Your Rights When an Algorithm Makes a Decision About You in Australia
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New transparency laws from December 2026 will force organisations to explain automated decisions, but a general right to human review does not yet exist.
As government agencies like Centrelink and private businesses increasingly rely on algorithms to automate decisions, concerns about fairness, bias, and accountability have grown.
Upcoming Transparency Rights
From 10 December 2026, the Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2024 will require organisations to disclose the use of automated systems for significant decisions. They must explain the logic used, the data relied upon, and the most influential factors. Simply stating “the algorithm decided” will no longer be legally sufficient.
Current Options for Challenge
Currently, if an automated government decision goes against you, you have the right to request written reasons under administrative law. If the algorithm failed to consider relevant factors, the decision may be subject to judicial or merits review. However, Australia does not yet have a broad statutory right demanding human review of algorithmic decisions.
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Footnotes
- Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2024 (Cth).
- Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) s 13.
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