Structure of the Australian Army

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Structure of the Australian Army

This article describes the current structure of the Australian Army. It includes the army's order of battle and the headquarters locations of major units. Members of the Australian Army also serve within joint units of the Australian Defence Force which fall outside the direct command of the Australian Army.

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Two Bushmasters operated by the 2nd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment during an exercise in 2010

Overview

The Australian Army is organised into three main elements which report to the Chief of Army, the Headquarters of the 1st Division, Special Operations Command and Forces Command.[1] Headquarters 1st Division is responsible for high-level training activities and is capable of being deployed to command large scale ground operations. It does not have any combat units permanently assigned to it, though it commands units during training activities and the Land Combat Readiness Centre reports to the divisional headquarters.[2][3]

Most of the Army's units report to Forces Command, which is responsible for overseeing their readiness and preparing them for operations. This organisation came into effect during January 2011. Before this time the Army's three regular brigades were permanently assigned to the Headquarters 1st Division.[4][3]

Organisation

Summarize
Perspective
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Australian Army organisation 2025

The following order of battle describes the Army's organisational structure at the battalion and independent company/squadron level. It does not take into account changes to units' structure and command arrangements associated with operational deployments.

Chief of Army[5]

1st (Australian) Division

1st Brigade

3rd Brigade

7th Brigade

10th Fires Brigade

17th Sustainment Brigade

2nd (Australian) Division

  • 2nd (Australian) Division[5][15][23]
    • Headquarters, 2nd Division (Randwick Barracks, NSW)
    • 8th Signal Regiment (HQ at Randwick Barracks, NSW)[24]
      • 108th Signal Squadron (HQ at Simpson Barracks, Victoria) - 4th Brigade
      • 109th Signal Squadron (HQ at Irwin Barracks, WA) - 13th Brigade
      • 141st Signal Squadron (HQ at Lavarack Barracks, Qld) - 11th Brigade
      • 142nd Signal Squadron (HQ at Holsworthy Barracks, NSW) – 5th Brigade
      • 143rd Signal Squadron (HQ at HMAS Harman Canberra) – 2nd Division + 5th Brigade
      • 144th Signal Squadron (HQ at Keswick Barracks, SA) - 9th Brigade
      • Operational Support Squadron (HQ at Randwick Barracks, NSW) - 2nd Division Sydney
    • 9th Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery, (M252A1 Mortar mortars) (HQ at Kogarah Barracks, NSW)[25] — Will move to 10th Brigade
      • 2nd/10th Light Battery (HQ in Melbourne, Vic)
      • 5th/11th Light Battery (HQ at Lavarack Barracks, Qld)
      • 6th/13th Light Battery (HQ at Keswick Barracks, SA)
      • 7th Light Battery (HQ in Dee Why, NSW)
      • 23rd Light Battery (HQ at Kogarah Barracks, NSW)
    • 8th Operational Support Unit[26]

4th Brigade

5th Brigade

9th Brigade

11th Brigade

13th Brigade

Regional Force Surveillance Group

Forces Command

2nd Health Brigade

8th Brigade

Special Operations Command

Army Aviation Command

Land Combat College

Geographic distribution

Corps and Regiments

Corps in the Australian Army, are administrative groupings of soldiers with a common function to promote pride and esprit de corps.[44]

See also

References

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