How to Apply for Australian Citizenship Without a Migration Agent
You can apply for Australian citizenship by conferral without a migration agent. The application is lodged online through ImmiAccount, and most permanent residents who meet the four-year residency requirement have a straightforward case that does not require professional representation. The risks come not from the process itself but from specific avoidable errors — miscounting absences, incomplete identity documentation, and failing the test — all of which preparation addresses.
In the 2024-25 financial year, 165,193 people were granted Australian citizenship by conferral. Most of them applied without a migration agent.
Before You Start: Confirm Eligibility
The four-year residency requirement is the gate. You must have been lawfully present in Australia for the four years immediately before your application date, with:
- The last 12 months as a permanent resident
- Total absences no more than 365 days across the four-year period
- Absences in the final 12 months no more than 90 days
Note what "lawfully present" means: time on temporary visas counts toward the four years, but only the final 12 months must be on a permanent visa. Time on a tourist visa, student visa, or bridging visa may count, depending on when your four-year window starts.
Run the calculation before anything else. DHA's Residence Calculator in ImmiAccount performs the arithmetic once you enter your visa grants and travel dates. The entries require specific date formats and visa grant numbers — have your visa grant letters ready.
Step 1: Audit Your Identity Documents
The 2022 ANAO audit found that 26% of citizenship applications had identity verification discrepancies. Most of these are not fraud — they are small inconsistencies between documents issued at different life stages.
Before lodging, compare the following documents against each other:
- Full birth certificate
- All passports (current and expired, including foreign passports)
- Marriage certificate (if applicable)
- Divorce certificate (if applicable)
- PR visa grant document
- Any prior Australian visas showing your name
Look for: spelling variants, transposed first/middle names, date of birth differences (common between Western and non-Gregorian calendar conversions), and place of birth descriptions that vary ("Mumbai" vs "Bombay," "PRC" vs "China").
If you find discrepancies, document them proactively in a statutory declaration that explains each one and its cause. Addressing them in your cover letter before DHA flags them is far better than receiving a request for further information mid-process.
Step 2: Run Your Police Check and Alias Audit
8% of police checks fail due to missing aliases. An alias is any name you have been known by — prior surnames, maiden names, romanisation variants of non-Latin names, hyphenated or unhyphenated variants, and names used in countries where naming conventions differ from Australian practice.
Before requesting your Australian Federal Police check:
- List every name variant you have ever used on any official document
- Include all aliases on the AFP check request
- If your name translates differently across languages (common for Chinese, Arabic, Vietnamese, and Korean names), include all romanised variants
An alias that appears in an AFP or overseas check and was not disclosed creates a character problem. One that was disclosed and matches your explanation does not.
You may also require an overseas police clearance from each country where you lived for 12 or more months in the 10 years prior to your application. Check the DHA website for the current list of countries and how to obtain clearances from each — processing times vary from days (UK) to months (India, Philippines).
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Step 3: Complete Form 1300t
The citizenship application form is lodged through ImmiAccount. You will need:
- ImmiAccount login (create one if you don't have it — you may already have one from your PR application)
- Your personal details across all document variants you have identified
- Complete travel history for the four-year period
- Details of any criminal convictions or court appearances globally
- Details of any prior visa refusals or cancellations globally
- Relationship history if applying with a partner
The form is not long, but the character declarations section requires you to disclose all criminal matters globally — including matters that were dismissed, withdrawn, or did not result in a conviction. Omitting a matter that later appears in a check creates a misrepresentation finding. Disclosing it with context does not automatically affect your application.
Step 4: Prepare for the Citizenship Test
If you are aged 18 to 59 and not exempt (some disability and special circumstances exemptions exist), you must sit the test after lodging your application.
The critical rule: all five Australian Values questions must be answered correctly. Scoring 18/20 but missing one values question is a fail. The test failure rate rose to 16% primarily because of this rule, which is not prominently explained in the test preparation booklet.
Study approach:
- Read the full Australian Citizenship: Our Common Bond booklet
- Identify and mark the sections covering democracy, rule of law, equal opportunity, and responsibilities of citizenship — these generate most values questions
- Use a practice app or test bank to run through questions, tracking which categories feel uncertain
- Before sitting, verify that you know all five values-related question types and are confident in 5/5 performance on those specifically
- The remaining 15 questions require 75% — you can miss three and still pass
DHA will contact you after lodging to schedule the test. The test is in-person at a DHA office and takes around 45 minutes.
Step 5: Lodge the Application
Through ImmiAccount, you will:
- Complete Form 1300t
- Upload documents: identity documents (birth certificate, passports, marriage certificate if applicable), police clearances, and any statutory declarations for discrepancies
- Pay the $575 application fee (non-refundable; concession rate of $80 for eligible pension and Health Care Card holders)
- Receive a confirmation with your Transaction Reference Number (TRN)
Keep your TRN — it is how you track your application status in ImmiAccount.
Step 6: Sit the Test and Wait
After lodging, DHA will contact you (typically within a few weeks to months depending on processing volumes) to schedule your citizenship test.
After passing the test, your case enters the character and identity assessment phase. If everything is in order, you will receive an approval letter. The current processing time is 14-17 months from lodgement to decision.
After approval, your local council (or another ceremony venue) will contact you to schedule the citizenship ceremony. Ceremony wait times range from three to twelve months. At the ceremony, you make the Australian Pledge of Commitment and receive your Australian Citizenship Certificate. You are a citizen from that moment.
Step 7: Post-Ceremony Actions
Your Australian Citizenship Certificate is issued at the ceremony. From that date, you can apply for an Australian passport. Passport processing time is currently two to six weeks from application to delivery.
If you hold citizenship of another country, understand whether that country allows dual citizenship and what steps (if any) are required:
- India: Indian citizenship is automatically lost at the ceremony. You must apply for an OCI (Overseas Citizenship of India) card, which requires a renunciation certificate from the Indian High Commission. Begin this immediately after the ceremony.
- China: China does not permit dual citizenship. Contact the Chinese consulate after the ceremony to understand the renunciation process.
- Philippines: Philippines allows dual citizenship under RA9225. You can retain Philippine citizenship by filing a recognition/reacquisition application at the Philippine consulate.
- Vietnam: Vietnam permits dual citizenship in certain circumstances from 2024. Contact the Vietnamese consulate for current procedures.
- UK, South Africa, Malaysia: These countries permit dual citizenship. No renunciation required.
Common DIY Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Miscounting absences: The 90-day limit in the final 12 months is the most commonly tripped threshold. Count the day of departure and day of return as both present in Australia (DHA's convention). Use the official Residence Calculator, not a manual count.
Choosing the wrong application date: You can choose any date in the future as your "application date" for residency calculation purposes. Choosing a date when your absences are still within the limits — rather than lodging immediately — can make an otherwise ineligible application eligible. If you're close to the limits, review the calculation carefully before selecting your date.
Missing the values question requirement: As described above. The single most predictable source of delay in an otherwise eligible application.
Forgetting overseas police clearances: If you lived overseas for 12+ months in the past 10 years, you likely need a clearance from that country. These can take weeks to months to arrive. Start the process early.
FAQ
Is a migration agent required to apply for Australian citizenship?
No. The application is a standard online form through ImmiAccount. Agent representation is entirely optional.
What is the risk of making a mistake on the application?
The $575 application fee is non-refundable if your application is refused. Misrepresentation (omitting matters that appear in later checks) can result in a refusal and a 10-year bar. Honest applications with properly explained discrepancies are at far lower risk.
Can I get help without hiring an agent for full service?
Yes. A structured guide covers the preparation steps in detail. Some agents also offer limited-service consultations ($110–$330) if you want a professional to review your completed application before lodging.
How long does the process take without an agent vs with one?
The same. Processing times are 14-17 months to decision, with a further 3-12 months to ceremony. Agent involvement does not affect DHA's processing queue.
What happens if I fail the test?
You can re-sit. DHA allows multiple attempts, and each re-sit adds to your overall timeline. There is no limit on the number of attempts, but extended delays can result in the Department requesting an update on your circumstances.
Where can I find a complete preparation resource covering all of these steps?
The Australia Citizenship Guide covers the full DIY process: residency calculation worksheets, identity document audit checklist, citizenship test strategy targeting the values-question requirement, character assessment guidance, and country-specific dual citizenship roadmaps for seven nationalities.
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