20 multiple-choice questions
Drawn from a larger question pool, so each test is slightly different. Read every question carefully.
The conferral citizenship test looks small from a distance and bigger the closer you get. Thousands of applicants fail it each year, often not because they do not understand Australia, but because they misread the rules. For eligibility review, speak with our citizenship team.
The test is conducted in English at a Department office. You take it on a computer with navigation between questions.
Drawn from a larger question pool, so each test is slightly different. Read every question carefully.
All five must be correct. Missing even one means a fail, regardless of the other 15.
Need 15 out of 20 correct overall. The 5 values questions count toward this total but are also individually mandatory.
Time is generous for most applicants. Flag difficult questions and return to them.
All questions come from Our Common Bond. Reading the official resource is the strongest predictor of passing.
The Department's resource book is the only authoritative source. Third-party courses help but cannot replace it.
Download Our Common Bond from the Department's website. Read it fully. All test questions are drawn from it.
Complete multiple practice tests. Identify weak areas. Focus preparation on those areas specifically.
Arrive early with required identification. Use the flag-and-review feature for difficult questions. Take your time with the values section.
Without preparation, the failure rate is significantly higher. Preparation matters more than general knowledge of Australia. Many test-takers who have lived in Australia for years still fail because they have not read Our Common Bond.
For test preparation or exemption review, book with Sourabh Aggarwal.