*PBI = Public Benevolent Institution — charities that provide direct relief to people in need. PBIs receive the highest level of tax concession: donors can claim deductions (DGR status), and the charity gets FBT exemptions and GST concessions.
01The Size Pyramid
Australia's charity sector is shaped like a steep pyramid. Large charities — just 10% of all registered charities — control 92.2% of total revenue. The 42,740 small charities that form the base of the pyramid share just 2.2% of resources.
This isn't just a scale difference. It's a structural feature that shapes who can access funding, who can afford compliance, and who ultimately survives in the sector.
10% of charities (Large) hold 92.2% of all revenue. The pyramid gets steeper every year.
Charities by Size — Count vs Revenue Share
Explore further
Power Dynamics Report →02Where the Money Goes
Geography shapes everything. NSW and Victoria together account for the majority of registered charities and an even larger share of revenue. Meanwhile, the Northern Territory and Tasmania — where community need is often greatest — have the fewest charities and smallest revenue pools.
The gap between registered state and operating state tells its own story. Many charities operate nationally from an eastern-seaboard headquarters, meaning the money flows through Sydney and Melbourne regardless of where the impact is needed.
Geography — Registered State
Geography — Operating In
Explore further
Community Parity Report →03What Charities Do
Every charity registers one or more charitable purposes with the ACNC. The distribution reveals clear patterns: Religion is the most commonly registered purpose, while Reconciliation is the rarest with only 1,617 charities — a telling signal about where the sector directs its collective attention.
Only 1,617 charities list Reconciliation as a purpose. In a country still grappling with its colonial history, the sector's priorities are written in the data.
Charitable Purposes
Explore further
Community Parity Report →04Who They Serve
General Community is by far the most commonly listed beneficiary (24,636 charities) — a broad category that reveals little about who actually benefits. At the other end, the groups with the most acute needs are served by the fewest charities.
Only 15,958 charities list First Nations people as beneficiaries. LGBTIQA+ communities, people at risk of homelessness, and pre/post-release populations are similarly underserved in the data.
Who Charities Serve — Beneficiary Groups
Explore further
Community Parity Report →05The Grant-Making Ecosystem
Over 16,000 charities distribute grants to other organisations or individuals. But the top 20 alone account for a disproportionate share of total grant-making. A striking finding: many of the largest grant-makers are not foundations — they're universities, religious organisations, and government-funded service providers passing through money.
The colour coding below reveals which top grant-makers are registered foundations versus other types of charities. The distinction matters because it changes who controls the allocation decisions.
Top 20 Grant-Makers by Amount Distributed
Explore further
06PBI & Tax Deductibility
Public Benevolent Institutions (PBIs) enjoy the highest level of tax concession — donors can claim tax deductions, and the charity itself receives FBT exemptions. PBI status is the gold standard for fundraising.
But who holds it? The data shows that large charities are disproportionately likely to have PBI status. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle: PBI status makes fundraising easier, which helps organisations grow, which makes them more likely to maintain PBI status.
PBI Status by Charity Size
Explore further
The Access Gap Report →07The Workforce
The workforce composition reveals the real operating model of each tier. Large charities are staff-heavy enterprises — they employ the vast majority of paid workers in the sector. Small charities run on volunteers, with minimal paid staff.
This isn't just a funding story. It's about who can offer careers, who can retain talent, and who must rely on the goodwill of unpaid labour to deliver critical community services.
Large charities employ 879K paid staff. Small charities have 1145K volunteers keeping services running.
Workforce by Charity Size — Paid Staff vs Volunteers
Explore further
The Access Gap Report →08Seven-Year Trends
Between 2017 and 2023, the sector's total revenue grew by 73% — from $128.1B to $222.1B. Assets grew even faster, from $264.3B to $494.4B.
But grants distributed — the money that actually flows out to communities — grew from $5.6B to $11.3B. As a share of revenue, grant-making has remained stubbornly flat. The sector is accumulating wealth faster than it's deploying it.
Revenue +73% over 7 years. Assets grew from $264.3B to $494.4B. But grants as a share of revenue haven't budged.
Sector Financial Trends 2017–2023
Explore further
$222 Billion Report →Methodology
Data source: ACNC Charity Register (64,560 charities) and Annual Information Statement (AIS) data for 2017–2023. Financial figures are from the most recent AIS filing for each charity.
Size tiers: Small (annual revenue under $250K), Medium ($250K–$1M), Large (over $1M). As defined by the ACNC.
Limitations: All data is self-reported by charities. Not all charities file every year. Financial figures for “Unknown” size charities (those without a recent AIS) are excluded from size-based analysis. Purposes and beneficiaries are self-selected categories.