Deaths due to acute respiratory infections in Australia

Latest release

Acute respiratory disease mortality in Australia, including COVID-19, influenza and RSV

Reference period
September 2025
Released
30/10/2025
  • Next Release 28/11/2025
    Deaths due to acute respiratory infections in Australia, October 2025
  • Next Release 19/12/2025
    Deaths due to acute respiratory infections in Australia, November 2025
  • View all releases
Release date and time
30/10/2025 11:30am AEDT

Key statistics

  • In August 2025 there were more deaths from influenza (211) than COVID-19 (153).
  • Between January and August 2025 deaths involving COVID-19 were lower than 2023 and 2024 while deaths involving influenza and RSV were higher.
  • In 2025 there have been more deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people involving influenza than either COVID-19 or RSV.

Acute respiratory infection mortality in Australia

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia, the Provisional Mortality Statistics series was introduced in June 2020, and articles regarding COVID-19 Mortality in Australia were initially attached to this publication. 

As the pandemic has progressed, there has been a re-emergence of other acute respiratory infections. To reflect this, the ABS broadened the scope of reporting on acute respiratory infections to include deaths involving COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) from April 2024. 

Provisional Mortality Statistics will now be published quarterly, while information on deaths involving acute respiratory infections will be published more frequently. To reflect this change, "Acute Respiratory Infection Mortality" will now be published as its own topic on the ABS website. Prior to this it was published as an article that was attached to the Provisional Mortality Statistics publication. Previous articles can be accessed from past issues of the Provisional Mortality Statistics publication,

This publication reports on the number of monthly deaths due to COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). These viral diseases will be referred to collectively as deaths due to acute respiratory infections. Due to the higher number of deaths due to COVID-19, a more detailed analysis will be included for this cause. 

The ABS mortality data is sourced from the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages and is separate from the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System. While the registration-based deaths data takes longer to receive and process, this dataset has provided important supplementary information to the surveillance system data. 

All data presented in this article is provisional. It is expected that numbers of deaths due to these causes will increase for more recent time periods as more death registrations are received by the ABS. 

Deaths involving acute respiratory infections by month

The table below shows the number of deaths associated with acute respiratory infections reported on a medical certificate of cause of death by month and year. A death due to an acute respiratory infection is one where the viral disease has either directly caused the death (the virus has caused terminal complications such as pneumonia) or the person has died with the virus (a person has died from another cause but the viral illness still contributed significantly to death). 

  • COVID-19 has been the leading cause of acute respiratory infection related mortality across the majority of 2023-2025. In 2025 the number of deaths involving influenza has exceeded the number of deaths involving COVID-19 in August. Data for September is incomplete.
  • Since the end of 2021 COVID-19 has recorded a pattern where there are two peaks of mortality during the year - one occurring between November and January and the other occurring between May and August. While there was still an increase in deaths occurring between November 2024 and January 2025 when compared with October 2024, the number of deaths occurring during this period was much lower than other years. There were more deaths in June and July 2025 than earlier in the year, but the winter peak has been much smaller than in 2023 or 2024.
  • The number of COVID-19-related deaths declined in August after the small winter peak in June and July. Deaths remain at a level below 2024 and 2023. In the year to August 2025 there were 1,807 deaths involving COVID-19, compared to 4,135 in 2024 and 4,641 in 2023.
  • Deaths involving influenza fell slightly in August 2025 to a comparable level to August 2024. In the year to August 2025 there were 1,057 deaths involving influenza, compared to 882 in 2024 and 423 in 2023, and 1,005 in 2019.  
  • Deaths involving RSV decreased in August 2025 but remain higher than in August 2023 or 2024.  In the year to August 2025 there were 399 deaths involving RSV, compared to 380 in 2024 and 277 in 2023.
Acute respiratory infection associated deaths, 2023-2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2023 - COVID-199863563905938308084352432142665215486,190
2023 - Influenza156153754961485243584641611
2023 - RSVnp711233564706737351316380
2024 - COVID-195953963493095848766343922082142512955,103
2024 - Influenza3536294365122280272824223161,045
2024 - RSV121526456889715434292018481
2025 - COVID-1932116414212914935335419565nanana1,872
2025 - Influenza36325310678166321265105nanana1,162
2025 - RSV1810223840641188934nanana433

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month

The ABS codes an underlying cause of death (UCOD) for all deaths in the national mortality dataset. The underlying cause of death is defined as the disease, condition or external event that started the chain of events leading to death. International coding rules are applied to disease and conditions appearing on the medical certificate of cause of death (MCCD) to assign the UCOD. A disease or condition must be certified on the MCCD to be coded by the ABS. If COVID-19, influenza or RSV is listed as the underlying cause of death, the death is considered to have been caused by the virus. 

The following table shows the number of deaths due to acute respiratory diseases since 2023. 

  • The number of deaths due to COVID-19 fell in August 2025, and deaths remain at lower levels than the same period in earlier years.
  • Deaths due to influenza decreased in August 2025 and higher than the number of deaths due to COVID-19. There were 883 deaths due to influenza in the first eight months of 2025, slightly more than the 827 deaths recorded in the first eight months of 2019, which was a recent bad year for influenza.
  • Deaths due to RSV have decreased in August 2025 but remain higher than August 2023 and 2024.
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month, 2023-2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2023 - COVID-197532362724406376073361651552034083984,610
2023 - Influenza86112746761123732443536470
2023 - RSVnpnpnpnp81519199126np101
2024 - COVID-194442872672304546824943201501451972303,900
2024 - Influenza27261934519722321057331712806
2024 - RSVnpnp6172023171810128np141
2025 - COVID-1924913110910011029227715352nanana1473
2025 - Influenza293045866414827021194nanana977
2025 - RSV7npnp111027433312nanana149

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths with contributing acute respiratory infections by month

The table below shows the number of acute-respiratory associated deaths where the person has died "with" the virus (a person has died from another cause but the viral illness still contributed significantly to death).

  • COVID-19 and Influenza are more likely to be assigned as the underlying causes of death rather than a contributing factor (i.e. a person died with the virus). The opposite is true for RSV - it is more likely to be listed as a significant contributor to death. To wholly monitor the effects of RSV on mortality, deaths with RSV should be taken into consideration.
  • Deaths with COVID-19 decreased in August 2025 and remain at lower levels than previous years.
  • Deaths with influenza mentioned as a contributory cause increased slightly in August 2025 but remains below the number recorded in August 2024.
  • The number of deaths where RSV was certified as a contributory cause decreased in August 2025 and but remains above the level in August 2023 and 2024. For the year to August, the number of deaths with RSV was slightly lower in 2025 than in 2024 but higher than in 2023.
Deaths with acute respiratory infections by month, 2023-2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
2023 - COVID-19233120118153193201997859631131501,580
2023 - Influenza70np1082036151114115141
2023 - RSVnp5820274951482823712279
2024 - COVID-19151109827913019414072586954651,203
2024 - Influenza810109142557622596np239
2024 - RSV91220284866543624171214340
2025 - COVID-19723333293961774213nanana399
2025 - Influenza7np8201418515411nanana185
2025 - RSV11620273037755622nanana284

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by age and sex

  • More males have died from COVID-19 compared to females across 2023-2025. The opposite has been true for influenza and RSV, with more females dying than males from these viruses.
  • Those aged over 90 years are the only age group to consistently record more deaths of females than males from COVID-19. Nearly two thirds of Australia's population of persons aged over 90 years are female.
  • All three of these acute respiratory infections are more likely to cause death in older age groups than younger age groups.
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by age and sex, 2023-2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 2023 - COVID-192023 - Influenza2023 - RSV2024 - COVID-192024 - Influenza2024 - RSV2025 - COVID-192025 - Influenza2025 - RSV
Male 0-19np8npnp7npnpnp0
Male 20-29np50np50npnp0
Male 30-39550np6npnp50
Male 40-491612np161405110
Male 50-594516023180737np
Male 60-6917035np1204554350np
Male 70-7952058np4338661701169
Male 80-891,02158128881271833516619
Male 90+645331159878192047430
All Male2,430230312,0863865276946363
Female 0-19011npnp9npnp60
Female 20-290np0npnp00np0
Female 30-3910100npnp00np0
Female 40-491170127npnp130
Female 50-592511np2817010210
Female 60-6911232np8938030500
Female 70-793205492747199910612
Female 80-8979769206501392428217039
Female 90+90544337531325427914435
All Female2,180240701,8144208970451486

np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory infection death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9. All deaths due to influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths due to RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B34.8 with B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by state and territory

  • As the most populous state, New South Wales generally records the highest numbers of deaths for acute respiratory infections. There have been nearly as many deaths due to RSV in Victoria in 2025 as there were in New South Wales.
  • COVID-19 has caused more deaths than influenza and RSV across 2023-2025 in all jurisdictions with the exception of the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory recording more influenza deaths in 2025.
Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by state and territory of registration, 2023-2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 NSWVicQldSAWATasNTACTAus
2023 - COVID-191,5861,19777338646312018674,610
2023 - Influenza1368312065361488470
2023 - RSV282520612np07101
2024 - COVID-191,2691,02468634637511916653,900
2024 - Influenza269207172634928612806
2024 - RSV40264669120np141
2025 - COVID-19520365272124126456151,473
2025 - Influenza289256203878925919977
2025 - RSV45443968700149

np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory infection death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9. All deaths due to influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths due to RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B34.8 with B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Acute respiratory disease mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples are at heightened risk of more severe outcomes from acute respiratory diseases. There are several reasons for this, including higher rates of socioeconomic disadvantage, higher rates of chronic diseases and limited access to culturally safe health care.

This section presents three tables which includes information on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who have died from acute respiratory diseases. The first two tables focus on COVID-19 mortality only due to the higher numbers of deaths from the virus. The third table presents numbers of deaths and age-standardised death rates on deaths associated with COVID-19, influenza and RSV. For most of the analysis deaths include those where the acute respiratory disease was listed on the medical certificate of cause of death. This includes deaths where the acute respiratory disease caused death and those where the acute respiratory disease contributed to death. Data is presented in this way largely due to the small numbers of deaths from these diseases in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.  

There have been deaths recorded in all jurisdictions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. However, the rest of this analysis focusses on deaths registered in New South Wales, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory only. Currently, these five states and territories have evidence of a sufficient level of Indigenous identification and high enough numbers of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander deaths to support mortality analysis.

COVID-19 mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people by month

There were 82 deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people involving COVID-19 in 2024. This is lower than in both 2023 (120 deaths) and 2022 (265 deaths). The 20 deaths of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people involving COVID-19 in 2025 is substantially lower than in previous years. 

Deaths from or with COVID-19 among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-25, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAll
202226462025211821321481024265
2023249np1116131165np712120
2024116971011105npnpnp582
20256npnpnpnpnpnpnpnananana20

na - not available
np - not published
a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 September 2025.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

COVID-19 mortality among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: Age-standardised death rates

There were 487 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who had COVID-19 certified as a cause of death across the five jurisdictions in 2022-2025. Of these people:

  • 313 died due to COVID-19. This is where the virus caused complications that led directly to death. A further 174 people died with COVID-19. This is where another disease caused the terminal complication causing death but COVID-19 was a contributing factor.
  • The age-standardised death rate for deaths from COVID-19 is higher for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females than males, while the reverse is true for deaths with COVID-19. For non-Indigenous people, males have a higher death rate from COVID-19 and with COVID-19 than females.
  • Of those who died from or with COVID-19, a higher proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people died with COVID-19 as a contributing factor compared with non-Indigenous people (35.7% compared with 25.6%).
  • The mortality rate from COVID-19 is 1.5 times higher in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people compared to non-Indigenous people.
  • For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander females, the rate of mortality with COVID-19 is 2.3 times higher than that of non-Indigenous females.
Number, proportions and age-standardised death rates of COVID-19 deaths in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-2025, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)(i)
 Number of deathsProportion of deaths (%)Age-standardised death rates 
IndigenousNon-IndigenousIndigenousNon-IndigenousIndigenousNon-IndigenousRate differenceRate ratio
Died from COVIDMales1427,46062.074.521.917.34.61.3
Females1716,14866.374.322.112.1101.8
Persons31313,60864.374.42214.57.41.5
Died with COVIDMales872,55238.025.510.364.31.7
Females872,12233.725.79.94.35.72.3
Persons1744,67435.725.610.15.15.12.0
Died from or with COVIDMales22910,012100.0100.032.223.38.91.4
Females2588,270100.0100.032.016.415.62.0
Persons48718,282100.0100.032.119.612.51.6

a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 September 2025.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

Deaths due to COVID-19, influenza and RSV

For Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who died by an acute respiratory disease: 

  • COVID-19 caused more deaths than both influenza and RSV across each year in 2022-2024. To date in 2025, there have been 20 deaths involving COVID-19 and 37 deaths involving influenza.
  • The mortality rate for COVID-19 and influenza related mortality for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was higher than non-Indigenous people across each year in 2022-2024. In 2025 the influenza related mortality rate was higher for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people than non-Indigenous people, and the mortality rate for COVID-19 related deaths is similar for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and non-Indigenous people.
  • The annualised 2025 mortality rate for influenza related mortality is higher in both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and non-Indigenous people than for 2024, but data for 2025 is not yet complete. Influenza mortality rates were higher in 2024 than in 2022 or 2023.
Number and age-standardised death rates of acute respiratory infection associated deaths in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, 2022-2024, NSW, Qld, SA, WA and NT(a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)(h)(i)
 COVID-19InfluenzaRSV
 202220232024202520222023202420252022202320242025
Indigenous deaths265120822027404337871412
Non-Indigenous deaths9,0374,3823,5091,354294444700783161270336284
Indigenous age-standardised death rate67.029.820.06.86.17.67.910.9npnpnpnp
Non-Indigenous age-standardised death rate37.817.613.56.71.31.92.84.00.71.11.31.4

np - not published
a. Doctor certified and coroner certified deaths are included.
b. Data is by date of occurrence.
c. Data is provisional and subject to change.
d. Died from COVID-19 - where the underlying cause of death is COVID-19. Died with COVID-19 - COVID-19 is a contributory cause of death but not the underlying cause.
e. Includes deaths that occurred from January 2022 that were registered by 30 September 2025.
f. Data is sourced from the death registration system and differs from COVID-19 data collected through the surveillance system.
g. Deaths in remote Australia can take longer to register with a jurisdictional RBDM as funerals may take longer to occur. This delay in registration may cause a delay in the death registration being sent to the ABS.
h. Data are reported by jurisdiction of state of registration for NSW, Queensland, WA, SA and the NT only. Data for Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT have been excluded as data quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification is not considered to be as robust for these jurisdictions.

Acute respiratory infections as a proportion of total deaths by month of occurrence

Deaths from acute respiratory infections as a proportion of total deaths changes over time and is dependent on a number of factors. The following table shows the number of deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month of occurrence in the context of total deaths registered by 30 September and received by the ABS. These counts are not final and are considered preliminary. For example, the number of deaths that occurred in the month of September that the ABS has received registrations for is less than half of the deaths that occurred in the preceding months. This is because many deaths will not have had their registrations finalised yet and are not included in counts. This number will increase as the ABS receives more finalised registrations and an updated count for all months will be published in next month's publication. Cause of death counts will also increase as more deaths are received. See the 'Timeliness and Completeness' section in the Provisional Mortality Statistics publication for more information on when deaths are most likely to be received by the ABS.  

Deaths from COVID-19 accounted for 1.7% of all registered deaths in January 2025 and declined to lows of 0.7% between March and May. Deaths from COVID-19 currently account for 1.7% of all deaths received by the ABS that have occurred in June, 1.5% of deaths in July and 1.0% of deaths in August. 

Deaths due to influenza were 0.9% of all deaths in June, 1.5% of deaths in July 2025 and 1.3% of deaths in August.

Numbers and proportions may change as additional registrations are received by the ABS and cause of death revisions applied. 

Deaths due to acute respiratory infections by month, 2025 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
 JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSep(f)Total
All deaths14,82313,16614,59714,43015,90316,74418,00015,9986,102129,763
COVID-19249131109100110292277153521,473
Influenza293045866414827021194977
RSV7npnp111027433312149

na - not available
np - not published
a. Includes acute respiratory disease death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
b. Includes all deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 September 2025.
c. All deaths involving COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1-U07.2, U10.9 or U09.9. All deaths involving influenza have been coded to J09-J11. All deaths involving RSV have been coded to J12.1, J20.5, J21.0, B97.4.
d. Data is provisional and subject to change.
e. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.
f. The number of deaths for July will increase as more death registrations are received by the ABS.

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