Nazi and other hate symbols will be banned in Queensland under proposed laws set to be introduced to the state parliament.
Victoria and NSW have already criminalised the display of Nazi symbols while Tasmania and Western Australia intend to do the same.
Premier Annastasia Palaszczuk says a bill to be introduced on Wednesday will ban the display of symbols and flags to promote hatred or cause fear, such as the swastika, also known as the Hakenkreuz.
"There is no place in our state for evil hateful ideologies - Queensland is better than that," the premier posted on Twitter.
It is understood there will be exceptions for Hindus, Buddhists and Jains for whom swastikas are religious symbols.
Ms Palaszczuk foreshadowed the planned ban last May after a Nazi flag was displayed near the Brisbane Synagogue and a train carriage was vandalised with Nazi symbols.
Queensland's Jewish Board of Deputies Vice-President Jason Steinberg said at the time there had been a notable rise in anti-semitism with 60 per cent of the Jewish community reporting being vilified, and fearing that reported incidents wouldn't be taken seriously by police.
A parliamentary committee also recommended prohibiting hate symbols, including those representing the Nazi and ISIS ideologies, after an inquiry into serious vilification and hate crimes.
It is unclear if the premier's bill will cover social media and internet displays of hate symbols, which was also recommended by the committee.
The cross-party panel said discrimination protections should be widened from race, religion, sexuality and gender identity to also include disability, medical status, sex characteristics and intersex status.
It also proposed to make hate or serious vilification an aggravation in criminal cases and that the civil incitement test be lowered so it shouldn't have to prove offenders actually incited hate crimes, only that their actions were likely to.