University demographic data
Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland is a community of communities, where students and staff from all walks of life learn and work together. Here you can find some information about who we are.
Ethnicity and gender have many dimensions, and here we provide a broad overview of student and staff communities. These communities include people who experience disability, belong to the LGBTQIATakatāpuiMVPFAFF+ community, have a refugee background, or a constrained economic background. In 2023, around a third of students identified with at least one of these groups.
There are many other ways in which we form communities, around language, faith, nationality, parenting, and many more. We’re committed to being a safe, inclusive, and equitable place for people to study and work with diverse friends and colleagues. This enriched environment fosters broad thinking, different perspectives, creativity, and a variety of talents.
Waipapa Taumata Rau is a community of almost 60,000 people, with 46,045 students and 13,138 staff. The images below show the composition of these groups according to some key characteristics.
Gender
Around 60% of people at Waipapa Taumata Rau are female.
Ethnicity
The two largest groups are Asian and Pākehā/European, accounting for around 40% each of the Waipapa Taumata Rau community.
Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland Community
Our communities include people who experience disability, belong to the LGBTQIATakatāpuiMVPFAFF+ community, have a refugee background, or a constrained economic background. The images are indicative, as many people identify with more than one of these groups.
Notes on the data
- Data are accurate as of July 2024.
- Some people may be counted twice in the total for the University if they are both enrolled as students and employed as staff.
- Some people identify as belonging to more than one community.
- The acronym LGBTQIATakatāpuiMVPFAFF+ stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and asexual – with:
- Takatāpui being a term embracing all Māori with diverse genders, sexualities and sex characteristics.
- MVPFAFF embracing Pacific identities – Mahu (Hawai’i and Tahiti), Vaka sa lewa (Fiji), Palopa (Papua New Guinea) Fa’afafine (Samoa) Akava’ine (Rarotonga), Fakaleiti (Tonga), Fakafifine (Niue).