Projected population by local government area and five-year age group and sex, Queensland, 30 June, 2006 to 2031
Presented in the Excel and CSV files at the bottom of this page are population projections by 5-year age groups and sex (males, females and persons) for Queensland local government areas based on the 2012 Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS).
Population projections are based on assumptions concerning future fertility, mortality and migration patterns for each age group. Assuming low levels of growth (low rates of fertility, low life expectancy, low levels of in-migration and high levels of out-migration) will result in a lower total population being projected. The high series of population projections result from assuming high levels of growth. The low and the high series projections form the upper and lower limits of likely population futures. The medium series population projections are mid-way between these limits and generally form the most likely long-term scenario for population change.
To learn more about the approach used to prepare population projections and gain a better understanding of the concepts and definitions used with this particular dataset, please refer to the Queensland Government population projections reference information link listed in the Related Pages section below.
Revision note
The high series data on this page were reissued on 31 July 2012 with corrections made to some of the figures contained in these tables.
| Release | Type | File Size |
|---|---|---|
| Projected population (all series) by local government area and five-year age group and sex, Queensland, 30 June, 2006 to 2031 | xls | (665 kB) |
| Medium series only | csv | (1,360 kB) |
| Low series only | csv | (1,285 kB) |
| High series only | csv | (1,485 kB) |
If you need help with any of the file types above, please see our help page.
Revision note
The high series data on this page were reissued on 31 July 2012 with corrections made to some of the figures contained in these tables.
More Information
For further information about this page please use the Request a Statistic form or phone (07) 3035 6418.
Last reviewed 31 July 2012
