Not legal advice. This site is an editorial reference. Laws change — always confirm with a qualified attorney in the relevant jurisdiction before recording, and check each page’s last reviewed date.

Call Recording Laws in Australia

Plain-English summary

Australia’s recording law is split across federal and state legislation. The federal Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 prohibits interception of telecommunications passing over a telecommunications system. Participant recording of a call to which one is a party is not, on the prevailing reading, “interception” under the TIA Act because the recording occurs at the participant’s end of the line, not during transmission.

State Surveillance Devices Acts regulate the use of listening devices. Queensland, Victoria, and the Northern Territory permit a participant to record a private conversation to which they are a party. New South Wales, the ACT, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia generally require the consent of all principal parties, with some exceptions for protecting lawful interests.

Statutory framework

  • TIA Act 1979 (Cth). Federal interception offence.
  • State Surveillance Devices Acts. NSW (Surveillance Devices Act 2007), Vic (Surveillance Devices Act 1999), Qld (Invasion of Privacy Act 1971), SA (Surveillance Devices Act 2016), WA (Surveillance Devices Act 1998), Tas (Listening Devices Act 1991), ACT (Listening Devices Act 1992), NT (Surveillance Devices Act 2007).
  • Privacy Act 1988 (Cth). Australian Privacy Principles apply to organizations.

Regulator guidance

The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) enforces the Privacy Act. State privacy regulators (NSW Privacy Commissioner, Office of the Victorian Information Commissioner, etc.) have additional jurisdiction in their respective states.

Australian Privacy Principles

APP 1 (transparency), APP 3 (collection), APP 5 (notification), APP 6 (use and disclosure), and APP 11 (security) all apply to call recording. Organizations with annual turnover above AUD $3 million are within the Privacy Act’s scope.

Workplace and business calls

Workplace recording rules differ across states. Several states require notice to employees; some require collective agreement. The Fair Work Commission has held that recordings made without notice are problematic as evidence in unfair-dismissal proceedings.

Cross-border and conflict-of-laws notes

For international calls, the TIA Act applies to interception in Australia. State law applies where the recording occurs in the state. The Privacy Act applies to organizations operating in Australia.

Penalties and remedies

Criminal: TIA Act § 7 — up to 2 years; state surveillance-device acts impose their own penalties.

Administrative: OAIC may seek civil penalty orders up to AUD $2.5 million per breach for serious or repeated interferences (penalties were significantly increased in 2022).

Practical guidance

  • Identify the state of each participant and apply the strictest applicable rule.
  • For commercial recording, apply the APPs throughout.
  • For workplace recording, give clear notice in the state-appropriate form.

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