Latest data available, updated 18 August 2025
Employment gender gaps have continued to narrow in the strong post-pandemic labour market, driven by increased female workforce participation. Most gender gap indicators are currently at or near their lowest recorded levels.
The headline gender pay gap was 11.5% in May 2025, returning to a record low level. This indicator offers an ‘apples to apples’ comparison of male and female employees, as it excludes gender differences in hours worked and overtime/bonuses.
The gender gap for total earnings – i.e. take home pay – was 27.2% in May 2025. This indicator offers a more real-world comparison, as it includes gender differences in hours worked and overtime/bonuses. The total earnings gap has been steadily declining for the last decade.
The gender gap in hours worked rose to 18.5% in May 2025. This indicator measures how patterns of full-, part- and over-time work lead to gender differences in total hours worked.
The gender gap for wages – i.e. average hourly rates of pay – was 10.7% in May 2025. This gap reflects occupational differences, such as women being employed in lower-wage occupations, industries and/or less-senior roles. Except for a period of volatility during the pandemic, the gender wages gap has been relatively stable – oscillating between 11 and 13% – for the last decade.
The industries with the lowest gender pay gaps are public administration (4.2%), retail trade (6.0%), construction (6.5%), education (7.0%), transport, postal & warehousing (7.5%) and manufacturing (10.1%). The gap is largest in health care & social assistance (29.9%), financial services (26.5%), administrative services (23.9%) and professional, scientific & technical services (23.8%).
Since the pandemic, the strongest improvements in the gender pay gap have occurred in two traditionally male-dominated industries: construction (down by 6.9% since 2019) and transport (down by 10.9%).
In July 2025, the male unemployment rate stood at 4.4% while female unemployment was 4.1%. Following the pandemic, female unemployment has tended to be slightly lower than male reflecting strong employment growth in several female-dominated industries.
Female underemployment was 6.7% in July 2025, compared to 5.0% for males. The gender gap in underemployment has narrowed significantly in the tight post-pandemic labour market, falling from around a 4.0% gap prior to the pandemic to around 1.7% across the current cycle.
Female labour market participation was 63.5% in July 2025, reaching its series high level again. Female participation has steadily increased for decades, but the tightness in the labour market post-pandemic has accelerated the increase. The current gender workforce participation gap is 7.2%.
The share of female employees in full-time employment was 57.4% in July 2025. With the rate of male full-time employment was 80.1%, the gender gap for full-time employment has narrowed to 22.7%.
The data in this factsheet are derived from various ABS labour surveys. Data is collected on a monthly, quarterly or biannual basis, and is typically released two or three months following the reference period. Ai Group Research & Economics will update this factsheet as new data is released. Refer to notes in the charts for links to the source data.
Ai Group Research & Economics Team
Website: Research and Economics Resource Centre
Email: economics@aigroup.com.au
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