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Partner & Fiancé Visas

Bring your partner to Australia, or keep them here with you.

If you're married or in a genuine de facto relationship with an Australian, there's a visa to keep you together. Partner visas come down to proving your relationship is real - and that's where good preparation makes all the difference.

Onshore and offshore Married and de facto Leads to permanent residence
How Partner Visas Work

It comes down to one thing: is your relationship genuine?

Partner visas aren't about ticking a box. They're about showing a case officer that your relationship is real and continuing. The couples who succeed are the ones who tell their story clearly and back it with the right evidence.

  1. A two-stage journey to permanent residence

    Whether you apply from inside or outside Australia, a partner visa is always two stages. You're granted a temporary visa first, and then - after a waiting period - the permanent visa, provided you're still together. You generally lodge both stages in one application and pay once.

  2. You need a genuine, continuing relationship

    You have to show your relationship is real, exclusive and ongoing - whether you're married or de facto. For de facto couples, you usually need to have been living together for at least twelve months, though there are exceptions such as registering your relationship.

  3. You need an eligible sponsor

    Your partner - the Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen - sponsors you. Sponsorship comes with its own requirements and limits, so it's worth confirming they're eligible before you start.

    Evidence across four areas. Case officers want to see your finances, your household, your social life, and your commitment to each other. A strong application shows the full picture, not just the easy parts.

Choosing A Pathway

Which partner visa pathway fits your situation?

Most of the decision comes down to two questions: where are you right now, and are you married, in a de facto relationship, or engaged? Use the path below as a starting point, then talk it through with a registered agent before you lodge.

Are you in Australia right now? If you're already onshore and either married or in a de facto relationship, the usual path is the Subclass 820/801 Partner visa. You lodge here, and you can normally stay on a bridging visa - often with work rights - while your case is decided.

Are you outside Australia? If you're offshore and married or de facto, the equivalent path is the Subclass 309/100 Partner visa. It follows the same two-stage journey to permanent residence, but you apply from overseas and there's no bridging visa, so you generally wait outside Australia.

Engaged, but not yet married? If you intend to marry your Australian partner but aren't married or de facto yet, the Subclass 300 Prospective Marriage visa brings you to Australia to marry, then you transition into a partner visa from here.

Whichever path you start on, a partner visa is a two-stage process to permanent residence, and the core question is always the same: is your relationship genuine and continuing? If you're unsure where you sit, we'll map the suited pathway to your circumstances. You can also see all family visa streams if a partner visa isn't the right starting point.

Costs At A Glance

What a partner visa can cost.

The figures below are a guide to the Home Affairs application charge only. They're indicative, change over time, and your circumstances can move them - so treat them as a starting point, not a fixed price. Our professional fee is separate from the government charge, and we quote it in writing once we understand your case.

Pathway Where you apply Indicative govt charge
Subclass 820/801 (onshore) In Australia Around AUD 3,100 combined, paid once at lodgement
Subclass 309/100 (offshore) Outside Australia A combined two-stage charge applies; confirm the current figure for your case
Subclass 300 (Prospective Marriage) Outside Australia A separate charge applies, then a further charge when you move to a partner visa

Charges change, and yours may differ. The combined 820/801 charge is around AUD 3,100 at lodgement, but Home Affairs fees are reviewed over time and dependants or your individual circumstances can affect the total. We separate the government charge from our professional fee and put everything in writing - see fees and how we quote, or read the full breakdown on the 820/801 page.

Common Questions

Partner visa questions.

No. Partner visas are open to married couples and to de facto partners, including same-sex couples. For a de facto relationship, you generally need to show you've been living together for at least twelve months, although registering your relationship in some states can remove that requirement. We'll work out which basis is strongest for your situation.
Honestly, partner visas are not quick, and processing times shift throughout the year. The encouraging part is that if you apply onshore, you can usually stay in Australia on a bridging visa while you wait - often with work rights. We'll give you a realistic timeframe for your situation rather than a number that sounds nice but isn't true.
If you apply onshore, you'll usually be granted a bridging visa that lets you stay lawfully while your application is processed, and it commonly comes with work rights. The details depend on your situation, so we'll confirm exactly what you'll be able to do while you wait, including whether travel is possible.
A shorter relationship isn't a deal-breaker, but it does mean your evidence needs to work harder to show the relationship is genuine and continuing. There are also options like the prospective marriage visa for engaged couples who haven't yet reached de facto status. We'll look at your timeline honestly and tell you the strongest way forward.
A separation during processing is serious and affects the application, but it doesn't automatically end all options. Family violence provisions can protect partners in certain circumstances. The right advice depends on exactly where you are in the process and what's happened. We'll work through it with you honestly.
Yes. Same-sex married and de facto couples are eligible on exactly the same basis as everyone else. You still need to show a genuine and continuing relationship, your sponsor still needs to be eligible, and de facto couples generally still need twelve months of living together unless an exception applies. How your relationship is legally recognised can vary from state to state, and we'll factor that into which basis we lodge on.
A bridging visa lets you stay in Australia lawfully while your application is being processed. If you apply onshore on the Subclass 820/801 Partner visa, you're usually granted one on lodgement, and it often comes with work rights. If you apply offshore on the Subclass 309/100 Partner visa, you don't get a bridging visa - you wait overseas until the temporary visa is decided. We'll confirm what your bridging visa allows, including any travel conditions.
In many cases, yes. If you have dependent children and you're their primary carer, they can usually be added to your application. This calls for extra evidence about your care arrangements and can affect both the processing and the cost, but having children doesn't disqualify you. We'll confirm who can be included and what each person needs to provide before you lodge.

Written and reviewed by Brian Chan, Registered Migration Agent (MARN 2217857)

Visa Store Australia, Perth · Last reviewed June 2026 · Verify on the MARA register · General information only, not personal migration advice.

Not sure which visa fits?

Tell us your situation and we'll point you to the right one - and help you build a case that holds up.

Partner Visa Australia Onshore, offshore and fiance streams
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