ANCOR - Australian National Child Offender Register

The Australian National Child Offender Register (ANCOR) is a web-based system designed to assist police to register, case manage and share mandatory information about registered persons as required by legislation. It also enables alerts to be generated when registered persons notify that they are planning to travel interstate or overseas. All Australian police jurisdictions actively use the register.

What offences does ANCOR registration relate to?

The general objective of the legislation is to ensure that persons convicted of sex offences and other serious offences against children are able to be monitored by police once they have served their sentence. Jurisdictional legislation determines what a registrable offence is, and this may vary between states and territories.

The table below gives the relevant legislation by state or territory.

Jurisdiction Legislation
ACT Crimes (Child Sex Offenders) Act 2005
NSW Child Protection (Offenders Registration) Act 2001
NT Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Registration) Act 2004
QLD Child Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2004
SA Child Sex Offenders Registration Act 2006
TAS Community Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2005
VIC Sex Offenders Registration Act 2004
WA Community Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2004

At 01 July 2010 there were 11,543 registered offenders across Australia.

Registering and reporting

Mandatory and optional reporting requirements

A registered offender is required to provide the following information to police:

Registered persons may also be asked to provide the optional information on ID document details, special needs and associations.

ANCOR case lifecycle

Authorized police use ANCOR to manage persons convicted of child sex offences and other specified offences. A child sex offender case typically moves through the following stages on ANCOR: