About Overland
Overland literary magazine has been showcasing brilliant and progressive fiction, poetry, nonfiction and art since 1954. The magazine has published some of Australia’s most iconic voices, and continues to give space to underrepresented voices and brand-new literary talent every single day.
In 2025, Overland is a quarterly print journal (publishing essays, stories and poetry) and an online magazine, publishing nonfiction articles each week day. Overland also publishes special online editions of fiction and poetry experimenting with form, hosts events and debates, and runs a writing residency and a series of literary competitions.
Overland has a proud history of publishing dissenting articles and gives a voice to the experiences that are excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets. The magazine has been part of an ongoing attempt to document lesser-known stories and histories, dissect media hysteria and dishonesty, debunk the populist hype of politicians, give a voice to those whose stories are otherwise marginalised, misrepresented or ignored, and point public debate in alternative directions.
2025 contributor rates
For the online magazine
Articles and art/comics – $160 (plus an additional 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders and GST when applicable).
For the print magazine
Rates for articles in the online magazine – $160 (plus an additional 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders and GST when applicable).
Rates for the print magazine: fiction and essays – $525; poems – $160 (plus an additional 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders and GST when applicable).
Overland pays contributors upon publication. If your piece has recently appeared in print or online, you can submit your invoice here.
Freelance Charter
Overland believes that freelance contributors are an integral part of our business. As such, we are proud to become the first publishers to sign onto the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance’s Freelance Charter, which affirms the rights and protections of freelance contributors. Find out more about the campaign to support freelance writers here.
Guide to referencing and style
You can access our referencing guide and style guide online.
Please note
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – and the magazine would not exist without its subscribers. For that reason, the editors prioritise submissions by subscribers.
You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription, which starts at $50.
Open now. Closes 27 July 2025 11:59pm AEST.
Sponsored by Trinity College at the University of Melbourne and supporters, the Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers, established in 2014 and now in its eleventh year, recognises the talent of young Indigenous writers across Australia.
It is the first of its kind in Victoria, and complements Trinity’s ongoing commitment to Indigenous education and reconciliation. The initiative is named after the first two Indigenous residential students at Trinity College – Sana Nakata and Lilly Brophy. The aim of the prize is to provide the winner with the opportunity to focus on and develop their writing skills and portfolio.
First prize includes $5000, an optional writing residency at Trinity College, and publication of the successful piece in Overland. The runner up will receive $500, with the possibility of a second runner up to be determined by the judges. The prize alternates between poetry and short fiction each year.
In 2025, first prize will be awarded to the best short story up to 3000 words by an Indigenous writer who is 35 years or younger at the closing date of the competition. A runner-up prize may also be awarded.
The prize is now open and will close 27 July 2025 at 11:59pm AEST.
Eligibility and selection criteria:
- The prize is open to Indigenous writers who are 35 years or younger at the closing date of the competition
- First prize will be awarded to the best short story up to 3000 words
- The work must be unpublished at the time of entry
- Entrants must be Australian citizens or permanent residents of Australia
- The author’s name must not appear on the submitted document
- The prize will be awarded at the judges’ discretion and they reserve the right to not select a winner
- Second and third place prizes may be awarded at the judges’ discretion.
The residency
The Trinity College residency will provide the writer with a bespoke opportunity for professional and creative engagement with the wider Melbourne writing scene, community involvement with the student cohort at the College, and social and professional engagement with staff at the College. Trinity will cover the costs of flights, accommodation, and all meals during the residency period.
Subject to the winner's availability, the residency will be hosted at Trinity College between March and May to facilitate engagement with one or both of the Blak&Bright First Nations Literary Festival and the Melbourne Writers Festival. The residency will provide ample time for the fellow to work on their writing.
There will be opportunities to engage in campus and college life, to give workshops or talks, and receive writing mentorship. Trinity will connect the writer-in-residence with staff and students, including their Indigenous Engagement and Support Coordinator and potential mentors, during the residency.
Subject to the wishes of the Indigenous writer-in-resident, the residency may include:
- a prize presentation evening at the Awards Dinner in late March
- mentorship with writers connected with Trinity College or the University of Melbourne
- an introduction to the Trinity-run Indigenous reading group and student group
- inclusion in staff events via the Senior Common Room
- readings/participation in Trinity’s programs and/or at Overland events
- running a workshop for the Trinity-run book club, Literature Coterie.
Judges
This year’s judges are Mykaela Saunders and Evelyn Araluen.
Dr Mykaela Saunders is a Koori/Goori and Lebanese writer, critic and editor. Mykaela is a postdoctoral research fellow at Macquarie University researching First Nations speculative fiction. Mykaela worked in Aboriginal education in various capacities from 2003 to 2023, and has been teaching at the tertiary level since 2012. Her research explores her people’s past, present and future.
Evelyn Araluen is a Goorie and Koori poet, researcher and co-editor of Overland Literary Journal. Her Stella-prize winning poetry collection DROPBEAR was published by UQP in 2021. She lectures in Literature and Creative Writing at Deakin University.
About Trinity College
Trinity College is the oldest residential college at the University of Melbourne. It is home to over 300 residential students, including a number of Indigenous students. Trinity’s Indigenous programs have been developing since Sana Nakata and Lilly Brophy became the first Indigenous students to attend the College.
Read the previous winners: Jessica Hart (poetry); Marika Duczynski (fiction); Ellen van Neerven (poetry); Evelyn Araluen (fiction); Raelee Lancaster (poetry); Allanah Hunt (fiction); Grace Lucas-Pennington (poetry); Jasmin McGaughey (fiction).
If you have a current subscription to Overland, use this form to pitch an article for publication.
Pitching to Overland
Please explain your proposed article in 100 words or so. What will your piece be about and why are you the person to write it? How will your article be different from other writing on the subject? When will you be able to send the finished piece? Make sure that your deadline is realistic – if we accept your pitch, we are committing to publishing the article only so long as we receive publishable copy by the specified time and date.
If you can provide links to examples of your writing (whether in other publications or on your own site), please do so.
In 2025, contributors to the online magazine are paid $160 per article plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders and GST when applicable.
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription, which start at $50.
If you do not have a current subscription to Overland, use this form to pitch ideas for articles.
Overland relies on its subscribers for survival. While all work will be read, we cannot guarantee response times to submissions by non-subscribers. You can support Overland by becoming a subscriber.
Pitching to Overland
Please explain your proposed article in 100 words or so. What will your piece be about and why are you the person to write it? How will your article be different from other writing on the subject? When will you be able to send the finished piece? Make sure that your deadline is realistic – if we accept your pitch, we are committing to publishing the article only so long as we receive publishable copy by the specified time and date. If you can provide links to examples of your writing (whether in other publications or on your own site), please do so.
In 2025, contributors to the online magazine are paid $160 per article, plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders and GST where applicable.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription on our website, which start at $50, or in the form below.
Regarding the payment options below: only fill this section out if you wish to subscribe to the magazine.
If you have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for submissions of articles for the online magazine.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
Overland publishes a weekly nonfiction magazine of literary, political and cultural analysis and polemic. While the magazine is eclectic, the online format generally favours short, punchy and topical articles. The rate for online articles is $160 plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders. Our online editors are Giovanni Tiso, Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk.
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription, which start at $50, on our website.
If you do not have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for submissions of articles for the online magazine.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
Overland relies on its subscribers for survival. While all work will be read, we cannot guarantee response times to submissions by non-subscribers. You can support Overland by becoming a subscriber.
About Overland’s online magazine
Overland publishes a weekly nonfiction magazine of literary, political and cultural analysis and polemic. While the magazine is eclectic, the online format generally favours short, punchy and topical articles. The rate for online articles is $160 plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders. Our online editors are Giovanni Tiso, Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription on our website, which start at $50, or in the form below.
Regarding the payment options below: only fill this section out if you wish to subscribe to the magazine.
If you have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for essay submissions for the print magazine.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
About the essays in Overland’s print magazine
The print edition of Overland publishes essays, polemics and other hard-hitting articles with a strong cultural or political analysis. As a quarterly, it cannot carry news articles or other content that will date quickly. Because space in the print edition is necessarily limited, material submitted in this category must justify its inclusion on the basis of originality, style, theoretical profundity or similar basis –it must, in short, stand the test of time. Academic articles may be refereed but Overland is a generalist publication and discourages specialist or narrowly scholastic submissions. Overland does not impose formal word limits but potential contributors should be aware that space limitations make longer pieces harder to accept.
The standard payment for nonfiction print essays is $500. Our print magazine editors are Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk.
*We particularly encourage submissions from women writers, activists and academics.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription, which start at $50, on our website.
If you do not have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for submissions.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
Overland relies on its subscribers for survival. While all work will be read, we cannot guarantee response times to submissions by non-subscribers. You can support Overland by becoming a subscriber.
About the essays in Overland’s print magazine
The print edition of Overland publishes essays, polemics and other hard-hitting articles with a strong cultural or political analysis. As a quarterly, it cannot carry news articles or other content that will date quickly. Because space in the print edition is necessarily limited, material submitted in this category must justify its inclusion on the basis of originality, style, theoretical profundity or similar basis – it must, in short, stand the test of time. Academic articles may be refereed but Overland is a generalist publication and discourages specialist or narrowly scholastic submissions. Overland does not impose formal word limits but potential contributors should be aware that space limitations make longer pieces harder to accept.
The standard payment for nonfiction print essays is $525 plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders. Our print magazine editors are Evelyn Araluen and Jonathan Dunk.
*We particularly encourage submissions from women writers, activists and academics.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription on our website, which start at $50, or in the form below.
Regarding the payment options below: only fill this section out if you wish to subscribe to the magazine.
If you have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for poetry submissions to the print quarterly.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
About the poetry in Overland’s print magazine
Overland publishes emerging, politically engaged poets, printing their work alongside more established national and international progressive contemporaries. The payment for poems published in the print journal is $160 per poem plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders. Our poetry editor is Elena Gomez.
Due to the number of submissions Overland receives, we ask that poets submit no more than 3 poems per quarter. We also ask that multiple poems be submitted in a single Word document or PDF.
*We particularly encourage submissions from women writers of colour.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription, which start at $50, on our website.
If you do not have a current subscription to Overland, use this form for submissions.
Please note: Overland’s current response period is up to 6 months due to the large volume of submissions received. We appreciate your patience as we carefully consider all pieces through multiple readings and endeavour to respond as quickly as possible.
Overland relies on its subscribers for survival. While all work will be read, we cannot guarantee response times to submissions by non-subscribers. You can support Overland by becoming a subscriber.
About the poetry in Overland’s print magazine
Overland publishes emerging, politically engaged poets, printing their work alongside more established national and international progressive contemporaries. The payment for poems published in the print journal is $160 plus 11.5% superannuation for ABN holders. Our poetry editor is Elena Gomez.
Due to the number of submissions Overland receives, we ask that poets submit no more than 3 poems per quarter. We also ask that multiple poems be submitted in a single Word document or PDF. We particularly encourage submissions from women writers of colour.
About subscribing to Overland
Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of publishing ideas and voices often excluded from mainstream media and publishing outlets – but it would not exist without its subscribers. You can help support Overland by taking out an annual subscription on our website, which start at $50, or in the form below.
Regarding the payment options below: only fill this section out if you wish to subscribe to the magazine.