Inside the ACNC Charity Data Hub: A Benchmarking Guide for NGOs https://synergaid.com.au/blog/acnc-charity-data-hub-benchmarking-guide-ngos Published: 2026-07-01T13:20:43.666122+00:00 Most charity leaders know the ACNC exists as a regulator. Far fewer have used it as a strategic tool. The ACNC Charity Data Hub is a free, public library of sector data — and if you are running an NGO in Australia, it is one of the most useful benchmarking resources you are probably not using. Here is how to get the most out of it. What the Charity Data Hub actually contains The Hub aggregates every Australian Charities Report the ACNC has published since 2014, alongside interactive dashboards, topic reports and downloadable datasets. It also links out to the ACNC's open datasets on data.gov.au , which are refreshed regularly. The core resources are: The current and historical Australian Charities Reports (currently in the 12th edition) The interactive Charity Data Explorer , a Power BI dashboard you can filter by state, size, subtype and more Thematic reports such as Charity by numbers: the volunteer effect Raw datasets for organisations wanting to run their own analysis 1. Benchmark your organisation against similar charities Open the Charity Data Explorer and filter by your charity size (extra small, small, medium, large, very large or extra large) and by state or subtype . You will see the average revenue, expenses, employee count, volunteer count and asset ratio for charities that look like yours. This is genuinely useful in three situations: writing a strategic plan, briefing a new board, and preparing a grant application where funders want to know how you compare to peers. 2. Use it to sanity-check your budget The report breaks down revenue by source — government funding, goods and services, donations and bequests, investments — and expenses by category, with employee costs alone making up 55.7% of the sector total. If your ratios are dramatically different from the averages for your size band, that is not automatically a problem, but it is a conversation worth having with your board. 3. Support policy and advocacy work If your organisation contributes to submissions or policy consultations, the Data Hub is your evidence base. You can cite hard numbers — 53% of charities operate with no paid staff, volunteers outnumber employees 2.5 to 1, extra large charities capture 57% of sector revenue — instead of anecdote. Funders, government agencies and journalists all take ACNC data seriously. 4. Track sector trends over time Because past editions are all in the Hub, you can look at how a specific metric has moved over 5+ years. Volunteer counts, government funding as a proportion of revenue, changes in beneficiary groups (adults aged 65+ recently entered the top three) — all of that history is a click away. 5. Find peers and partners on the Charity Register Alongside the Hub sits the ACNC Charity Register , where every registered charity's Annual Information Statement is public. It is a fast way to see who is doing similar work in your region, who their auditors are, and what programs they run. Synergaid takeaway Block out an hour, open the Charity Data Explorer, and run your own benchmarks. Screenshot three numbers — sector average revenue for your size band, average employee count, and average volunteer count — and take them to your next board meeting. It reframes 'how are we doing?' from a feeling into a data point. Source: ACNC Charity Data Hub . All figures are drawn from the Australian Charities Report 12th edition . © Synergaid Pty Ltd · ABN 63 682 263 001