Pillar Guide · Conferral · Descent · Adoption · Resumption

You held PR for years. Citizenship is the final step.

You have built a life in Australia, paid taxes, raised children, contributed to your community. The process has tightened, waiting times have stretched, and a single character concern can delay approval by years. This guide walks through every pathway.

The four main pathways

Four pathways. Different rules for each.

Australian citizenship is obtained through one of four main pathways. Choosing the right one (and lodging it correctly) is the foundation.

Conferral

The standard path for permanent residents. 4 years lawful residence, 12 months as PR, test, character. Conferral guide.

Descent

For people born outside Australia to an Australian citizen parent. No residence requirement. Must be registered. Descent guide.

Adoption

Children adopted by Australian citizens through Hague or bilateral arrangements. Specific pathway by adoption status.

Resumption

For former citizens who lost citizenship (typically pre-2002). Often simpler than expected. Resumption guide.

The residence calculation for conferral

Four numbers that determine eligibility.

Residence maths catches more conferral applicants than any other issue. Count carefully. Keep records.

4 years of lawful residenceCounted backwards from the date of lodgement. Any visa (including bridging visas) counts as lawful.
12 months as a permanent residentThe most recent 12 months must be on a permanent visa. Time on temporary visas counts toward the 4 years but not this 12 months.
12 months total absence maximumWithin the 4-year window, total absence from Australia cannot exceed 12 months. Short trips add up. Log every departure and return.
90 days maximum in the final 12 monthsDuring the permanent-resident year, absence cannot exceed 90 days. This is the tightest threshold in the calculation.
The citizenship test and character

Two assessments. Both must pass.

Beyond residence, the Department assesses knowledge of Australia and good character.

Citizenship test

20 multiple-choice questions from Our Common Bond. 75% overall pass rate. All 5 Australian values questions must be correct. See test preparation guide.

Character assessment

Criminal history, immigration compliance, pending charges, tax compliance, family obligations. Minor offences usually manageable with disclosure. Significant records block approval.

Processing times

Standard conferral applications take 11 to 18 months from lodgement to ceremony. Character complexities add time.

Citizenship ceremonies are typically conducted by local councils.

Waiting for a ceremony after approval can add 3 to 6 months. We can expedite through special arrangements in limited circumstances such as imminent international travel needs.

Common questions

The questions we hear most.

For citizenship strategy and applications, book with Sourabh Aggarwal.

Does Australia recognise dual citizenship?
Yes, since 2002. Australians can hold citizenship of any other country that also permits dual citizenship. See dual citizenship guide.
Can I apply for citizenship before my 4-year residence is complete?
No, you must meet the residence requirements fully before lodgement.
Does time on a bridging visa count toward the 4-year residence?
Lawful presence counts, so bridging visa time counts. But only the final 12 months must be as a permanent resident.
What happens if I fail the citizenship test?
You can retake the test. Multiple failures in a short period raise concerns about whether the applicant meets the sufficient knowledge of responsibilities and privileges of citizenship requirement.
Complete residence evidence and character statements

Citizenship is a long process. Start it right.

We prepare citizenship applications with complete residence evidence, character statements, and full test preparation support. Book a consultation.

Some information on this page has been sourced from the Department of Home Affairs and has been interpreted and approved by Principal Migration Agent Sourabh Aggarwal (MARN 1462159). Last reviewed: May 2026.