
Forced removal and modern slavery reports have doubled, lifting Australian human trafficking alerts to an all-time high.
There were 420 reports of human trafficking in the 2024/25 financial year, up from 382 from the previous 12 months, Australian Federal Police data, released on Sunday, shows.
The 10 per cent year-on-year rise was mainly driven by reports of exit trafficking in Australia spiking from 35 to 75.
Exit trafficking is when coercion, threats or deception are used to exit or attempt to exit a person from a country.
Other notable report rises were for forced marriage (from 91 to 118), sexual servitude slavery (from 59 to 84) and modern slavery (from fewer than five to 12).
Other categories, such as forced labour, trafficking in persons, debt bondage and deceptive recruiting, recorded fewer reports, and there were none that related to organ trafficking or harbouring.
The overall increase in reports was "just the tip of the iceberg", with Australians becoming more attuned to recognising human trafficking indicators, AFP Commander Helen Schneider said.
"What we see from these figures is a trending increase in forced marriage and exit trafficking reports," she said.
"The increase in forced marriage reports may indicate our engagement and presentations to at-risk community groups are working, and people feel more comfortable reporting this activity."