ARIA Award for Best Indigenous Release

ARIA Award for Best Indigenous Release
1998 winner Archie Roach
CountryAustralia
Presented byAustralian Recording Industry Association (ARIA)
First award1987
Final award1998
Currently held byArchie Roach, Looking for Butter Boy (1998)
Most winsArchie Roach (3)
Most nominationsKev Carmody and Yothu Yindi (6 each)
Websiteariaawards.com.au

The ARIA Music Award for Best Indigenous Release was an award presented at the annual ARIA Music Awards. It was presented from 1987 through to 1998. Originally titled Best Indigenous Record in 1987, it was renamed Best Aboriginal/Islander Release in 1995. From 1996 it was Best Indigenous Release.

The award for Best Indigenous Release was first presented to Coloured Stone for their album Human Love. It was retired after the 1998 awards with Archie Roach winning the final award for his album Looking for Butter Boy. Roach won the award three times and Weddings Parties Anything, Yothu Yindi and Christine Anu each won it twice, with all except Yothu Yindi winning both their nominations. Kev Carmody and Yothu Yindi were tied for the most nominations with six each, with both additionally contributing to the various artists album Our Home, Our Land, though Carmody never won. In 1988, upon Midnight Oil's nomination for Best Indigenous Record, their manager Gary Morris objected to the group being put in that category by ARIA, saying "an Indigenous Award should go to an indigenous band."