The Victorian Water Register's My Water and Broker Portal will be offline on Thursday 21 May 2026 between 6 pm to 11 pm.
This planned outage is required for scheduled maintenance.
Between 6 pm to 11 pm, the following services will be unavailable:
The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) will implement multi-factor authentication (MFA) on My Water and the Broker Portal from Tuesday 2 June 2026. MFA adds an extra layer of security at sign-in and is a standard cyber-security measure used across government and industry.
This update is part of a suite of minor enhancements being released over 1–2 June to strengthen the security of the Victorian Water Register (VWR) and increase protection of user accounts and information. This release includes updated and expanded My Water Terms and Conditions of Use, clearer conditions for system access, and enhancements to the login process. As part of this uplift, users will be required to maintain individual user accounts, with the use of generic or shared email addresses no longer supported.
Once MFA goes live on 2 June, users will be required, during login, to enter a one-time verification code sent to the email address they are registered with.
Read more: Multi-factor authentication to go live on Tuesday 2 June 2026
The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) has confirmed dates for the 2026 July inter-valley trade openings. Estimated volumes will be announced closer to the events.
The Victorian Water Register, including My Water and the Broker Portal, will close for end-of-year processing at 12 noon Tuesday 30 June 2026. Services will re-open at 9 am on Wednesday 1 July 2026.
Important information regarding times and dates for the July 2026 trade openings will be provided soon.
If you are trading allocation or water shares before the end of the water year, please be aware of the important dates and times below. There is no guarantee that applications submitted after these times will be processed in the 2025–26 water year.
Read more: Important dates – end of 2025–26 water year application processing
Delivering water in the Murray system has always been challenging. Water is released from water storages and travels long distances to where it is used along the length of the Murray River. Although shortfalls in the Murray below Barmah have been rare, the risk of a shortfall is increasing. The Victorian Government recognises the importance of having a plan in place to ensure the response to a shortfall event is coordinated and effective and limits the impacts on water users and the community.
The first Victorian Murray Shortfall Response Plan was published in 2022. It provided confidence and transparency in the process of managing shortfall events to Victorian water users and the community.
The plan has been updated in 2026 to reflect changes following the introduction of the ‘place of take approvals’ framework in November 2023. It also includes improved processes developed between DEECA, relevant rural water corporations and agencies.
The plan is used by the Victorian Government and agencies within the water sector with a role in the management of shortfall events. As an operational document it is subject to regular updates and will be amended over time.
Victoria has released a new independent report by WSP, updating estimates of water availability and perennial horticulture demands in the southern Murray-Darling Basin.
The updated report has been developed in close collaboration with the New South Wales and South Australian governments, the Murray-Darling Basin Authority, and industry experts to provide an up-to-date understanding of how horticultural water demands are changing. The new report builds on analysis released in 2019, 2020 and 2022 and provides a greater level of confidence in the projected demand estimates through improved data accuracy.
The report finds that there remains a risk of not enough water being available; this is particularly significant in both extreme and moderately dry conditions. Water users should remain mindful of increasing water competition, especially in the lower Murray.
Read more: Water supply and horticulture demand in the southern Basin – 2025 Update
The Department and Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) has released four new reports for the Victorian water market. These are:
The release of these reports continues the Victorian Government’s commitment to ensuring all water participants can easily access water market information.
The reports compliment an increased suite of online reports and dashboards. These provide downloadable data for interested parties to undertake their own analysis. Dashboards and reports include Frequent Traders, Large Water Owners, Water Share Transfers to the Australian Government and new data for delivery shares. They are available on the Victorian Water Register website.
Read more: Four new trade reports released offer insight into Victoria’s water market
To improve the security and resilience of My Water and the Broker Portal, the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) has planned to rollout Multiple Factor Authentication for users in the first half of 2026. This initiative strengthens cybersecurity and makes the Victorian Water Register more secure for everyone.
DEECA will provide more information for customers early next year through the Victorian Water Register news. To ensure you are kept aware of these changes, users can subscribe via the homepage at https://waterregister.vic.gov.au/.
The next Goulburn-to-Murray trade opening is scheduled for Monday 15 December 2025. Based on current estimates, a minimum of 14 gigalitres (GL) of Goulburn-to-Murray trade opportunity will be released.
The estimated minimum 14 GL of trade opportunity is an indicative volume based on the available data to date. It does not include additional opportunity that may be available on 15 December following the Northern Victorian Resource Manager’s seasonal outlook announcement at 10 am. This additional opportunity can arise due to adjustments to the Legacy Trade Reserve set aside to meet historic exchange rate trade commitments.
The Goulburn-to-Murray Trade Limit – which governs allocation trade from the Goulburn, Broken, Campaspe, and Loddon systems to the Victorian Murray system, New South Wales, and South Australia – will open again on Monday 15 December 2025. This is the third of three Goulburn-to-Murray scheduled trade openings for the 2025–26 water year. Estimated volumes will be made public closer to this date.
Customers are encouraged to lodge trade applications throughout the 7-hour submission window. Market participants are not required to submit trade applications as soon as the submission window opens. A customer who submits a trade application at the start of the submission window will have the same chance of having their application succeed as a customer who submits at the end of the window.
The 21st edition of the Victorian Water Accounts have been released, with water use and availability data from 2023–24 now available online.
The 2023–24 Victorian Water Accounts have been released, with 21 years of data and information now available online.
The Victorian Water Accounts are a trusted and transparent source of information that provides a comprehensive picture of the availability and use of the state’s water each year.
The reports have been released annually since 2003–04 and contain valuable data gathered during significant dry and wet periods.
The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action has released the Goulburn-to-Murray Post Trade Opening Report (October 2025). This report summarises the outcomes from the October Goulburn-to-Murray trade opening. It consolidates information available via the Victorian Water Register website with some additional data around the number of unique allocation accounts that traded. It provides insights into the number, volumes, and reason for trade for all applications submitted and the order they were processed.
The October Goulburn-to-Murray trade opportunity opened with a balance of 31,523 ML. A total of 203 eligible trade applications were received, with a total volume of 70,222 ML. Eligible applications were randomised to determine a processing order. Processing resulted in 98 applications being approved.
Read more: Post trade report for October 2025 Goulburn-to-Murray trade opening now available
The Goulburn to Murray trade review Scientific Advisory Panel (the Panel) has prepared three reports, covering detailed results and analysis of the lower Goulburn River Research and Investigations Program undertaken during 2023–24, and interpretation of the outcomes over the combined three years from the start of the program (2021–24).
The program is designed to assess the environmental performance of the long-term Operating Rules for the lower Goulburn River and to determine whether the rules are working as intended to prevent environmental damage from sustained high flows over summer and autumn.
Climatic and flow conditions throughout 2021–24, including record breaking floods in spring 2022 and summer 2024, saw relatively low demand for inter-valley trade (IVT) deliveries from the Goulburn River to the River Murray during the peak irrigation period (December to April).
Earlier this year, the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) and WaterNSW developed a draft framework to assess options for improving the efficiency and equity of access to inter-valley trade opportunities. In July–August 2025 we sought feedback on whether the draft framework is appropriate and what options for managing access to trade opportunities should be assessed.
A report, summarising what we heard during the consultation, is available on Engage Victoria.
Read more: What We Heard – Improving access to trade in southern Murray-Darling Basin – Stage 1
The next Goulburn-to-Murray trade opening is scheduled for Wednesday 15 October 2025. Based on current estimates, approximately 31 gigalitres (GL) of Goulburn-to- Murray trade opportunity will be released.
The estimated 31 GL of trade opportunity is an indicative volume based on the best available data to date.
Find out more about how the Goulburn-to-Murray trade opportunity is calculated.
The Goulburn-to-Murray Trade Limit—which governs allocation trade from the Goulburn, Broken, Campaspe, and Loddon systems to the Victorian Murray system, New South Wales, and South Australia—will open again on Wednesday 15 October 2025. This is the second of three Goulburn-to-Murray trade openings for the 2025–26 water year. Estimated volumes will be made public closer to this date.
As part of Victoria’s ongoing commitment to water market transparency, post-trade opening reports have been regularly published since October 2023.
The release of the Post Trade Opportunity Opening Report, July 2025, summarises the outcomes from the July Barmah and Goulburn to Murray trade openings, and provides insights into the number, volume, and order of applications processed.
The Barmah and Goulburn-to-Murray trade opportunities both opened for a 7-hour submission window between 7:00 am and 2:00 pm on Wednesday 2 July 2025. Both trade openings used a randomisation approach to determine the order of application processing.
Read more: Post trade summary and report for July 2025 trade openings now available
Help us improve the efficiency and equity of access to inter-valley and inter-zone water allocation trade opportunities in the southern Murray-Darling Basin.
The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action (DEECA) and WaterNSW have developed a draft framework to assess options for improving the efficiency and equity of access to inter-valley and inter-zone trade opportunities. We are now seeking community feedback on whether the framework is appropriate for achieving this purpose, as well as your ideas on options for managing access to trade opportunities that should be assessed in the next stage of this project.
You can view the draft framework and submit your feedback to DEECA via a brief questionnaire at EngageVic. Alternatively, you can also submit your feedback to WaterNSW. This joint consultation will be open until 17 August.
Read more: Improving access to trade in southern Murray-Darling Basin
From 1 July 2025 there are additional Australian Government obligations on water brokers and exchanges operating in the Murray-Darling Basin, under a new Water Markets Intermediaries Code.
As a water market participant you are encouraged to familiarise yourself with the Code and the new safeguards that have been put in place to ensure your broker acts in your best interests.
The new Code, and complementary trust accounting obligations, place further responsibilities on water market intermediaries. This is in addition to the rules they must follow under Australian Consumer Law.
The Code is designed to give greater protection to users of water brokers and exchanges, aligning standards with those that exist in other similar markets. Some obligations under the Code commence on 1 July 2025, others on 1 October 2025.
On Wednesday 2 July 2025, the Murray-Darling Basin Authority made 38,767.7 megalitres (ML) of allocation trade opportunity available from above to below the Barmah Narrows. As in previous years, there was more demand than supply.
2025 marked the third year that Victoria and New South Wales (NSW) synchronised the timing of the Barmah trade opportunity.
This year, Victoria and NSW implemented a new joint randomisation protocol for the processing of Barmah trade applications. The new protocol meant that differences in each state’s processing approach and systems did not influence traders’ access to the available Barmah trade opportunity. You can learn more about how the protocol worked here.