AUSTRALIAN FAMILY VISA
A Family Visa to Australia provides spouses, partners, children, parents and relatives of Australian citizens and permanent residents the opportunity of migrating to Australia.
DO I QUALIFY FOR A FAMILY VISA TO AUSTRALIA?
Our Free Family Visa Eligibility Assessment is designed to instantly determine if you are eligible to apply for a Family Visa to Australia. It uses the criteria set by the Australian Department of Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC), it is the most comprehensive and technologically advanced online Migration Assessment tool available.
SPOUSE VISAThe Australian Spouse visa enables a married or defacto partner to stay in Australia with their eligible partner. |
PROSPECTIVE MARRIAGE VISAThe Prospective Marriage visa enables partners from overseas to enter Australia to marry their Australian fiance(e). |
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INTERDEPENDENT PARTNER VISAThe Partner Visa (or Spouse Visa) enables a married or defacto partner to stay in Australia with their eligible partner.. |
PARENT VISAA Parent visa enables parents with children living in Australia to join their children permanently through sponsorship. |
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AGED PARENT VISAAn Aged Parent visa entitles parents older than 63 years of age to join their children permanently in Australia through sponsorship. |
REMAINING RELATIVE VISAThe Remaining Relative visa is for individuals who wish to join their siblings or parents, who are their only near relatives, in Australia. |
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After the 3 Australian Independent Ministers made their decisions on which major party they would support, the Australian Labour Party has held onto the majority of seats, and will continue as Australia's Government for another term.
The looming immigration cap may lead to widespread labour shortages across Australia, warned Industry analysts. Although the cap has not yet been put into place, the Housing Construction Industry has already been experiencing some labour shortages due to the undersupply of labour and a lack of a dedicated migration program that attends to the residential sector.
The current Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has joined Tony Abbott and the independents Tony Windsor, Rob Oakeshoft and Bob Katter in advocacy to increase Australian immigration numbers in the regional parts of the nation.












