Dementia is Australia’s leading cause of death
Dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, accounted for over 17,500 deaths in 2024 and is now the nation’s leading cause of death, overtaking ischaemic heart diseases, according to data released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
Lauren Moran, ABS head of mortality statistics, said: ‘The number of deaths caused by dementia has risen by 39 per cent over the last decade.’
The leading causes of death in 2024 aligned with Australia’s ageing population. Over two-thirds (68.2 per cent) of deaths are people aged over 75 years, compared to 66.1 per cent ten years ago and 63.3 per cent twenty years ago.
‘People are now more likely to live to an age where they have a higher risk of developing dementia,’ Ms Moran said.
‘This is especially true for women who have longer life expectancies. Today’s data shows that 62.4 per cent of people who died from dementia were women.
‘We’ve also seen that dementia has been the leading cause of death for women since 2016.’
The gap between dementia and ischaemic heart disease had been narrowing over time. Dementia accounted for 9.1 per cent of total deaths while heart disease accounted for 9.3 per cent in 2023. In 2024, dementia accounted for 9.4 per cent of total deaths, and ischaemic heart diseases 8.7 per cent.
Mortality rates due to coronary heart diseases have dropped by nearly 90 per cent since they peaked in 1968.
‘However, coronary heart disease remains the leading cause of death for men, causing 10,153 deaths in 2024,’ Ms Moran said.
‘It was also the leading cause of death for people living in outer regional, remote, and very remote Australia.’
Coronary heart disease is the second leading cause of premature death, after suicide – more information below.
Chronic lower respiratory diseases (which include emphysema and bronchitis) caused just over 9,000 deaths. This became the third leading cause of death in 2024.
‘Overall deaths caused by respiratory diseases (excluding COVID-19) were at a record low during the first few years of the COVID-19 pandemic, but we’re now seeing a return to numbers recorded before the pandemic. This includes the flu, which caused 827 deaths in 2024,’ Ms Moran said.
Drug and alcohol-induced deaths both increased in 2024. Drug-induced deaths rose to 1,947, up from 1,766 in 2023. Alcohol-induced deaths rose to 1,765 from 1,700 in the same period.
‘Acute toxicity was the main cause of drug-induced deaths. Opioids and other depressants including benzodiazepines were the most common drug class present,’ Ms Moran said.
‘Long term complications of alcohol use, such as liver cirrhosis, was the main cause of alcohol-induced deaths. The alcohol-induced death rate has increased over the last five years from 5.4 deaths per 100,000 people in 2020 to 5.9 in 2024.’
Suicide was the leading cause of premature death. People who died by suicide had a median age of 46.0 years.
There were 3,307 people who died by suicide in 2024. This is 12.2 deaths per 100,000 people. Men accounted for just over three quarters of those deaths.
If you or someone you know requires assistance or support, please call Lifeline (13 11 14) or Beyond Blue (1300 224 636).
For dementia information and support please contact the National Dementia Helpline on 1800 100 500.
Media notes
- Rates for ischaemic heart disease, and drug and alcohol-induced deaths are age-standardised rates (per 100,000 people). These adjust for age structure and population to enable comparisons over time.
- The rate for suicide is a crude death rate. A crude death rate is the number of deaths registered during the year per 100,000 estimated resident population at 30 June.
- Premature mortality is calculated as years of potential life lost – a measure weighting deaths at younger age groups more heavily.
- This data is a component of the Causes of Death, Australia, 2024 publication. Prior to 2024, statistics on all topics were published on the Causes of Death, Australia topic page. To improve accessibility and readability the publication is now presented as four topic pages (Causes of Death, Australia, 2024, Intentional self-harm (suicide) deaths, 2024, Deaths from external causes, 2024 and Perinatal Deaths(to be released 18 November 2025)). More information on other topics of interest is available on the Causes of Death page.
- The ABS tabulates dementia as International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision (ICD-10) codes F01, F03 and G30. This differs from the AIHW who report dementia as F01, F03, G30, G31.0 and G31.8. A smaller number of deaths each are assigned to G31.0 and G31.8. As dementia and ischaemic heart diseases were very close in number in 2023 this led to a difference in ranking for the leading cause of death in 2023 data. More information on the tabulation of leading causes of death can be found in the Causes of Death methodology.
- Please take care when reporting on mental ill-health and suicide, and refer to the Mindframe national guidelines for more information.
- When reporting ABS data you must attribute the Australian Bureau of Statistics (or the ABS) as the source.
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