History of the Internet in Australia (2026): A Timeline From 1989 to Today

March 31st, 2026
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Timeline illustration showing Australian internet evolution: 1989 dial-up computer, 2000s ADSL modem, 2010s NBN box, 2026 5G smartphone and satellite
From 1989 dial-up to 2026 5G and gigabit NBN — the evolution of Australian internet.

Last updated: 18 May 2026

In 1989, Australia was first connected to the internet through the University of Melbourne. At that time, the internet mostly consisted of computer scientists communicating between major universities. Even the fastest connections between major cities in Australia were limited to less than 50kbps. With 128kbps considered the absolute lowest acceptable bitrate for music files today, Australia didn’t have the capacity to stream a single music file over its national backbone network links.

Today the NBN offers gigabit connections — and from 2024, a 2 Gbps (NBN 2000) tier — directly to homes and businesses. The average Australian household now downloads over 540 GB of data per month, with 5G home wireless and Starlink satellite filling the gaps in places NBN fibre doesn’t reach. This is a timeline of Australia’s journey with the internet, from its 1989 inception through to 2026.

2026

Wi-Fi 7 and NBN 2000 go mainstream

Wi-Fi 7 routers become widely available in Australia and NBN 2000 (2 Gbps) reaches more FTTP-served suburbs. Starlink has over 7,000 satellites in orbit globally with strong Australian coverage including the Mini home unit.

2025

Free FTTP upgrade hits 2 million Australian homes

NBN Co's free FTTP upgrade program (running since 2020) crosses 2 million upgraded homes. FTTN copper is gradually phased out in favour of fibre across most metropolitan and regional areas.

2024

NBN 2000 launches and Starlink crosses 200,000 Australian customers

NBN Co releases its 2 Gbps speed tier (NBN 2000) for FTTP customers, the fastest residential plan available in Australia. Starlink satellite internet passes 200,000 Australian subscribers, providing high-speed alternatives to NBN Sky Muster for rural Australians.

2023

5G home wireless becomes a real NBN alternative

Telstra, Optus, TPG and Vodafone all sell 5G home wireless plans by 2023. Adoption crosses 500,000 households as 5G coverage expands to most major Australian regional centres.

2022

NBN Co launches free FTTP upgrade program

NBN Co announces that millions of homes on FTTN and FTTC connections become eligible for free upgrades to full fibre when they order a higher speed plan. The biggest single broadband infrastructure boost since the NBN rollout began.

2020

NBN 90% complete

Stephen Rue (CEO of NBN Co.) announcd the NBN rollout is 90% complete in February 2022.

2019

Australia’s first 5G network

Telstra launched Australia’s first 5G network. 5G has a theoretical maximum speed of 10Gbps, but Australia’s 5G network still struggles to reach 1Gbps even in our biggest cities.

2016

FTTC added to NBN rollout

Fibre To The Curb (FTTC) is added to the mix of technologies in the NBN rollout.

2015

Netflix reaches Australia

By the end of 2015, Australia was still one of only 50 countries with Netflix access. In 2017, this would grow to 190 countries.

2013

NBN Rollout changed to multi-technology mix

The Liberal/National Coalition replaced the Labor government in the 2013 federal election. They changed the planned FTTP NBN rollout to make use of a mix of technologies.

2012

Australia’s first 4G smartphone

Telstra launched Australia’s first 4G-compatible smartphone, the HTC velocity 4G. 4G offers download speeds of up to 150Mbps.

2011

Telstra privatisation complete

The federal government sold the last of its remaining Telstra shares, ending it’s three stage privatisation plan.

2009

NBN Co. Established

Initially, the NBN rollout was expected to be reach completion by 2021 with 93% of homes connected through an FTTP connection.

2009

First Android phone released in Australia – HTC Dream

Android phones are generally more affordable than iPhones and helped bring the internet to the pockets of many Australians.

2008

Google Chrome Web Browser released

Today, Chrome has a 65.5% market share making it the most popular web browser by far.

2008

iPhone launched in Australia

The iphone bought the internet to the mobile phone and gave Australians one of the first usable handheld devices to browse the web on.

2007

Labor party wins federal election

The election platform of the labor party in 2007 included the rollout of a National Broadband Network (NBN) expected to begin before the end of 2008.

2006

AARNet begins work on its second backbone network

The second AARNet national backbone network (AARNet2) was built in collaboration with Optus.

2004

Firefox launched

Mozilla launches the Firefox Web Browser, achieving more than 100 million downloads in the first year

2004

Gmail Launched

Today, Gmail has a market share of 28%, making it the second most popular email client behind Apple Mail.

2003

Australia’s first 3G network

Hutchison launched Australia’s first 3G network, covering 96% of the population. 3G has a maximum download speed of 42Mbps

2002

Google launches an australian branch

At the time, google was ranked as the fourth most popular search engine, behind AOL, MSN, and Yahoo!.

2002

ADSL2 Introduced

ADSL2 allowed for download speeds of up to 24Mbps, compared to the 2Mbps of ADSL1.

1999

Stage 2 of Telstra’s privitisation plan

The commonwealth government sold another 16% of Telstra’s shares in the second stage of its transition to full private ownership.

1999

Telstra launches first retail ADSL service

Telstra’s initial rollout of ADSL was limited to 1.5Mbps. However, speeds of up to 6Mbps through ADSL had already been demonstrated in Australia by Telecom Research Labs.

1998

Google launched

Google search engine officially launched by Stanford Students Larry Page and Sergey Brin

1998

IRC Created

Jakko Oikarinen created IRC (Internet Relay Chat) to be part of a BBS for the University of Oulu. It grew rapidly, and by 1989 there were already 40 IRC servers worldwide.

1997

Telstra begins selling shares

The Commonwealth sold 33% of its Telstra shares, the first of three stages in a transition to full private ownership.

1997

Yahoo! Launches an Australian branch

Australia and New Zealand join the 7 other countries with seperate Yahoo! regions. At the time, Yahoo Australia and New Zealand had more than 14,000 local sites and more than 20,000 local links.

1996

Hotmail Launched

After being acquired by Microsoft in the same year, Hotmail would grow massively to become the largest email service worldwide by 1999, with more than 30 million active users.

1996

Bigpond launched

Telstra launched Bigpond and used it to distribute wholesale cable internet access.

1995

Microsoft launches Internet Explorer

Internet explorer came bundled with windows installs and by 2003 had reached 95% total usage share. In 2022, it sits at 2% and Microsoft’s new web browser Microsoft Edge is at 5.8%.

1995

AARNet1 sold to Telstra

Telstra took on responsibility for managing the existing AARNet network and operated it as Telstra Internet. AARNet1 was Australia’s first national backbone network and permanent connection to the global internet.

1994

Yahoo! launched

Jerry Yang and David Filo launch Yahoo!, offering various services including e-mail and a search engine

1994

Netscape Navigator Launched

Known as Mosaic at the time, the browser was released by Mosaic Communications Coorporation (now known as Netscape Communications Coorporation)

1993

Mosaic web browser released

Tim Berners-Lee created the Mosaic web browser, the first truly user-friendly, graphical web browser. It introduced many of the layout standards which continue today and was the first web browser to display images alongside text in a web page.

1990

First cable-modems

Rouzbeh Yassini founded LANCity, creating the first cable-modems capable of high-speed data transfer over coaxial cables. Today, cable interent provides speeds of up to 500Mbps.

1990

AARNet National backbone established

the AARNet national backbone connected Universities across the country to a central hub at the University of Melbourne. Each link supported speeds of up to 48kbps.

1989

First Australian ISP

Pegasus begun offering dial-up internet (56Kbps) as a commercial service in major cities, becoming Australia’s first ISP.

1989

World Wide Web Established

Though mostly unimportant at the time, Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web. This is the set of protocols used today for exchanging documents and other web resources over the internet.

1989

AARNet Established

The Australian Academic and Research Network (AARNet) was launched by the Australian Vice-Chancellor’s Committee (now Universities Australia). It established Australia’s first long-term connection to the global internet.

1983

ARPANET adopts TCP/IP

ARPANET Adopts a new internet protocol suite based on the specification published in 1974. It was called TCP/IP (Transfer Control Protocol / Internet Protocol), and set a standard which continues today.

1979

ACSNet Launched

The Australian Computer Science network connected Australian universities to each other and to ARPANET using a store-and-forward message handling system.

1978

First BBS Created

Ward Christensen and Randy Suess launch CBBS (Computerised Bulletin Board Systems), making it the first public dial-up BBS.

1975

First fibre-optic network

Fibre-optic cables used to link a network of computers together in the NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) headquaters in Colorada, USA.

1974

TCP/IP precursor published

DARPA scientists Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn publish ‘Specification or Internet Control Protocol’, a formal specification of a protocol for internetwork communication using packet switching.

1969

ARPANET Established

The Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET) was established by the United States Department of Defence and introduced many of the internet standards we continue to use today. It is an early example of a large scale packet-switched networks.

1963

CSIRONET established

The CSIRO division of computing research established a national network of dial-up and low-speed leased line connections called CSIRONET.

Frequently asked questions about Australian internet history

When did internet first come to Australia?

1989. Australia’s first internet connection was made through the University of Melbourne, linking to ARPANET via the United States. At that time the network was limited to academics and computer scientists, with backbone speeds under 50 kbps — slower than a single MP3 stream today.

Did Australia invent Wi-Fi?

The key patent for the technology that became modern Wi-Fi (the wireless LAN standard) was developed by Australia’s CSIRO in the early 1990s. The CSIRO team led by Dr John O’Sullivan solved the multipath interference problem that made indoor wireless networks unreliable. CSIRO went on to win major patent settlements against Wi-Fi chipmakers, with the technology now used in every Wi-Fi device on the planet. So yes — the foundational Wi-Fi technology was invented in Australia.

Did Australia invent the internet?

No. The internet as a packet-switched network grew out of ARPANET in the United States (started 1969). Australia connected to ARPANET in 1989 via the University of Melbourne. But Australia did invent Wi-Fi, the wireless networking technology used in billions of devices today.

When did dial-up internet end in Australia?

Dial-up internet faded through the mid-2000s as ADSL broadband replaced it. By 2010 dial-up was effectively dead for households. Telstra continued offering dial-up as a back-up service for rural customers into the 2010s, but by 2020 it had been retired in favour of mobile broadband and NBN Sky Muster satellite.

What is the fastest internet in Australia today?

The fastest residential plan available in Australia in 2026 is NBN 2000 — a 2 gigabit per second tier, only available on FTTP connections. The cheapest gigabit (NBN 1000) plan is Tangerine’s Speedy Max at $88.90/month. See our fastest NBN plan guide for the full picture.

What was the first broadband internet in Australia?

Cable internet (Optus@Home and Telstra BigPond Cable) launched in 1996, followed by the first widespread broadband — ADSL — rolled out by Telstra in 2001. ADSL replaced dial-up for most Australians through the mid-2000s.

When did NBN start in Australia?

The NBN project was announced in 2009 by the Rudd Labor government. Construction started in 2011, the rollout was substantially completed by 2020, and the network continues to be upgraded — most recently with the NBN 2000 tier (2024) and the free FTTP upgrade program (running since 2020, reached 2 million homes by 2025).

Who were the first internet providers in Australia?

Australia’s first commercial internet providers in the early 1990s included Connect.com.au (1992), OzEmail (1992), and Pegasus Networks. Telstra entered the consumer ISP market in 1995 with its BigPond service. iiNet (founded 1993) and Internode (founded 1991) became major early competitors that eventually merged into the TPG Telecom group decades later.

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