factors on total burden of disease for the Australian and First Nations population. It combines health loss from living with illness and injury (non-fatal burden, or YLD) and dying prematurely (fatal burden, or YLL) to estimate total health loss (total burden, or DALY) (see Glossary).
The ABDS includes estimates of the contribution made by selected risk factors on the disease burden in Australia, including intimate partner violence (IPV) and child abuse and neglect. The disease burden due to IPV is currently only available for females, as there is not sufficient published research indicating a causal link between disease burden and the risk of IPV for males.
Source: AIHW 2021
For more information on how burden of disease is determined, see Australian Burden of Disease Study: impact and causes of illness and death in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people 2018, Summary.
Diseases/injuries that were causally linked to IPV
The ABDS 2018 estimated the amount of disease burden that could have been avoided if no First Nations women aged 15 and over in Australia experienced IPV. IPV was causally linked to:
- depressive disorders (IPV contributing to 20% of depressive disorders total burden in females)
- anxiety disorders (26%)
- early pregnancy loss (28%)
- homicide and violence (injuries due to violence) (62%)
- suicide and self-inflicted injuries (32%)
- alcohol use (10%) (AIHW 2022a).
The burden attributable to IPV for First Nations women (age-standardised DALY rate of 14 per 1,000 people) was 6.1 times the rate for non-Indigenous women (age-standardised DALY rate of 2.3 per 1,000 people). IPV contributed to 5.8% of the total health gap (as measured by the DALY rate difference between First Nations and non-Indigenous women) (AIHW 2022a).
Diseases/injuries that were causally linked to child abuse and neglect
Child abuse and neglect among First Nations people was causally linked to:
- anxiety disorders (contributing to 35% of anxiety disorders burden)
- depressive disorders (31%)
- suicide and self-inflicted injuries (41%) (AIHW 2022a).
The burden attributable to child abuse and neglect for First Nations people (age-standardised DALY rate of 16 per 1,000 people) was 3.9 times the rate for non-Indigenous people (age-standardised DALY rate of 4.0 per 1,000 people). Child abuse and neglect contributed to 5.2% of the total health gap (as measured by the DALY rate difference between First Nations and non-Indigenous people) (AIHW 2022a).
Family violence is associated with high psychological distress in First Nations mothers
The Aboriginal Families Study (see Box 7) identified high rates of social health issues affecting Aboriginal women and families in South Australia during pregnancy, and high levels of associated psychological distress after the birth of their babies. One in 4 Aboriginal women (25%, or 83) reported high to very high psychological distress after the birth of their baby, which is higher than estimates of maternal psychological distress among the general population (Weetra et al. 2016).
More than 1 in 2 (56%) Aboriginal women had experienced 3 or more stressful events and social health issues during pregnancy, and more than 1 in 4 (27%) had experienced 5–12 issues. A large number of Aboriginal women reported experiences of family or community conflict during pregnancy:
- 1 in 3 (30%, or 100) had been scared by other people’s behaviour
- 1 in 4 (26%, or 90) had left home due to a family argument
- 1 in 6 (16%, or 53) had been physically assaulted (Weetra et al. 2016).
The average age of participating mothers in the study was 25, with an age range of 15–43 (Weetra et al. 2016). First Nations mothers are, on average, younger than non-Indigenous mothers. Of all the mothers who gave birth in 2021, the average maternal age for First Nations mothers was about 27 years, compared with about 31 years for non-Indigenous mothers. A higher proportion of First Nations mothers were teenagers (10%), compared with 1.1% of non-Indigenous mothers (AIHW 2022b).
The Aboriginal Families Study investigates the health and wellbeing of 344 Aboriginal children born between July 2011 to June 2013 and their mothers living in South Australia. It is being conducted as a partnership between the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, the Aboriginal Health Council of South Australia and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute. An Aboriginal Advisory Group has been guiding the development and conduct of the study. The study is expected to be completed in December 2023.
As part of the study, the mothers completed a questionnaire in the first year after the birth of their children about experiences of family and community violence during pregnancy. The questionnaire included measures of stressful events (such as serious illness or injury) and social health issues (such as housing problems, trouble with police, and drug and alcohol problems) during pregnancy, and maternal psychological distress were assessed using the Kessler-5 scale. They completed a follow-up questionnaire focused on experiences of intimate partner violence when the children were aged 5–8 years, which were measured using a culturally adapted version of the Composite Abuse Scale.
For more information on the experiences of mothers and children, see Mothers and their children.
Source: ANROWS 2023; Weetra et al. 2016.
Preliminary findings from the follow-up questionnaire (based on 170 of the women) found that about 2 in 5 (37%) had experienced any violence from a current or former partner in the previous 12 months (partner violence):
- 1 in 3 (30%) had experienced psychological violence
- 1 in 4 (25%) had experienced physical violence
- about 1 in 4 (26%) had experienced financial abuse
- about 1 in 5 (19%) had experienced all three types of partner violence (Brown et al. 2021).
A higher proportion of women who were single (59%) reported partner violence compared with women who were living with a partner (20%) (Brown et al. 2021).
Witnessing family conflict is associated with social and emotional difficulties among First Nations children
The Longitudinal Study of Indigenous Children (LSIC) is a study among First Nations children of how a child’s early years affect their development. The study has interviewed participating families every year since 2008 and includes a sizeable population of First Nations children and their families across Australia; however, it is not based on a representative sample (DSS 2024b). The primary carers were asked about their relationship with their partners in Wave 3 (2010) and again in Wave 6 (2013) (Kneebone 2015).
Among the surveyed families of between 1,200 and 1,700 First Nations children, 1 in 5 (20%) reported that their children had been upset by family arguments in the last year, with this proportion consistent over time. These children were significantly more likely to experience social and emotional difficulties (as measured by a Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire), compared with children whose parents did not report them being upset by family arguments (Kneebone 2015).
Children whose parents have had violent arguments were also more likely to experience social and emotional difficulties compared with those whose parents did not report violent arguments; however, the difference was only statistically significant in Wave 3 (Kneebone 2015).
More First Nations women are killed by partners than First Nations men
The National Homicide Monitoring Program recorded 29 First Nations victims of domestic homicide in 2024–25:
- 18 victims were killed by an intimate partner
- 5 victims were the child of the offender
- 1 victim was the parent of the offender
- 1 victim was killed by a sibling
- 4 victims were killed by other relatives (Bricknell and Miles 2026).
Most (81% or 13) First Nations female victims of domestic homicide were killed by an intimate partner. Almost 2 in 5 (38% or 5) First Nations male victims of domestic homicide were killed by an intimate partner. All First Nations victims who were killed by an ‘Other relative’ were male (Bricknell and Miles 2026; Figure 11). These data should be interpreted with caution due to small numbers.
Related data are included in the National Plan Outcomes measures:
Figure 11: First Nations domestic homicide victims, by type of homicide and sex of victim, 2024–25
| Victim relationship with offender | Male victim | Female victim | Persons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intimate partner | 5 | 13 | 18 |
| Child | 3 | 2 | 5 |
| Parent | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Sibling | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Other relative | 4 | 0 | 4 |
Note:
'Child' includes victims who were adult children of offender.
For more information, see Data sources and technical notes.
Source:
AIC NHMP
|
Data source overview
A 2024 study by the AIC analysed 34 years of NHMP data to describe the prevalence and characteristics of homicide of First Nations women. Between 1 July 1989 and 30 June 2023, 460 First Nations women were the victims of homicide. Of these victims:
- Almost all (97% or 445) knew the primary offender.
- Almost 3 in 4 (72% or 330) were killed by their intimate partner, most of whom (92% or 300) were their current partner.
- Around 1 in 8 (13% or 58) were killed by other family members, including their parent or sibling (each 3% or 15) (Bricknell and Miles 2024).
Data used by the Australian Domestic and Family Violence Death Review Network, which only includes intimate partner homicides that had a history of violence between the offender and victim, indicate that:
- of the 240 female victims of homicide by a male intimate partner, 1 in 4 (25%) were First Nations women
- of the 65 male victims of homicide by a female intimate partner, 2 in 5 (40%) were First Nations men (ADFVDRN and ANROWS 2022).
For more information, see Domestic homicide.
Police-recorded crime data for homicide and related offences by a family member were available for New South Wales and South Australia in 2024. There were no homicides by a family member recorded for First Nations people in New South Wales. The victimisation rate of homicide and related offences by a family member was 5.5 per 100,000 First Nations people in South Australia (ABS 2025d; Figure 1).
Family violence is a risk factor for suicide
Violent behaviour is a risk factor for suicide, regardless of the presence of other mental health conditions or substance use (Cripps 2023). The Coroners Court of Victoria identified experience of abuse (85%), conflicts with family members (55%), conflicts with a partner (49%) and experiences of family violence with a partner (49%) as some of the major interpersonal and contextual stressors among First Nations people who died by suicide from 2018 to 2021. The court also found that 1 in 3 (34%) First Nations people who died by suicide had a childhood history of exposure to family violence, including witnessing and/or experiencing family violence during childhood (Coroners Court of Victoria 2023).
Is it the same for everyone?
The risk and experience of family violence among First Nations people can vary. Different aspects of a person’s identity (such as gender, socioeconomic status and disability) can expose the individual to overlapping and/or increased sources of discrimination and marginalisation, which can lead to increased risk and severity of family violence (Victoria State Government 2019).
Although national data on the experiences of family violence among First Nations people who also belong to other population groups are limited, some data are available for First Nations people with disability and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, Sistergirl or Brotherboy (LGBTIQASB+) First Nations people.
See Factors associated with FDSV for more information on intersecting risk factors associated with family violence.
First Nations people with disability
The proportion of First Nations people with disability is higher than for non-Indigenous Australians, however estimates vary (AIHW 2025c). Among First Nations adults with disability who responded to the 2022 Survey of Disability, Ageing and Carers, 1 in 5 (20%) reported they had experienced at least one form of abuse or neglect in the past 12 months. One in 6 (17%) reported emotional abuse and 1 in 10 (9.8%) reported physical abuse (ABS 2025a).
The latest National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (NATSISS, 2014–15) showed that First Nations people who reported experiencing physical violence by a family member in the past 12 months were more likely to have disability. Among First Nations people who reported physical violence from a family member, more than half (54%, or 17,700) had a disability. More than half (56%, or 12,800) women and just under half (49%, or 4,800) men who experienced physical violence from a family member in the last 12 months had a disability. However, this result should be interpreted with caution due to small sample sizes (ABS 2016).
For more information on family violence among people with disability, see People with disability.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, asexual, Sistergirl or Brotherboy (LGBTIQASB+) First Nations people
Brotherboy and Sistergirl are terms used by First Nations people to describe gender diverse people who have a male and female spirit that take on male and female roles within the community respectively.
There are no national data on the prevalence of family violence among LGBTIQASB+ First Nations people. However, it is known that First Nations LGBTIQASB+ communities experience a range of significant and intersecting points of discrimination and marginalisation (DSS 2022). A qualitative study on First Nations LGBTIQASB+ people’s experiences of family violence found a high prevalence of violence experienced by LGBTIQASB+ people, where intimidation, bullying and threats of violence were commonly used to make the victim-survivor feel unsafe or excluded and/or force the victim-survivor to hide their gender identity and sexual orientation. The study also found that negative reactions and behaviours were reported more within extended families, older generations and rural or remote communities (Soldatic et al. 2023).
For more information on family violence among LGBTIQA+ people, see LGBTIQA+ people.
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