2013 in Australian television

This is a list of Australian television events and premieres which occurred, or were scheduled to occur, in 2013, the 58th year of continuous operation of television in Australia.

Events

 * 17 January – The Seven Network's longest running soap opera Home and Away celebrates its 25th anniversary.
 * 18 January – The Nine Network's nightly current affairs programme A Current Affair turns 25.
 * 22 February – Network Ten's CEO, James Warburton, is stood down after 14 months in the role, following a string of network ratings failures.
 * 21 March – Phil Rankine and Amity Dry win an All-Stars edition of The Block.
 * 1 April – SBS revamps SBS 2 with an aim on a youth-oriented audience.
 * 7 April – Asher Keddie wins the Gold Logie Award for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television at the 2013 Logie Awards.
 * 17 April – The court bans Mel B from appearing on Channel Nine's Australia's Got Talent. Instead she will continue with Channel Seven for an indefinite long run.
 * 26 April – Days of Our Lives the US soap opera finishes its long 45-year run on the Nine Network, ending a 4-decade tradition of Daytime Soap operas in Australian Free-to-air Television. 6 years later, the program returns to Nine along with The Young and the Restless airing from 2 September on 9Gem
 * 28 April – Dan and Steph Mulheron win the fourth season of My Kitchen Rules.
 * 16 May – Cricketer Andrew Symonds wins the first series of Celebrity Splash!.
 * 29 May – Robyn and Katie Dyke win the eighth season of The Biggest Loser.
 * 17 June – Harrison Craig wins the second season of The Voice.
 * 1 July – Carly Schulz and Leighton Brow win the first season of House Rules.
 * 28 July – Alisa and Lysandra Fraser win the seventh season of The Block.
 * 27 August – Nancy Ho wins the first series of The Great Australian Bake Off.
 * 24 September – Melissa Juratowitch wins the eighth cycle of Australia's Next Top Model.
 * 16 October – Hillal Kara-Ali wins the sixth and final season of The Mole, taking home $180,000 in prize money. Erin Dooley is revealed as the Mole, and Aisha Jefcoate is the runner-up.
 * 28 October – Dami Im wins the fifth season of The X Factor.
 * 2 November – Channel Seven again bans Mel B from appearing on Channel Ten's The Project in the last minute before it goes to air.
 * 6 November – Tim Dormer wins the tenth season of Big Brother.
 * 10 November – Music trio Uncle Jed win the seventh season of Australia's Got Talent.
 * 26 November – Illusionist Cosentino and his partner Jessica Raffa win the thirteenth season of Dancing with the Stars.
 * 10 December – The final analogue signals are turned off in Melbourne and Surrounds as well as Remote Central and Eastern Australia, bringing an end to 57 years of analogue broadcasting in Australia.

New channels

 * 28 March – eXtra$2$
 * 17 September – Spree TV
 * 22 or 25 November – Fresh Ideas TV

Renamed channels

 * 1 January – Foxtel Movies (replacing both Showtime and Movie Network)
 * 2 April – SBS 2 (rename of SBS TWO)

Analogue switch-off
The switch-off of analogue television was completed in 2013, with the following areas being the last to be switched off:
 * 2 April – Adelaide
 * 9 April – Tasmania
 * 16 April – Perth
 * 28 May – Brisbane, Gold Coast
 * 25 June – Regional Western Australia
 * 28 July – Darwin
 * 3 December – Sydney
 * 10 December – Melbourne, Remote Central and Eastern Australia

Restack/Retune
Restack was the official name, and Retune was the more consumer-friendly name, given to the change in frequency of many digital television stations following analog switch-off. The main purpose was to clear channels 52–69 in the 700 MHz band for reuse in mobile communications. Channels 9 & 9A were also cleared so that they could be used for DAB+. Many remote areas were excluded, their stations didn't change frequency and channel 9 & 9A continue to be used in some remote areas for digital television.

The restack began in April 2013 and was completed by the end of 2014.

Changes to network affiliation
Criterion for inclusion in the following list is that Australian premiere episodes will air in Australia for the first time on the new network. This includes when a programme is moved from a free-to-air network's primary channel to a digital multi-channel, as well as when a program moves between subscription television channels – provided the preceding criterion is met. Ended television series which change networks for repeat broadcasts are not included in the list.

Free-to-air premieres
This is a list of programs which made their premiere on Australian free-to-air television that had previously premiered on Australian subscription television. Programs may still air on the original subscription television network.

Subscription premieres
This is a list of programs which made their premiere on Australian subscription television that had previously premiered on Australian free-to-air television. Programs may still air on the original free-to-air television network.