Family Hub
Australian citizenship

The last step of the journey, done properly

Citizenship is where residence, character and identity all have to hold together. We advise on conferral and descent, prepare applications that meet the residence and good-character requirements, and act on refusals at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART).

$595 Conferral application fee (general)
4 yrs General residence requirement
ART Where refusals are reviewed
Two kinds of work

Becoming a citizen, and defending the claim

The application

Conferral & descent

The standard route for permanent residents (conferral) and the route for children born overseas to an Australian parent (descent), together with resumption for people re-establishing citizenship.

  • Citizenship by conferral (general)
  • Citizenship by descent
  • Resumption of citizenship
When it goes wrong

Complex refusals

Refusals on good-character or identity grounds are among the hardest matters in migration law. We prepare the response and, where a decision is reviewable, act at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART).

  • Good-character responses
  • Identity & documentation disputes
  • ART review of reviewable refusals
What conferral turns on

The four requirements

Most conferral applications succeed or fail on four points. We check each one before you apply, so an easy grant is not undone by an avoidable gap.

  • Residence & absences
  • The citizenship test
  • Good character
  • The pledge
New Australian citizen at a citizenship ceremony

Residence

The general residence requirement is four years lawful residence, including twelve months as a permanent resident, with limited absences.

The test

The citizenship test covers Australia’s values, history and the responsibilities and privileges of citizenship.

Character

The good-character requirement looks at your conduct — police history, honesty in dealings and, where relevant, overseas records.

The pledge

For conferral, citizenship is finalised by making the pledge, usually at a citizenship ceremony.

Update — March 2026

The special residence requirement just widened

From March 2026, the special residence requirement concession — which helps people whose work takes them overseas meet the residence rule — was expanded to two more groups. If heavy international travel has been keeping citizenship out of reach, it is worth re-checking your position.

PhD academics

PhD-qualified academics at Australian universities undertaking research and development of benefit to Australia.

Senior religious leaders

Ministers of religion in senior leadership roles, added alongside the existing engagement categories.

Who should re-check

Anyone in a qualifying role whose absences previously broke the residence rule — the evidence you keep now matters.

Status resolution

Some people are already citizens and do not know it, or hold a status that is unclear because of the way the law changed over the decades. For those matters we conduct a forensic audit of birth records, migration history and the legislation in force at the relevant time to establish where you truly stand.

Request a status review

Why hire a citizenship lawyer?

A straightforward conferral rarely needs a lawyer. Character concerns, identity questions, complex absences, descent for a child born overseas, or a refusal are a different matter — and the good-character bar means small issues can carry large consequences.

We prepare applications that anticipate the Department’s questions, respond to good-character and identity concerns, and act on reviewable refusals at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART).

The general conferral application fee is $595. Fees current as at 3 July 2026 (FY2026-27); the charge at your lodgement date applies — confirm at immi.homeaffairs.gov.au.

Common questions

Citizenship FAQs

What is the general residence requirement?

For citizenship by conferral, the general residence requirement is four years of lawful residence in Australia immediately before applying, including at least the final twelve months as a permanent resident. Absences from Australia are limited — no more than twelve months total over the four years, and no more than ninety days in the last year. Special and concessional pathways apply to some applicants.

How much does a citizenship application cost in 2026?

The general citizenship by conferral application fee is $595. Concessional and nil-fee categories apply to some applicants, and other application types (such as descent) have their own fees. Fees are current as at 3 July 2026 (FY2026-27); the charge at your lodgement date applies — confirm at immi.homeaffairs.gov.au. Professional fees are quoted separately.

What does the good-character requirement involve?

Good character is assessed on your conduct over time — Australian and overseas police history, honesty in your dealings with the Department, and any pattern of concerning behaviour. It is a broad, discretionary test, so even old or minor matters should be addressed openly and in context. If character is a live issue, get advice before you apply.

Was the Special Residence Requirement expanded in 2026?

Yes. From March 2026 the Special Residence Requirement concession — for people whose qualifying work takes them overseas — was expanded to include PhD-qualified academics at Australian universities doing research of benefit to Australia, and ministers of religion in senior leadership roles. If heavy international travel has made the ordinary residence rule hard to meet, it is worth re-checking whether you now qualify.

Can a citizenship refusal be reviewed?

Many citizenship decisions can be reviewed at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART), subject to strict lodgement deadlines. Some decisions instead require a challenge in the courts through judicial review. Which path applies depends on the decision, so it is important to get advice quickly after a refusal — the deadlines are short.

Finish the journey. Get citizenship right

Book a consultation with an Australian migration lawyer to check your residence, character and identity position before you apply — or to respond to a refusal.

Book a consultation

or call +61 411 807 172