National Forecast Program

The population forecast for South Australia

Up, and out: The population forecast for South Australia

Presented by the forecast.id team from .id (informed decisions), this webinar shares our latest forecasts for each region of South Australia.

Jump ahead to see

  • The key takeouts
  • Presentation slides
  • A short video recap of the webinar
  • The full recording
The population forecast for South Australia

Register to watch the recording on-demand

If you weren't able to attend our live presentation, register here to watch the full recording, including a Q&A with our forecasters, on demand.

PRESENTED BY

Daniel  Evans
Daniel Evans

Head of Sales & Retention (Gov.)

The short recap

Watch a short recap of the key points from the presentation.

The presentation slides

Five big stories for South Australia

Join us to hear the results of our detailed research into the demographic drivers of change in each region of the state, and what our detailed assessment of current and future housing development tells us about when, where and how much growth we can expect in each part of South Australia over the next 25 years.

Here are five big stories we will be discussing in more detail in the webinar.

1. 400,000 additional South Australians over the next 25 years
That's the state's share of the 9.2 million people we forecast will be added to Australia's population in the same period.

2. It's all happening in the Adelaide-North region
This region is home to growing young families and with ample land supply to support Greenfield growth, the Adelaide-North region and, in particular, suburbs like Elizabeth, Gawler, and Salisbury will be home to the largest growth fronts, accounting for 40% of South Australia's overall growth over the next 25 years.

3. Overseas migration remains the big story in town
While SA only receives a relatively small share of the total migration to Australia from overseas, it remains the most significant driver of population growth in the state

4. The youth brain drain persists
This is a long-standing and cyclical pattern, that South Australia loses more young people to other states than it gains from them, and while it reversed momentarily during the pandemic, we're already seeing that pattern return

5. Zoned land or sites marked for development ≠ future housing
Just because land is zoned or a site is marked for future development, you can't assume someone will live there any time soon

At the local level, understanding future housing development is key to understanding how the population will be distributed throughout a region.  But if you're using zoning or identified development sites to forecast where people will live in the years ahead, you're probably overestimating future demand.

Access

How to access the National Forecasting Program

Our National Forecasting Program is the backbone of all of our forecasting products and services for government and business.

Government Toolkit

Our Government Toolkit gives users access to the proprietary datasets maintained by .id through a suite of intuitive online tools.
See the National Forecasting Program in action in our Population Forecast online tool, or get in touch.

Government Toolkit

The team

Our forecasting team

Prepared and presented by experts from Australia's largest independent population forecasting team.

Johnny Barnard

Johnny Barnard

Forecaster

Andrew  Hedge

Andrew Hedge

Product Marketing Manager (Industry)

Richard  Thornton

Richard Thornton

Product Manager Forecast

Sally  Blandy

Sally Blandy

Head of Product (Industry)

GET IN TOUCH

Purchase data for your area

From one-off reports to data partnerships, we can help you plan and invest with confidence.

.id offers:

  • Detailed forecast data for a suburb, region or an entire state
  • Forecast reports for a known location
  • Reports to identify growth hotspots
  • Partners program for consultants and frequent users

Let our team help you find the right option for you.