Two Canberrans who pulled down a string of Neo-Nazi stickers in the city centre on Friday say they are shocked and appalled to have found the propaganda.

Dave McCarthy was walking past the Canberra Theatre on Friday morning when he saw a sticker promoting the Hitler Youth stuck to the building, before finding another on the Canberra Museum and Gallery sign.

He ripped both stickers off.

"[I felt] really disheartened that it was happening and present in a progressive community like Canberra," Mr McCarthy said.

"It's definitely the first time I've seen a group that forward with their straight up Nazism."

Fearing there could be more in the city, Mr McCarthy shared a Facebook post urging fellow Canberrans to destroy any other stickers they come across.

In response, his friend Augustine Bamberry went searching in the afternoon and tore down a few more on poles along City Walk and Ainslie Place.

A post warning some were found to be surrounded by razor blades was shared on social media. ( Facebook: Dave McCarthy )

"It just makes me angry because Nazis have no place in Canberra, Australia or anywhere else," Mr Bamberry said.

"Even if someone put these up as a joke, it's still promoting an awful thing and that's not okay."

One comment on the Facebook post about the propaganda warned people that some of them were found to have concealed razorblades underneath them.

A similar photo being shared on social media included the words "use an implement like a boot or a knife to scrape them off".

But both Mr McCarthy and Mr Bamberry said they found no razor blades under the stickers they tore down.

'Hitler you've been waiting for'

The group hides members' faces with a skull icon in photos from radicalisation camps on social media. ( Twitter: Antipodean Resistance )

The stickers purported to be from the Neo-Nazi group "Antipodean Resistance", which has previously described itself as "the Hitler you've been waiting for".

Antipodean Resistance said it was a "youth organisation" which saw "this country for what it is: terminally ill".

It came to the attention of authorities through its attempts to influence the debate around the same-sex marriage postal vote, with posters linking gay marriage to paedophilia.

It has also been criticised for plastering posters on the campuses of Australian universities.

The group claims its chapters have held radicalisation camps in the Dandenong Ranges in Victoria, and near Mount Beerburrum on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland.

An ACT Policing spokeswoman said it had not received complaints about the Canberra stickers but were "aware of these occurrences and are making inquiries."

"ACT Policing would like to remind the Canberra community that vilification is prohibited under the ACT Discrimination Act 1991 and the ACT Criminal Code 2002, and it is also an offence to deface public and private property," she said.

She urged anyone who witnesses the offences, or has any relevant information, to contact ACT Policing on 131 444.

She said they can also give anonymous information to Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or on their website.