In 2019 Affirm Press was named Small Publisher of the Year at the
Australian Book Industry Awards, and in 2024 was shortlisted for Publisher of the Year. Its books have won various major awards. In 2021,
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams won the ABIA's General Fiction Book of the Year, the Indie Book Awards Book of the Year, the Indie Books Awards Debut Fiction, the ABA Booksellers' Choice Adult Fiction Book of the Year, the MUD Literary Prize for Best Debut Novel, and the NSW Premier's Literary Awards People's Choice Award. In 2021, the book was also shortlisted for NSW Premier's Literary Awards
Christina Stead Prize for Fiction and the Walter Scott Historical Prize in the UK. In 2021,
The Grandest Bookshop in the World by Amelia Mellor won the ABIA's Book of the Year for Younger Children and the NSW Premier's Literary Award
Patricia Wrightson Prize for Children's Literature. It was shortlisted for the ARA Historical Novel Prize (Children and Young Adult Category), the Readings' Children's Fiction Prize, and Speech Pathology Australia's Book of the Year (8-10 years). In 2023, ''The Bookseller's Apprentice'' by Amelia Mellor won the ARA Historical Novel Prize: Children and Young Adult. It was shortlisted for the ABIA's Book of the Year for Younger Children (ages 7-12), Book People Awards Children's Book of the Year, and Reading's Children's Prize. It was longlisted for the Indie Book Awards Children's category. In 2024,
The Bookbinder of Jericho by Pip Williams won the ABIA's General Fiction Book of the Year and Marketing Strategy of the Year, and was shortlisted for the Indie Book Awards and Dymocks Book of the Year. In 2023, it won
Booktopia's Best Overall Book Award and was longlisted for the ARA Historical Novel Prize. Additional notable awards include the
Stella Prize (
The Strays by
Emily Bitto), the Booksellers Choice Award (
The Birdman’s Wife by
Melissa Ashley), and The Children’s Book Council of Australia’s Picture Book of the Year Award (
A Walk in the Bush by Gwyn Perkins). In August 2018 Christian White became the fastest-selling Australian debut novelist on record when Affirm Press published his book
The Nowhere Child. == Corporate affairs ==