Referenced by 4 other explainers
Household type shows how people live together at home. It looks at who shares each home.
These figures are Place Forecast estimates based on Census data published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
The six types are:
Most homes fall into one of these six types. Each home is counted once.
Two ABS household groups are left out here. They are Visitor only homes and homes that do not fit a group. The ABS does not publish these groups at the geography we build small areas from. So they cannot flow into the figures. As a result the total here sits a few per cent below the full ABS household count for the area.
These figures cover private homes that are lived in. They leave out empty homes and non-private dwellings such as hotels, hospitals, aged-care homes, or hostels.
The ABS does not publish a Not stated count for household type. Blank answers are added to the published totals.
A household can hold more than one family. When it does, the Census records it using the main family. For example, take a household with grandparents, parents, and children. It may still show as a couple family with children. It depends on how the ties are coded.
This page shows broad household types only. Other ABS datasets show more detail. They cover same-sex couples, de facto couples, step-families, and blended families.
These groups follow ABS classification rules. They may not reflect how people describe or understand their own family.
These figures show how people answered Census questions. Here are the equity caveats to keep in mind. They keep the numbers fair:
See the marker methodology for how these figures are calculated and their limitations.