Overview

His Majesty King Charles III was born 14 November 1948 at Buckingham Palace during the reign of his maternal grandfather, King George VI. This year His Majesty celebrates his 77th birthday. As King of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth realms, Charles is Australia’s Head of State, represented by the Governor-General, Her Excellency the Honourable Ms Sam Mostyn AC.

King Charles has visited Australia 17 times but his first visit as monarch was from 18 to 23 October 2024. Accompanied by Queen Camilla, the King visited Sydney and Canberra, where the Royal Couple’s numerous engagements included the King’s address to Parliament House, attendance at the celebration of the Bicentenary of the New South Wales Legislative Council, a Welcome to Country and Smoking Ceremony in Canberra, and several Meet the People Walks.

Technical specifications

Issue date
28 October 2025
Issue withdrawal date
1 May 2026
Denomination
1 x $1.70, 1 x $4.35
Stamp & product design
Jo Muré, Australia Post Design Studio
Paper: gummed
Tullis Russell 104gsm Red Phosphor/Blue PVA Stamp Paper
Paper: self-adhesive
Domain Securpost/C Print 100 P8P/Non Phos
Printer: gummed
RA Printing
Printing process
Offset lithography
Stamp size (mm)
$1.70 stamp: 26mm x 37.5mm; $4.35 stamp: 37.5mm x 26mm
Minisheet size (mm)
135mm x 80mm
Perforations
$1.70 stamp: 14.6mm x 13.86mm; $4.35 stamp: 13.86mm x 14.6mm
Sheet layout
Module of 50 (2 x 25)
FDI postmark
N/A
FDI withdrawal date
26 November 2025

Stamps in this issue

$1.70 The King's Birthday

This official photographic portrait of the King was taken by Millie Pilkington before the Royal Tour of Australia in October 2024. The King’s medals include the insignia of the Sovereign of the Order of Australia.

$4.35 Sydney Opera House

To honour the royal visit, the official portrait of the King and Queen by Millie Pilkington was projected onto the sails of the Sydney Opera House. Queen Camilla wears the famous Wattle Brooch, presented to Queen Elizabeth II in 1954 by the prime minister, Robert Menzies, as a gift from the Australian people. The late Queen was frequently photographed wearing the brooch, including during her numerous visits to Australia. Queen Camilla first wore the Wattle Brooch for the official photographic portrait taken just before the Royal Tour of Australia.