Five years. Thousands of new neighbours.
No other kind of change reshapes a council as quickly as migration. Charles Sturt's Punjabi-speaking community has grown by +99% since the last census. It is only one of several.
Up +99% since the last census. From 1,034 to 2,053 speakers.
Up +71% since the last census. From 332 to 569 speakers.
Up +66% since the last census. From 432 to 718 speakers.
115 languages carry the conversation at home. Every one of them is spoken here.
Each block below is scaled to the number of people who speak that language at home, and tinted by how fast that community has grown since the last census.
Growth this fast means services designed from the 2016 census are already out of date. This Atlas is our honest attempt to keep the picture current, for our own planning, for the agencies that partner with us, and for the families still arriving every year.
Our linguistic character changes street by street. Click through to any suburb for its own portrait: the languages spoken there, the communities calling it home.
29.5% of Charles Sturt residents speak a language other than English at home, against 20.5% for South Australia and 27.3% nationally. Drawn from the 2021 census.