The Partner visas (subclasses 309 and 100) allow the partner or spouse (located outside of Australia) of an Australian citizen, Australian permanent resident or eligible New Zealand citizen live in Australia.
Visa Process
Obtaining the permanent Partner visa is a two-stage process. The temporary Partner (Provisional) visa (subclass 309) is granted first and lets you stay in Australia while the permanent Partner (Migrant) visa (subclass 100) is processed.
If you are granted the temporary visa, you are eligible to be assessed for the permanent Partner visa (subclass 100) about two years after you lodged your application. You will need to provide further documents for this assessment.
Eligibility
- you must be married or in a de facto relationship with an Australian citizen, Australian permanent resident or eligible New Zealand citizen
- if you are in a de facto relationship, you must show that you have been in a de facto relationship for at least 12 months
- you must be 18 or older when you apply
- you must have a sponsor, who will be your partner, except if your partner is under 18 years of age
- your relationship with your partner is a Genuine Relationship
- you must meet the health and character requirement
Genuine Relationship
You will need to show that you and your partner have a commitment to a shared life together, to the exclusion of all others. You and your partner must live together, or at least not live apart on a permanent basis.
The Department of Immigration will look at several aspects of your relationship, including:
- Cohabitation: Usually evidenced through showing correspondence addressed to both of you at the same address
- Financial Interdependence: Joint bank accounts, joint ownership of property, joint financial commitment such as leases, mortgages, insurance policies.
- Social aspects of the relationship: Joint travel, joint social activities, joint participation in cultural or sporting activities.
Comments are closed.