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Australian Citizenship

Australian citizenship by conferral.

Conferral is how permanent residents, and eligible New Zealand citizens, apply to become Australian citizens. It is a residence-based application: meet the residence rule, pass a character check and, for most people, the citizenship test, then make the pledge.

4-year residence ruleCitizenship test, 75% to passFor PRs and 444 holders
Who Conferral Suits

The pathway for permanent residents ready to become citizens.

Conferral is the usual route if you are a permanent resident living in Australia who has been here long enough to meet the residence rule, and you want the full rights of citizenship: an Australian passport, the right to vote, and a status that cannot be cancelled on residence grounds. Holders of a Special Category visa 444 may also qualify, often by a more direct route.

This page is the conferral deep-dive. If instead you were born outside Australia to a parent who was already an Australian citizen, you are likely looking at citizenship by descent, which has no residence rule and no test. And if you only need to keep travelling on your permanent residence for now, that is the Resident Return Visa 155 and 157, not citizenship.

The Residence Requirement

Four years here, the last year as a permanent resident.

Most applicants apply under the general residence requirement. Broadly, you must generally have:

  • lived in Australia on a valid visa for four years immediately before you apply;
  • held a permanent visa or a Special Category (444) visa for the last 12 months of that period; and
  • kept time spent outside Australia within limits: no more than 12 months in total across the four years, including no more than 90 days in the 12 months immediately before you apply.

Home Affairs publishes a residence calculator to check the dates against your travel history. The absence limits are strict and catch people who travelled often for work, so it is worth checking carefully before lodging.

Some applicants meet the residence rule differently. People aged 60 or over, partners of Australian citizens, those born to a former Australian citizen, and others may have concessions or a relaxed test. The detail depends on your history, so we confirm which rule applies to you rather than assume the standard one. Figures here are national rules under the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 and can change, so verify them at homeaffairs.gov.au before you apply.

Character, Test and Pledge

Three more things conferral asks of you.

  • Good character. Adults are assessed against a character requirement, which usually involves disclosing your history and may involve police checks.
  • The citizenship test. Most applicants aged 18 to 59 sit a test on Australia and its shared values. The pass mark is 75%. If you do not pass, you can generally re-sit, typically within about 12 months.
  • The pledge. Conferral is completed by making the Australian citizenship pledge at a ceremony, a commitment to Australia and its shared values.

Children under 16 can usually be included in a responsible parent's application rather than applying on their own. Applicants aged 60 and over, and some others, are generally not required to sit the test.

Conferral or Descent

Which applies to you?

Citizenship by conferral

You live in Australia as a permanent resident (or 444 holder) and have met the four-year residence rule. You apply, meet character, sit the test if required, and make the pledge. This page.

Citizenship by descent

You were born outside Australia and a parent was an Australian citizen when you were born. No residence rule, no test - it turns on your parent's citizenship at your birth. See citizenship by descent.

Common Questions

Citizenship by conferral, answered.

Generally four years immediately before you apply, with the last 12 months held on a permanent visa or a Special Category (444) visa. Time spent in Australia on a temporary visa can count toward the four years, but the final 12 months as a permanent resident is the part most people are still waiting on.
It can. Under the general residence requirement you generally cannot have been absent for more than 12 months in total across the four years, and no more than 90 days in the 12 months immediately before you apply. If you have travelled a lot, check your dates against the Home Affairs residence calculator before lodging, because going over either limit can mean waiting longer.
Most applicants aged 18 to 59 sit the citizenship test, which covers Australia and its shared values. You need 75% to pass. Applicants aged 60 and over, and some others, are generally not required to sit it.
You can usually re-sit the test, generally within around 12 months, so a single attempt that falls short is rarely the end of the road. We can point you to the official study material so you are ready.
Children under 16 can generally be included in a responsible parent's conferral application rather than applying separately. Older children usually need to meet the requirements in their own right. The right structure depends on your family, so we confirm it case by case.
It may be. New Zealand citizens who hold a Special Category (444) visa can have a more direct route, and since 1 July 2023 many have been able to apply directly for citizenship after four years of living in Australia, without first taking out another permanent visa. The detail depends on when you arrived, so see the New Zealand citizen pathway and confirm what applies to you.
No. A Resident Return Visa keeps a permanent resident's travel facility alive. Citizenship replaces the need for it, because citizens travel on an Australian passport. If you are not yet ready to apply for citizenship and need to travel, the RRV 155 and 157 is the page you want in the meantime.
Conferral is completed by making the Australian citizenship pledge, a commitment to Australia and its shared values, usually at a citizenship ceremony. For most applicants the ceremony is the final step before you become a citizen.
Sources

Department of Home Affairs - Become an Australian citizen (by conferral) and the residence calculator; Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth). Figures and rules are current as at June 2026 and verified live at publish. Confirm the current detail at homeaffairs.gov.au/citizenship.

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.

Ready to apply for citizenship?

We can check your residence dates, confirm whether the test applies, and map conferral against descent for your situation.

Citizenship by Conferral The residence pathway to citizenship
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