This section provides answers to commonly asked questions about the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
The Consumer Price Index (CPI)
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is regarded as Australia's key measure of inflation. It is an important economic indicator that measures the change in the price of a 'basket' of goods and services, which account for expenditure by households in capital cities. This 'basket' covers the following 11 categories of goods and services:
- Food and non-alcoholic beverages
- Alcohol and tobacco
- Clothing and footwear
- Housing
- Furnishings, household equipment and services
- Health
- Transport
- Communication
- Recreation and culture
- Education
- Insurance and financial services
The CPI is a general measure of inflation based on the change in prices of goods and services purchased by Australian households. It is widely used to inform governments, businesses, and the community about the change in inflation facing Australian households. The CPI provides policy and decision-makers with data and insights necessary to inform monetary and fiscal policy settings. The CPI is the measure used by the Reserve Bank of Australia for its inflation target.
The quarterly CPI is released every three months throughout the year, with quarters ending March, June, September and December. It is released on the last Wednesday of the month following the end of the reference quarter.
Australia’s CPI aligns with the recommended international standards and methods set out by the International Monetary Fund in Consumer Price Index Manual, 2020 – Concepts and Methods. The exception to these standards is that Australia currently publishes CPI on a quarterly basis while the standard is that it should be monthly. Australia is moving to a complete monthly CPI in late 2025. For more information see: About the complete monthly CPI design | Australian Bureau of Statistics (abs.gov.au).
The CPI measures the average inflation experience
The CPI is designed to provide a summary measure of how the prices of goods and services purchased by Australian households change over time. The prices for a representative ‘basket’ of goods and services are combined to form indexes using weights derived from the amounts spent by all capital city households on each item. As such, the CPI is not designed to represent any specific type of household, family or individual. For example, the CPI includes both rental and owner-occupier house purchase costs in the basket, which would not be typical for a single household. It is, therefore, unlikely that any individual experience will correspond precisely with either the national CPI or the CPI for specific capital cities.
More information is available in "Coverage and classifications" Consumer Price Index: Concepts, Sources and Methods.
The CPI Monthly Indicator
Since October 2022, the ABS also publishes a monthly CPI indicator alongside the quarterly CPI. Except for the November month publication (which is released in January), the monthly Indicator is released on the last Wednesday of the month after the reference month.
The monthly CPI indicator provides a timelier and more frequent measure of inflation compared to the quarterly CPI. The same prices data collected for the quarterly CPI is also used to produce the monthly indicator. It's referred to as an 'indicator' as the measure represents up-to-date prices for around two-thirds of the CPI basket each month rather than the full CPI basket being measured each month.
The decision to introduce a monthly indicator was in response to user requests for more timely CPI data, given the high levels of inflation in recent years. This decision meant Australia is now aligned to most advanced countries in the world that currently publish a monthly CPI.
The ABS will move to publishing a complete monthly CPI from late 2025. Quarterly CPI figures will also continue to be published.
More information is available in "Coverage and classifications" Consumer Price Index: Concepts, Sources and Methods.
For more information, visit these links below:
Monthly Consumer Price Index Indicator, June 2024 | Australian Bureau of Statistics (abs.gov.au)
About the complete monthly CPI design | Australian Bureau of Statistics (abs.gov.au)
How CPI data is used
The CPI is Australia’s main measure of inflation. It is used by governments to inform fiscal and monetary policies. It is also used by economists and financial markets to understand the level of inflation. One of the main uses of the CPI is to guide the Reserve Bank of Australia’s monetary policy decisions “to achieve an inflation rate of 2–3 per cent”.
The CPI is often used to adjust pensions, subsidies and prices charged for goods and services to counter the effects of inflation. This process is referred to as 'indexation'. In particular, governments use the CPI to index a number of social welfare payments and benefits. Indexation arrangements are also often applied to such things as rental agreements, wage negotiations, insurance cover and child support payments.
For more information, please refer to Inflation Target RBA.
Where to find CPI data
The latest CPI data can be found in Consumer Price Index, Australia. The latest release contains key statistics, data for different categories of spending (e.g. food, clothes, etc.) and insights into what are the main contributions to CPI inflation. To find headline CPI numbers, percentage change from the previous quarter and annual percentage change from the corresponding quarter of the previous year, head to the 'Main Features' section of the release.
You can also download current and historical CPI data from the 'Data Downloads' section of the release. Here you can download price indexes for each State and Territory capital city and more detailed products such as rents, their percentage changes and the relative contribution of these indexes to the change in the All Groups index. These detailed tables are available as Microsoft Excel time series and spreadsheets.
Accessing CPI information
You can access all published CPI data for free on the ABS website (abs.gov.au).
Additional information and support
If you need more detailed information or would like to speak with someone, you can contact the National Information and Referral Service at 1300 135 070. Alternatively, you can email client.services@abs.gov.au.
You may also refer to the following for further information:
Information published in the CPI
The CPI includes a range of commentary and analysis for users in the ‘Main contributors to change’ and ‘Capital cities comparison’ each quarter. In addition, the CPI includes several Excel workbooks available in the ‘Data downloads’ section that contain price indexes, percentage changes, and contributions to change that covers:
- the headline ‘All Groups CPI’
- 11 groups (e.g. Food and non-alcoholic beverages, Clothing and footwear, Health),
- 33 sub-groups (e.g. Fruit and vegetables, Footwear, Dental and hospital services)
- 87 Expenditure classes (e.g. Fruit, Footwear for infants and children, Dental services).
These items are available for the eight State and Territory capital cities, as well as the weighted average of the eight capital cities. A complete list of the CPI groups, subgroups and expenditure classes can be found in the tables in the “Data download” link at the top right-hand corner of the CPI publication or via the left hand navigation bar.
For further information, explore the various downloadable files in the “Data download” link at the top right-hand corner of the CPI publication or via the left hand navigation bar.
CPI Geographic Coverage
The CPI for the eight State and Territory capital cities are defined by the Greater Capital City Statistical Area in the Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS). A weighted average of the eight capital cities is produced to provide a national CPI.
The Australian CPI focuses on capital cities because they contain the majority of the population and are the main hubs of economic activity, making data collection more feasible and cost effective.
For more information, refer to “Coverage and classifications" Consumer Price Index: Concepts, Sources and Methods, or the Main Structure and Greater Capital City Statistical Areas.
The CPI measures inflation for capital city households in Australia. This means it might not reflect the inflation experience for people living in rural and regional areas.
Sampling and non-sampling error
Sampling error: The CPI looks at price changes based on a sample of items, not every transaction. This means the published indexes might not be exactly what they would have been if every household’s spending was included. Sampling errors are about how accurate the index is, not mistakes in working it out.
Non-sampling errors: These happen because of problems in collecting price data, delays in surveys, defining concepts, and handling quality changes. The ABS works hard to reduce these errors.
The CPI uses a set basket of goods and services which does not consider people’s substitution to cheaper goods and services when prices rise. This can affect how it represents changes in living costs. Every year, the weights for different items are updated. Additionally, the ABS has implemented multilateral methods for 28 expenditure classes, mostly for food, which weights products at the elementary level using expenditure shares. These enhancements alleviate the substitution effect.
For more details, refer to Maintaining the relevance of the CPI.
A history of the CPI in Australia
The first fully compiled CPI was published in 1960, with the series extended back to 1948. The CPI was preceded by five series of retail price indexes compiled by the then Commonwealth Bureau of Census and Statistics over one hundred years ago. These series were titled A, B, C and D series, and the Interim Retail Price Index respectively. The C Series Index, which began in 1921, was the principal retail price index in Australia prior to the introduction of the CPI in 1960.
The introduction of the CPI heralded a change in the approach to measuring retail price movements. Rather than compiling a set of discrete fixed-weighted indexes, the objective became to produce a series of short-term fixed-weighted indexes that were to be regularly linked together to provide a single continuous measure of price change. This strategy was adopted to ensure that, at any point in time, the weighting patterns and item coverage of the CPI were relevant to user requirements and reflected contemporary economic conditions as well as possible. The CPI now comprises seventeen linked indexes. The CPI originally consisted of weights from 1948. Weights were updated in 1952 and subsequently in 1956, 1960, 1963, 1968, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1982, 1987, 1992, 1998, 2000, 2005, 2011 and 2017. From 2018 the CPI weights are updated annually, to reflect what the average consumers spends their money on.
For the 13th series CPI in 1998, it was decided that the CPI would change from a measure of the change in living costs of employee households to a general measure of price inflation for the household sector. Consequently, the population coverage was expanded from wage and salary earner households to include all metropolitan households.
A key change to the Australian CPI's principal purpose in 1998
The Australian CPI is compiled according to international standards and is based on robust data collection and compilation methodologies. Prior to 1998, the CPI was compiled primarily to be used for income adjustment through wage indexation. This had implications for the coverage and design of the index. It was limited to the expenditures made by households whose principal source of income was wages. The CPI basket also included mortgage interest payments to measure the change in the cost of owner-occupied housing.
Since 1998, the principal purpose of the CPI has been to measure inflation faced by households to support macro-economic policy decision making. The CPI now covers the expenditures of all households, not just those whose principal source of income is wages, as was the case before 1998). To measure owner-occupied housing costs, mortgage interest payments were replaced with new dwelling construction costs in the CPI basket.
In recognition of the interest in the extent to which the impact of price change varies across different groups in the community, in addition to the CPI, the ABS compiles Selected Living Cost Indexes, Australia.
The SLCIs measure out-of-pocket living expenses incurred by selected population sub-groups of Australian households. The most notable difference between these indexes and the CPI is that the living cost indexes include interest charges instead of new dwelling purchases, while the CPI includes new dwelling purchases instead of interest charges. For more information refer to the Methodology within the Selected Living Cost Indexes, Australia.
More information regarding the reasons for the change to the CPI is available in Information Paper: Outcome of the 13th Series Australian Consumer Price Index Review, 1997.
For more information on the history of the CPI, visit these resources below: