Education export income - Calendar Year

This page contains information on the education export income, for the calendar year 2022

On this page:

International education was worth $26.6* billion to the Australian economy.

There was $15.1 billion paid as Goods and Services and $11.4 billion paid as Tuition fees.

*In 2022, there was $2.8 billion paid as tuition fees from students studying outside Australia due to travel restrictions.

Commodity 2019 2020 2021 2022
Coal 63941 43367 63504 142365
Iron Ore 96185 116929 154654 124130
Natural Gas 48654 36208 49810 90342
Education-related 40068 31688 22023 26590
Gold 23372 25492 23281 23514
State 2019 2020 2021 2022
NSW 14530 11429 7815 9715
VIC 13555 10485 6897 8357
QLD 5745 4576 3253 3798
SA 2160 1873 1598 1816
WA 2157 1838 1276 1580
ACT 1079 766 596 773
TAS 688 551 432 406
NT 155 171 157 144

Education export income by sector (A$ million)

Note: New Zealand students do not study on student visa and have no sector data.
  2019 2020 2021 2022
Higher Education $27,535 $21,110 $13,822 $17,822
Vocational Education and Training $7,925 $7,817 $6,998 $6,556
Schools $1,455 $1,152 $769 $635
English Language Intensive Courses for Overseas Students (ELICOS) $1,638 $842 $176 $974
Non-award  $1,064 $415 $50 $362
New Zealand $241 $190 $127 $147
Total $40,068 $31,688 $22,023 $26,590
Country 2019 2020 2021 2022
China 12540 7586 4446 5972
India 6364 6048 4218 4408
Nepal 2960 2724 2128 2579
Vietnam 1440 1286 973 1176
Indonesia 1001 879 599 856
Malaysia 1361 1076 711 819
Hong Kong 750 644 450 701
Philippines 759 845 638 691
Colombia 820 802 662 688
Thailand 756 598 445 674
Rest of the world 11317 9200 6753 8026

Considerations for interpreting this data

  • The figures in the tables above represent the data on international education exports released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in its International Trade in Services series.
  • The total export income generated by all international education activity includes spending by onshore students as well as earnings from other educational services and royalties. The ABS uses the term ‘education-related personal travel’ for this term.
  • Includes international students studying onshore on student visas only.
  • Export income does not include income generated by the operations of offshore campuses of Australian institutions.

Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics data