Our Expert in Australia
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Last updated: July 8, 2026
Australia has no single, uniform law that guarantees wrongful imprisonment compensation by state, and that fragmentation leaves exonerated individuals navigating a patchwork of ex‑gratia schemes, civil tort deadlines and discretionary government payments that differ sharply between jurisdictions. Queensland’s May 2026 push for a dedicated Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) and an accompanying statutory compensation framework has reignited a national conversation about how, and how much, the wrongfully convicted can recover. This guide consolidates the current position across all eight states and territories, sets out the practical time limits that apply to civil claims and ex‑gratia applications, explains when and how you can sue police in Australia, and illustrates realistic payout ranges drawing on documented case outcomes.
Whether you are recently exonerated, supporting a family member, or advising a client, the information below is designed to help you act before critical limitation periods expire.
There are four broad pathways to compensation after wrongful imprisonment in Australia, and the route available to you depends on the jurisdiction, the circumstances of the wrongful conviction and who was responsible for the error.
Short answer: Yes, you can sue police in Australia. An exonerated individual may bring a civil action against police officers or the relevant state for false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, misfeasance in public office, or, in limited circumstances, negligence. Each cause of action carries different evidentiary burdens. False imprisonment requires proof that you were detained without lawful justification. Malicious prosecution demands evidence that the prosecution was initiated without reasonable and probable cause and with malice. Misfeasance in public office targets deliberate or reckless abuse of power. These claims are heard in state or territory courts and, where the amount exceeds jurisdictional thresholds, in the Supreme Court.
Understanding the applicable limitation period in your state is critical, because missing the deadline extinguishes the right to sue entirely.
How much money do you get if you are wrongfully imprisoned in Australia? There is no fixed formula. Awards and payments vary enormously depending on the length of imprisonment, the severity of the injustice, lost earnings, psychological harm and the route through which compensation is sought. Courts assessing civil claims apply standard damages principles: the claimant is entitled to be put in the position they would have been in had the wrong not occurred.
The recognised heads of damage in wrongful imprisonment cases include:
Academic research published through PubMed Central has identified that systemic factors, including tunnel vision in investigations, inadequate forensic procedures and prosecutorial non‑disclosure, often drive the length and severity of wrongful imprisonment, which in turn determines the quantum of any award. Courts and governments also consider the claimant’s age at conviction, health consequences, and the degree of public vindication already achieved.
| Case | Years Imprisoned | Compensation | Jurisdiction / Route |
|---|---|---|---|
| Andrew Mallard | ~12 years | $3.25 million (ex‑gratia) | Western Australia, ex‑gratia payment by WA Government following High Court quashing of conviction (Mallard v The Queen [2005] HCA 68, available via AustLII) |
| Farah Jama | ~16 months | Reported settlement (undisclosed quantum, civil claim) | Victoria, civil suit against the State of Victoria; DNA evidence found to be contaminated |
| David Eastman | ~19 years | $7 million (ex‑gratia, ACT Government, 2023) | ACT, ex‑gratia payment after acquittal on retrial |
These cases illustrate that wrongful imprisonment compensation by state is profoundly uneven: some exonerees receive multi‑million‑dollar payments while others secure nothing, depending on the political will of the relevant government and the availability of a viable civil claim.
| State / Territory | Limitation Period (Civil Tort Claim) | Usual Compensation Route & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New South Wales (NSW) | 6 years (Limitation Act 1969, s 14) | Civil tort claim (false imprisonment, malicious prosecution) or ex‑gratia petition to NSW Attorney‑General. No automatic statutory entitlement. |
| Victoria (VIC) | 6 years (Limitation of Actions Act 1958) | Civil claim against police or the State; ex‑gratia at government discretion. Suing Victoria Police is procedurally possible through the Supreme Court. |
| Queensland (QLD) | 6 years (Limitation of Actions Act 1974) | Ex‑gratia or civil tort claim. May 2026: active policy push for a statutory CCRC and compensation framework, legislation not yet enacted. |
| Western Australia (WA) | 6 years (Limitation Act 2005) | Ex‑gratia petition to WA Attorney‑General (Mallard precedent). Civil claims possible. Legal Aid WA provides procedural guidance on compensation time limits. |
| South Australia (SA) | 6 years (Limitation of Actions Act 1936) | Ex‑gratia petition to SA Attorney‑General. No standalone statutory scheme. Civil claims available in limited circumstances. |
| Australian Capital Territory (ACT) | 6 years (Limitation Act 1985) | Ex‑gratia payment (Eastman precedent). The ACT Human Rights Commission notes that while the HRA recognises a right to compensation for wrongful conviction, the government is not legally compelled to pay and refusal is not judicially reviewable. |
| Tasmania (TAS) | 6 years (Limitation Act 1974) | Ex‑gratia petition. No statutory scheme. Very limited case law on quantum; discretionary government approach. |
| Northern Territory (NT) | 6 years (Limitation Act 1981) | Ex‑gratia petition to NT Attorney‑General. No statutory entitlement. Small jurisdiction with few documented wrongful conviction cases. |
How much compensation for wrongful imprisonment in NSW depends entirely on the claim route. Civil tort claims for false imprisonment or malicious prosecution must be filed within six years under the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW). Ex‑gratia payments are made at the discretion of the NSW Government following a petition to the Attorney‑General; there are no published quantum guidelines. Past NSW cases have produced outcomes ranging from modest five‑figure settlements to substantial awards where police misconduct was egregious. Claimants should obtain legal advice promptly, because the six‑year clock typically starts running from the date of release or acquittal.
Suing Victoria Police is a recognised litigation pathway. Civil claims for false imprisonment, malicious prosecution or misfeasance in public office are heard in the County Court or Supreme Court of Victoria, subject to a six‑year limitation period under the Limitation of Actions Act 1958. Ex‑gratia payments have been made in individual cases but without a formal scheme. Victoria’s approach remains discretionary, and industry observers expect the Queensland CCRC push to increase political pressure on Victoria to formalise its process.
Queensland is the jurisdiction to watch in 2026. The May 2026 policy push for a Criminal Cases Review Commission aims to create both an independent body to investigate potential miscarriages of justice and a statutory compensation framework for the wrongfully convicted. If legislated, it would represent Australia’s first dedicated wrongful‑conviction compensation statute. Until then, exonerees rely on ex‑gratia petitions to the QLD Attorney‑General or civil claims filed within the six‑year limitation period under the Limitation of Actions Act 1974.
Andrew Mallard’s $3.25 million ex‑gratia payment remains the benchmark WA case. Civil claims are governed by the Limitation Act 2005, with a standard six‑year period. Legal Aid Western Australia publishes procedural guidance on compensation applications, and those seeking police misconduct lawyers in Perth should consult the GLE lawyer directory for practitioners experienced in state‑accountability litigation. WA’s approach remains discretionary, and no statutory scheme is currently under active consideration.
South Australia follows the national pattern: no statutory entitlement, with compensation available only via ex‑gratia petition or civil tort claim. The Limitation of Actions Act 1936 imposes a six‑year limitation period. SA has produced few high‑profile wrongful‑conviction cases, so there is limited public data on typical quantum. Claimants should engage experienced civil litigation counsel early to preserve evidence and assess the viability of both routes.
The ACT Human Rights Commission recognises a right to compensation for wrongful conviction under the Human Rights Act 2004 (ACT), which incorporates Article 14(6) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. However, as the Commission has noted, the territory government is not legally compelled to make ex‑gratia payments, and a refusal to pay is not judicially reviewable. The David Eastman case, resulting in a $7 million ex‑gratia payment after 19 years of wrongful imprisonment, demonstrates that substantial awards are possible but depend on individual government decisions.
Both Tasmania and the Northern Territory rely exclusively on ex‑gratia petitions. Neither jurisdiction has a statutory compensation scheme, and documented wrongful‑conviction cases are rare. Limitation periods for civil tort claims are six years in both jurisdictions. Given the small size of these legal markets, claimants may need to instruct counsel from interstate with specific expertise in state‑accountability litigation.
Can you sue for wrongful arrest in Australia? Yes. The principal causes of action are:
Across all jurisdictions, the standard limitation period for tort claims against police is six years from the date the cause of action accrues, typically the date of release, acquittal or successful appeal. Some jurisdictions impose additional pre‑action notice requirements before suing a government entity. In NSW, for example, claims against the State may require compliance with the Claims Against the Government and Crown Proceedings legislation. In Victoria, notice periods and procedural steps are governed by the Crown Proceedings Act 1958 (Vic). Police officers may also invoke statutory immunities for acts done in good faith, and state governments routinely indemnify serving officers, meaning the State itself becomes the effective defendant.
The process for applying for compensation differs depending on whether you pursue an ex‑gratia petition or a civil tort claim. Below is a practical checklist covering both routes.
Ex‑gratia petition:
Civil tort claim:
Commonwealth (AFP) claims: Where the wrongful conduct involved the Australian Federal Police, a compensation claim can be lodged directly through the AFP’s published claims process. The AFP’s website sets out the procedure for making a compensation claim and the types of harm covered.
Regardless of the route, early legal advice is essential. Consider also reading our guide on how to sue the government in Australia for additional procedural context on claims against state entities.
Every wrongful imprisonment case turns on its own facts, but a worked example illustrates how damages can be assessed. Consider a claimant wrongfully imprisoned for two years, aged 35 at the time of conviction, earning $85,000 per year:
These figures are illustrative only. Ex‑gratia payments are not bound by court precedent and may be significantly higher or lower. The early indications from the Queensland CCRC proposal suggest that any statutory scheme may set minimum compensation benchmarks, but no specific figures have been published.
The decision between litigation and an ex‑gratia petition involves balancing several factors:
In practice, many claimants pursue both routes simultaneously, lodging an ex‑gratia petition while instructing solicitors to commence or prepare civil proceedings within the limitation period.
If you or someone you know has been wrongfully imprisoned, the single most urgent step is to check the applicable limitation period in your state, once it expires, the right to bring a civil claim is lost. Gather and preserve all available evidence immediately: court documents, police records, medical reports, financial records and witness contact details.
Seek specialist legal advice from a lawyer experienced in wrongful imprisonment compensation by state, false imprisonment claims and police‑accountability litigation. The GLE lawyer directory connects you with civil and police‑misconduct practitioners across every Australian jurisdiction. Acting early protects your rights and maximises the chance of a fair outcome.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Obrien at OBrien Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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