The latest edition of the AAA’s quarterly Transport Affordability Index shows transport costs for the typical household are on the rise again after falling sharply at the beginning of 2020.
Transport costs for the typical household are on the rise again after falling sharply at the beginning of 2020. The typical Australian household spent $309 per week on transport costs during the September quarter, according to research contained in the latest Transport Affordability Index released today by the nation’s peak motoring body, the Australian Automobile Association.
AAA Managing Director, Michael Bradley, said governments needed to closely monitor transport costs as the economy gradually rebooted from the impacts of COVID-19 lockdowns.
“The latest figures show a small 1.2 per cent increase in weekly household transport costs from the previous quarter, which likely marks the start of an upward trend following a sharp drop earlier this year,” Mr Bradley said.
He said prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, increases in household transport costs outstripped inflation.
“Governments need to closely monitor transport policies to ensure any cost increases are kept within inflation or below. This is particularly important given the latest research shows transport costs now account for 12.4 per cent of the typical household income,” he said.
The latest figures mean the typical metropolitan household is spending $17,813 on transport costs each year; compared with $14,093 for the typical regional household.
Loan repayments and fuel remain the largest cost inputs, although toll costs outstrip fuel costs in capital cities.
Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane remained the nation’s most expensive capital cities.
The AAA’s quarterly Transport Affordability Index measures costs associated with car loan repayments, tolls, fuel, public transport, insurance, roadside assistance, servicing and tyres. The Index also measures a regional centre in each state and the Northern Territory to give an indicative picture of household transport costs across the regions.
Media contact: Jake Smith
[email protected]
0403 466 153
Initial results of Australia’s first program to test vehicle real-world performance show the cars tested use up to 13 per cent more fuel on the road than they did in laboratory tests reported by manufacturers.
read moreThe quarterly update of the AAA’s EV Index shows the Australian new vehicle market continuing to change.
read moreThere was a 4.6 per cent rise in road deaths over the 12 months to 30 September 2023. We cannot explain these increases or be confident about proposed solutions, because state governments are withholding crucial data about road quality and crash causes.
read more