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ToggleIntroduction: Why This Guide Exists
After decades of helping thousands of couples apply for partner visas — across every relationship type, background, and visa complication — I’ve learned one hard truth: most people don’t fully understand what they’re walking into. And that’s not their fault. The process is complex, the stakes are high, and the rules aren’t always clear. But getting it wrong can cost more than just time and money. It can cost your future together.
This guide is for couples who are trying to stay together in Australia through the de facto partner visa process. Whether you’re same-sex or opposite-sex, married or unmarried, living together or long distance — this is your roadmap. It’s written in plain English and built on more than 25 years of experience advising on real cases, in real-life situations.
We’ll cover the key questions you probably already have — and more importantly, I’ll answer the ones you didn’t even know to ask.
I want this to be the most accurate, up-to-date, and useful guide available. So if you come across anything in this article that needs clarification or updating, please reach out. It won’t just help me — it will help our whole community of applicants, lawyers, agents and partners working toward better immigration outcomes.
Because when we get the information right, we give people their future back.
Section 1: Understanding the Partner Visa Framework
The Australian partner visa program is designed to keep couples together where one person is an Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen, and the other is not.
There are two main processing pathways:
A. Onshore Partner Visa – Subclass 820/801
This is for couples who are both in Australia.
- You apply while you’re in Australia
- You usually get a Bridging Visa while your application is processed
- After two years, you may be eligible for permanent residency via subclass 801
B. Offshore Partner Visa – Subclass 309/100
This is for couples applying from outside Australia.
- The applicant must be outside Australia at the time of application
- They receive subclass 309 (temporary) first
- After two years, you may be eligible for permanent residency via subclass 100 (permanent)
Both streams involve a two-stage process, and both require a significant amount of evidence, time, and patience.
Section 2: What “De Facto” Really Means in Australian Migration Law
The word “de facto” gets thrown around a lot, but in immigration law, it has a specific meaning — and simply living together isn’t enough.
You’re in a de facto relationship if:
- You are not married to each other
- You are not related by family
- You live together (or have lived together) on a genuine domestic basis
- You are in a mutual commitment to a shared life, to the exclusion of all others
Many couples assume sharing a house equals de facto. Not necessarily. If you’re just flatmates, or there’s no financial or emotional interdependence, you won’t qualify.
On the other hand, some couples who don’t live together full-time — due to FIFO work, military service, or other reasons — may still meet the definition if they can show a shared life in other ways.
The relationship must also be genuine and continuing at the time of application. This is critical. If you’re separated at the time of lodgement, or if the relationship isn’t real (on paper or in life), your application is likely to fail — and no amount of appeal strategy can undo that.
Section 3: The 12-Month Rule and Relationship Registration Workaround
To apply as a de facto partner, you usually need to show that:
- You’ve lived together for at least 12 months, and
- That cohabitation occurred immediately before lodging your application.
But there’s a workaround — and it’s a very strategic one.
If you register your relationship with an Australian state or territory that has a formal relationship register, you can skip the 12-month cohabitation requirement.
This is especially useful for:
- Long-distance couples
- Couples who’ve only recently moved in together
- Couples whose living situation makes cohabitation impractical
Section 4: Where Can You Register Your Relationship?
Here’s how the states and territories stack up:
✅ Relationship Registration Available:
- New South Wales
- Victoria
- Queensland
- South Australia
- Tasmania
- Australian Capital Territory
These states allow both same-sex and opposite-sex couples to register a relationship, even if they haven’t lived together for a full 12 months.
Registration usually takes 28 days (after a cooling-off period) and requires proof of identity and residence in that state.
❌ Registration Not Available:
- Western Australia
- Northern Territory
If you live in WA or NT and don’t have 12 months of cohabitation, you may be forced to wait — or move interstate temporarily.
Section 5: Same-Sex Couples and the Impact of Marriage
Since December 2017, same-sex marriage has been legal in Australia. That means same-sex couples who are married enjoy the same rights as opposite-sex couples when applying for a partner visa.
If you are married, you do not need to prove 12 months of cohabitation. The marriage itself satisfies the relationship requirement — but only if it’s recognised under Australian law.
If you were married overseas, and the country where you married also recognises same-sex marriage, then your marriage is likely to be recognised here.
However, you still need to prove that your relationship is genuine and continuing — marriage is not a shortcut. The Department will still assess the financial, social, household, and commitment aspects of your relationship.
Section 6: Can You Apply Onshore?
Yes — but only if your current visa doesn’t have restrictions.
The onshore partner visa (820/801) is available only if:
- You are physically in Australia
- You hold a visa that allows you to make a further application
- Your visa does not have Condition 8503 – No Further Stay
Many visitors arrive on a subclass 600 tourist visa. Some of those visas come with 8503, which prevents you from lodging another substantive visa while in Australia.
If that’s you, your options are limited:
- You can apply for a waiver of 8503 — but it’s not guaranteed
- Or you’ll have to leave Australia and apply from offshore (309/100)
Section 7: What Happens After Lodging Onshore?
Once you lodge a valid onshore application:
- You’ll receive a Bridging Visa A (BVA)
- That visa activates when your current visa expires
- You’ll be able to stay lawfully in Australia
- You’ll usually be granted full work rights
- You’ll be eligible for Medicare
A key point: work rights only start when the bridging visa becomes active — not while you’re still on a visitor visa. If your visitor visa lasts three months, you may have to wait that long before you can work.
If you need to travel overseas while waiting for your application to be processed, you must apply for a Bridging Visa B (BVB) before leaving — or you risk not being able to return.
Section 8: What the Department Wants to See — And What They Don’t
The Department of Home Affairs doesn’t care about how much you love each other. It cares about how well you can prove you live like a couple.
Your application will be assessed across four broad categories:
1. Financial Aspects
You need to show financial interdependence. This might include:
- A joint bank account that you both actually use
- Shared rent or mortgage payments
- Joint bills
- Car loans, insurance, or other liabilities in both names
A “sleeping” joint account with no real activity won’t help. They want to see real financial blending.
2. Household Aspects
The question here is: are you living together as a couple or just sharing a space?
- Mail going to the same address
- Joint household responsibilities (cleaning, cooking, planning)
- Lease agreements, tenancy contracts
Declarations from others (via Form 888) are useful, but your own statements — well-written and detailed — often make or break the application.
3. Social Aspects
Do your friends and family know you’re together?
- Photos at social events
- Wedding invites (as a couple)
- Holidays or trips
- Statements from people close to you
Be careful with social media — too much can look performative, too little can raise eyebrows. Be real.
4. Nature of the Commitment
This is the most subjective part, but the most powerful when done well.
- Your plans for the future
- How you support each other emotionally and practically
- Whether you’re listed as beneficiaries on insurance or wills
Section 9: My Embedded Evidence Checklist
Here’s what I recommend you gather:
– Joint bank statements with active use
– Shared lease or mortgage documents
– Utility bills and shared service contracts
– Screenshots of meaningful messages or call logs (especially early in the relationship)
– Social media screenshots (if relevant, not spammed)
– Photos — mix of everyday life and special events
– Travel history — flight tickets, hotel bookings, itineraries
– Statutory declarations from both partners
– At least two Form 888s from friends or family
– A relationship certificate (if registered)
– Future plans — housing, children, financial goals
Don’t overwhelm the case officer. Choose quality over quantity. Curate your evidence like a story — beginning, middle, and continuing.
Section 10: What If You Separate?
If your relationship ends before your partner visa is granted — whether temporary or permanent — your application is likely to be refused.
If you’ve already been granted a temporary partner visa, you may still be eligible for a permanent visa in certain situations:
- You and your partner have children together
- You’ve experienced family violence during the relationship
These are serious cases that require detailed legal support. You must act quickly and carefully.
Section 11: What If Your Application Is Refused?
You will usually have access to merits review through the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART).
Key facts:
- The ART fee is currently around $3,496
- You must lodge the appeal within a strict deadline
- A successful appeal will set aside the refusal and send it back to the Department
But — and this is critical — no appeal will fix a defective application lodged with the wrong relationship status.
This brings me to one of the most important principles in Australian migration law:
Section 12: The Time Machine Rule (And Why It Matters)
If you’re not in a genuine relationship at the time of application, no amount of time that passes later can save you.
Let me say that again: you can’t backdate a relationship.
You cannot become a de facto couple after applying and hope to patch it up during review. The Tribunal will assess whether you met the legal requirements on the day you lodged the visa. If you didn’t — the case is over.
I call this the Time Machine Rule, because I’ve seen so many people wish they could go back and “fix” the facts. But there is no Time Machine. The law is locked to the moment of application.
Even the best immigration lawyer in the world can’t overcome a fatal defect like that.
Section 13: Prospective Marriage Visa vs Partner Visa
Let’s clear this up.
The Prospective Marriage Visa (subclass 300) is for people who are:
- Engaged to be married
- Not yet living in a de facto relationship
- Intend to marry within 9 months of arriving in Australia
This visa is not a workaround for people who don’t qualify for a partner visa.
If the Department assesses that you’re already living together as a de facto couple, they’ll expect you to apply under the 309/100 or 820/801 pathways. Applying for a PMV in that case can backfire.
I’ve seen couples tripped up by this — thinking they can delay the heavy evidence by applying for a PMV, when really, they’re already de facto in the eyes of immigration law.
Section 14: Application Fees and Strategic Costs
The Department of Home Affairs charges $9,095 to lodge most partner visa applications. This is payable in full at the time of application.
That fee doesn’t include:
- Medical examinations
- National Police Checks
- Certified translations
- Legal advice
- Additional child dependants
It’s one of the most expensive visas in the system — which is why strategy matters so much. A poorly prepared application costs just as much as a perfect one… until it gets refused.
Section 15: Permanent Residency and the 5-Year Travel Trap
Getting your permanent partner visa — subclass 801 or 100 — is a major milestone. But don’t let the word “permanent” fool you.
Your permanent visa comes with a five-year travel facility.
That means you can leave and return to Australia freely for five years from the date your PR is granted. But after that five years?
You must apply for a Resident Return Visa (RRV) to travel again.
If you’re overseas when your travel rights expire, you won’t be able to return unless your RRV is granted while you’re still overseas. This has stranded many permanent residents who assumed they could come and go as they pleased.
Plan for this:
- Track your permanent visa grant date
- Set a reminder before five years is up
- If you haven’t applied for citizenship, apply for an RRV before travelling
Section 16: Final Thoughts — Why People Trust Me
This process is personal. It’s not just about law or documents — it’s about lives, families, futures.
I’ve been helping couples with partner visas since the 1990s. I’ve seen every version of this system, and I know what works and what doesn’t.
What makes my process different? I tell you the truth. I flag the risks. I help you structure your evidence. And I care deeply about your outcome — because I’ve walked beside people just like you through every step of this journey.
Section 17: Ready to Apply?
If you’ve made it this far, you’re serious — and I’d love to help.
You can:
- Book a consult with me online
- Or call the office and say you’ve read the “Definitive Partner Visa Guide”
I’ll review your case. I’ll build your strongest possible application. And I’ll do it properly — because your relationship deserves nothing less.
523 Responses
Hi Nilesh, quick questions, is it still eligible if we are both living together but outside of Australia (e.g., working in Europe) after applying for a De Facto Visa? We assume that we only need to be in Australia when we apply for this visa (820) and when they decide on our temporary visa application, is that correct? Thank you!
Cheers, Josephine
Dear Josephine
Thank you for contacting MyVisa®.
You will need to in Australia when you lodge the subclass 820 application and you’ll be well advised to be back in Australia to get granted the visa. You can guess when you need to be back this by looking at the processing times published by DHA.
The department is full of great people and they’re likely to indicate to us in advance that they are looking to Grant the visa and at that stage we would normally indicate to you to get back into Australia.
There is no mandatory requirement that you must be resident in Australia for the duration of your relationship for the duration of the application.
Should you wish to get specific advice about your circumstances from me, you can book in a consultation with me here.
https://myvisa.com.au/book
Regards
Nilesh Nandan
Immigration Lawyer
MyVisa®
Hi, I am currently awaiting for the approval of a partnership visa. We were in an de facto relationship prior to the application. Now we want to get married, however have been told that getting married will impact on our application negatively. This makes absolutely no sense to us. Is that true? Thanks heaps
Dear Sandy
Nilesh has asked me to respond to your question.
Thank you for contacting MyVisa®.
The short answer is that it is recommended to remain in a de facto relationship until after the partner visa application is finalised.
We agree that it makes little sense!
Here are some of the issues:
Officers can test the integrity and status of the relationship at the date of application and again at the date of decision.
Legislation is poorly drafted and does not properly accommodate (your partner visa situation) where there is a claim of a “de facto” relationship at the time of application and then a “married” relationship at the time of decision.
If you have applied for an onshore Partner visa (subclass 820/801), it will depend on whether you relied on the registration of your de facto relationship to get past the 12 month requirement.
For these cases, it may be advisable not to get married, as this may adversely affect the relevance of the de facto relationship certificate (as it may no longer be applicable) due to the change in your relationship status from de facto to married. Complicated, isn’t it!
This is not to say that partner visa grants can not or are not made to applicants who are in a defacto relationship at the time of application and a married relationship at the time of visa decision – it’s just that it’s fraught with greater risk of refusal.
In the event you have already married, you may wish to provide new Form 888 statutory declarations in light of your new married relationship status. You will also be required to notify the Department as soon as possible of the change in circumstances by submitting a Form 1022.
Note: Issues arise due to the applicant’s location when lodging the application (offshore or onshore) and whether there is a section s48 issue.
Should you wish to get specific advice about your circumstances from Nilesh, you can book in a consultation with him here.
https://myvisa.com.au/book
Please do let us know if you decide to marry and what your experience was!
Regards
Justin Jinhyun Kim
Immigration Lawyer
MyVisa®
Also I forgot to add that I am from Perth which does not recognise the registered relationship documents.
And we work as hotel annimators/Entertainers. This means we live in the hotel for free so no bills or rent paid.
We have been staying in our friends apartment in Turkey for the last 6/7 months with only paying bills to him. Proof being that the address is the same on our turkish residence permit application otherwise no proof of rent.
Thanks
Dear Amber
Nilesh has asked me to respond to your question.
Thank you for contacting MyVisa®.
You may be eligible for a Partner visa based on your de facto relationship. We think this is your only option, considering your circumstances.
Regarding your relationship evidence, your circumstances are challenging. You will need lots of statements (4x Form 888 plus partner statements).
Usually, a Partner visa application takes between 19 and 23 months to process. However, it can vary depending on individual circumstances and COVID.
Should you wish to get specific advice from Nilesh, you can book in a consultation with him here.
https://myvisa.com.au/book
Regards
Jade Lee
Immigration Lawyer
MyVisa®
Hi!
I am an Australian Citizen and my boyfriend is German and 35 years old.
We have been together in a relationship since June 2019 ( so 1.5 years) and we met working overseas.
We are currently both outside of Australia due to COVID rules as he cannot enter the country. We previously spent 10 months apart in different countries originally because of work commitments and then COVID not being able to travel. Now being back in the same country (Turkey) for approx 7 months and will be apart again for another 6/7 months for work. Hoping to both travel to Australia by the end of the year so he can at least meet my family! I see applying for a defacto relationship is one of the only options but struggling with evidence.
How long does the process take? How much does it cost and do you see any other visa options for us?
Thanks
Hi Nilesh
I was wonderin to what extent the department expects money to be pooled between de facto partners. Is it sufficient to have individual accounts as well as a joint account that is used to pay all shared bills? Or is it expected that all money comes in and out of single joint account? Thanks.
Hello, I am the sponsor of a partner visa applicant and my relationship has broken down beyond repair.
I wanted to try to respect the application but my partner has since started being with another and she has been abusive towards me.
What can I do? Who do I notify of my circumstances. She’s trying to kick me out of my home that I have built with little to no help from her. I have supported her fully, I even got stuck in the pandemic overseas visiting her family because she had ceased being human in her homesickness and need to see her family.
I have done everything to support this until I have reached breaking point. I cannot see myself leaving my home that I have worked so hard to build. Please give me some advice.
Hi there,
Is the immigration officer able to access WhatsApp private conversations for a partner visa application and check the legitimacy?