World Watch/Australia/Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence · Australia

Artificial Intelligence - Australia

Guidelines onlyVoluntary, principles-based regime: the National AI Plan (Dec 2025), the National AI Centre's 'Guidance for AI Adoption' (Oct 2025, replacing the 2024 Voluntary AI Safety Standard) and the 2019 AI Ethics Principles, applied on top of existing technology-neutral laws (Privacy Act 1988, Australian Consumer Law, Online Safety Act). Administered by the Department of Industry, Science and Resources / National AI Centre, with a new Australian AI Safety Institute.

Australia has no comprehensive AI law and, as confirmed by the National AI Plan released on 2 December 2025, has decided against an EU-style AI Act or the mandatory 'high-risk' guardrails it consulted on in 2024. AI is instead governed by voluntary guidance (the Oct 2025 Guidance for AI Adoption and the AI Ethics Principles) layered on existing, largely technology-neutral laws, with regulators and a new AI Safety Institute monitoring risks. Some existing-law reforms touch AI, notably new Privacy Act transparency rules for automated decision-making taking effect 10 December 2026.

No standalone AI Act

The National AI Plan (2 Dec 2025) confirms Australia will not pursue economy-wide AI legislation or mandatory high-risk guardrails for now, instead building on existing legal and regulatory frameworks as the foundation for managing AI risks.

Voluntary guidance (current)

On 21 October 2025 the National AI Centre published 'Guidance for AI Adoption', setting out 6 essential practices for responsible AI governance (Foundations and Implementation Practices versions). It updates and replaces the 2024 Voluntary AI Safety Standard and aligns with ISO/IEC 42001 and the NIST AI RMF; it creates no new legal obligations.

Earlier 2024 Voluntary AI Safety Standard

In September 2024 the government released a Voluntary AI Safety Standard comprising 10 voluntary guardrails (accountability, risk management, data governance, testing, human oversight, transparency, contestability, record-keeping, etc.), now superseded by the 2025 Guidance.

Proposed mandatory guardrails not adopted

A September 2024 proposals paper consulted on mandatory guardrails for AI in high-risk settings (modelled on the EU AI Act/Canada's AIDA). These were not legislated; the Dec 2025 National AI Plan opted for existing laws plus voluntary guidance instead.

Australian AI Safety Institute

The government announced an Australian AI Safety Institute (AISI) to monitor, test and share information on emerging AI capabilities, risks and harms, supporting ministers and regulators; rollout began in early 2026.

Existing-law reform: automated decisions

The Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2024 (assented 10 Dec 2024) adds transparency requirements (new APP 1.7) for automated decision-making that significantly affects individuals, including AI tools; obligations take effect 10 December 2026, enforced by the OAIC.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →