Postal, early and declaration votes are counted from the Monday after polling day. 

Declaration vote counts

Most votes are counted on election night. But postal votes, early votes and all other types of declaration votes are not counted until the week after polling day.

Before they can be counted, tens of thousands of early votes need to be securely transported to our central processing centre, sorted and then delivered to the returning officer for each district. Tens of thousands of postal votes arriving from South Australia, interstate and overseas will be delivered to returning officers each day by Australia Post until the Saturday 7 days after polling day.

All these ballot papers need to be validated against the electoral roll before we can count them. Returning officers count them progressively during the week after polling day. The counting process for declaration votes is no different to the process described above. Returning officers continue to update the first preference results and 2CP results throughout the week, as more ballot papers get added to the count.

Learn more about how the ballot papers are counted.