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ARC Home Media Australians overwhelmingly back facial recognition to protect retail workers from serious crime
Media release

Australians overwhelmingly back facial recognition to protect retail workers from serious crime

New national research shows Australians strongly support the targeted use of facial recognition technology (FRT) to protect retail workers and customers from serious and repeat criminal behaviour. 

Independent polling commissioned by the Australian Retail Council (ARC) and conducted by RedBridge found clear majority support for facial recognition technology where there are serious risks to safety. 

The RedBridge Retail Crime Prevention Survey found: 

  • 81 per cent support the use of FRT to identify people who have previously threatened retail staff with a weapon 
  • 80 per cent support its use to identify people who have physically assaulted staff or customers 
  • Around three in four (75 per cent) Australians support its use to identify repeat serious offenders, including those responsible for significant theft or ongoing disturbances 
  • 72 per cent of Australians supported the use of FRT to identify people who had been subject to intervention orders. 

The research also shows Australians believe the technology delivers real safety outcomes. 86 per cent say facial recognition would be effective in helping police identify and prosecute offenders, while 76 per cent believe it would help retail workers feel safer at work. 

ARC CEO, Chris Rodwell said the findings reflect growing public concern about escalating retail crime and violence. 

“Across Australia, retail staff are facing unprecedented levels of violence and intimidation simply for doing their job. Workers are increasingly facing threats with weapons, physical assaults and organised repeat offending,” said Mr Rodwell. “This research sends a very clear message: Australians want retail workers protected from serious and repeat offenders, and they support the careful use of technology to achieve that.” 

Mr Rodwell said strong governance, transparency and privacy protections must sit alongside the deployment of any technology. 

“The public expects high standards and robust privacy safeguards. This is about protecting everyday workers and shoppers from repeat offenders, not tracking law-abiding customers. Retailers accept that responsibility and are seeking nationally consistent frameworks that protect both privacy and the community,” he said. “The question is no longer whether facial recognition has a role in retail safety, it’s how we put clear, consistent rules around its use so workers are protected and our shops are free from violence and repeat theft.” 

*RedBridge conducted the survey between in October 2025. The sample of N = 2,021 Australian voters aged 18 and older was recruited over online panel. Quotas for age, gender, location and education were used to ensure the sample is representative. 

About us: Australian Retail Council (ARC) represents a $444 billion sector that employs 1.4 million Australians across metropolitan, regional, and remote communities – making retail the largest private sector employer in the country and a significant contributor to the Australian economy. Our membership spans the full spectrum of Australian retail, from family-owned small and independent retailers that make up 95% of our membership, through to our largest national and international retailers that employ thousands of Australians and support both metropolitan and regional communities every day.