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Writer's pictureKyriakos Tsinivits

Points given by Australia to Eurovision winners from 2015 to 2024



Article updated 24 May 2024 by Dale Roberts


Australia made its debut at the Eurovision Song Contest back in 2015 and has competed every year since. Each year Australians televoters and juries have also awarded points to every Eurovision winner in the Grand Final.


We have ranked the points awarded by the Australian televote and jury to every Eurovision winner in the Grand Final, from the lowest to the highest total score, to determine Australia's favourite Eurovision winner between 2015 and 2024.


Check out Australia's televote and jury favourite Eurovision winners in the list below, including details of how Australia voted for the ultimate winners in their semi-finals.


Any ties will be decided by which entry received more points in the public vote.



9. Jamala - '1944' (Ukraine, 2016) - 10 points

(8 points - Televote / 2 points - Jury)



In 2016, Australia competed in the same semi-final as the eventual winner, Ukraine's Jamala and her song '1944'. Australia was represented by Dami Im with 'Sound of Silence', who actually won semi-final 2 by coming first with the juries and second in the televote.


In the semi-final, Australia's televoters gave '1944' three points, putting it in eighth place. The Australian jury ranked Ukraine in twelfth place, meaning that it missed out on points. Both the televoters and jury from Australia gave Belgium's Laura Tesoro and 'What's the Pressure' their 12 points.


In the Grand Final, Australian televoters placed Ukraine in third place with eight points and the jury gave '1944' two points, ranking it ninth. When it came to the coveted douze points, both the Australian televote and jury again backed Belgium.


Australia clearly LOVED 'What's the Pressure' and was the only country to give both their sets of douze points to Belgium.



8. Duncan Laurence - 'Arcade' (Netherlands, 2019) - 12 points

(6 points - Televote / 6 points - Jury)



In 2019, the Australian televoters and jury each awarded Duncan Laurence's 'Arcade' six points, meaning that Eurovision-winning song finished in fifth place in the Australian vote.


But where did Australia's douze points go?


The Aussie televoters gave 12 points to Norway's KEiiNO and their entry 'Spirit in the Sky'. Their popularity "down under" would see KEiiNO tour Australia in late 2019. The Aussie jury gave Sweden's John Lundvik its douze points for his song 'Too Late For Love'.



7 Måneskin - 'Zitti e buoni' (Italy, 2021) - 13 points

(7 points - Televote / 6 points - Jury)



In 2021, the Australian televoters had Eurovision winner Måneskin in fourth place, giving them seven points. Their douze points went to Iceland's Daði og Gagnamagnið and their song '10 Years'. The Australian jury ranked the Italian band in fifth place, awarding them six points; the jury's douze points went to Malta's Destiny with her energetic entry 'Je me casse'.



6. Salvador Sorbal - 'Amar pelos dois' (Portugal, 2017) - 14 points

(7 points - Televote / 7 points - Jury)



In 2017, Australia was in the same semi-final as the 2017 winner Portugal. The Australian televoters gave Salvador Sorbal 10 points and the jury gave him six points. In the semi-final, Australia's 12 televote points went to the Moldovan entry 'Hey Mamma' by the SunStroke Project, and the jury gave its douze points to Poland's Kasia Moś and her song 'Flashlight'.


In the Grand Final, the Australian televote and jury were in agreement, placing the Eurovision winner in fourth place by each awarding seven points. However, the situation was more mixed when it came to the home of Australia's two sets of 12: televoters remained faithful to the SunStroke Project, whereas the jury's douze points went to 'Never Give Up On You' by the UK's Lucie Jones.


5. Nemo - 'The Code' (Switzerland, 2024) - 17 points

(7 points - Online vote / 10 points - Jury)



'The Code' was more popular amongst the Australian jury than the public. The juries were one of the few jwho didn't give 12 points to Nemo (Our 12 points went to Bambie Thug from Ireland). The Australian online voters (as Australia votes through an online system) gave Switzerland 7 points.


4. Loreen - 'Tattoo' (Sweden, 2023) - 17 points

(10 points - Online vote / 7 points - Jury)



'Tattoo' was more popular amongst the Australian public than the Aussie jury. The Australian online voters (as Australia votes through an online system) gave Sweden 10 points, awarding the douze points to Finland's Käärijä. The jury however had Loreen in fourth place awarding her seven points with their 12 points going to Belgium. One juror did have 'Tattoo' as their douze points.


3. Netta - 'Toy' (Israel, 2018) - 18 points

(12 points - Televote / 6 points - Jury)



For the second time, the Australian televoters had the Eurovision winner as their number one favourite entry in a Grand Final. The Australian jury, however, had Netta and her entry 'Toy' in fifth place, awarding it six points. That year, the 12 jury points went to Sweden's Benjamin Ingrosso and his entry 'Dance You Off'.



2. Kalush Orchestra - 'Stefania' (Ukraine, 2022) - 19 points

(12 points - Online vote / 7 points - Jury)


'Stefania' is Australia's second most awarded Eurovision winner in terms of points awarded. In the Grand Final, the Australian online voters (Australia voted through an online system for the first time) gave Ukraine 12 points!


This was the third time that Australian Eurovision fans had fully backed the Eurovision winner by awarding it douze points.


The Australian jury, however, placed Ukraine in fourth place, although one juror did give Ukraine the maximum 12 points. Overall, Spain's Chanel with her entry 'SloMo' came out on top with the jury.



1. Måns Zelmerlöw - 'Heroes' (Sweden, 2015) - 22 points

(Televote rank 1st place (12 points) / Jury rank 2nd place (10 points))



'Heroes' proved very popular with Australians at their first competitive Contest in 2015. Australia got to vote in both semi-finals and in the Grand Final. In the second semi-final, Australia awarded the eventual winner, Sweden, 12 points, which came first with the Australian jury and televote.


In the Grand Final, 'Heroes' scored douze points from Australia, placing second with the jury and first with televoters. It makes the song Australia's favourite Eurovision winner by points awarded.


Years later at 'Eurovision - Australia Decides' 2020 on the Gold Coast, Måns Zelmerlöw appeared as a special guest where he performed 'Heroes' to a crowd of very enthusiastic Aussie Eurovision fans.


Well, there you have it! What do you think? Does Australia have taste when it comes to backing Eurovision winners?


Let us know on our socials.


For continued updates on all Eurovision Song Contest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Threads. All the links can be found at: https://linktr.ee/aussievisionnet

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Each year Australians televoters and juries have also awarded points to every Eurovision winner in the Grand Final. backrooms game

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