Australia Spouse Visa (Subclass 309 & 820)
Start your journey to Australia with your partner through an onshore or offshore spouse visa application

Australia Spouse (Partner) Visa
The Australian Spouse Visa, officially called the Partner Visa, is for married partners of Australian citizens, permanent residents, or eligible New Zealand citizens. It lets you move to Australia and live together with your spouse legally.
This visa starts as a provisional visa, which means it is temporary at first. During this time, you can work freely, access Medicare, and settle into your new life in Australia.
After living together for a period of time, you can apply for permanent residency. This makes the Partner Visa one of the most important visas for couples who want to build a long-term future in Australia.

Table of Contents
- Australia Spouse (Partner) Visa
- Spouse Visa Requirements
- 5 Types of Spouse Visas
- Subclass 309 — Australia Spouse Visa (Offshore)
- Subclass 100 — Permanent Spouse Visa
- Subclass 820 — Spouse Visa Onshore (Temporary)
- Subclass 801 — Permanent Partner Visa (Onshore)
- Subclass 300 — Prospective Marriage (Fiancé) Visa
- Processing Steps
- Processing Times
- Why Your Visa Might Get Refused
- Why Live in Australia?
Spouse Visa Requirements
To be eligible for an Australia Spouse Visa, you and your partner must meet the following core requirements:
You must be in a genuine, continuing, and exclusive relationship
Your partner (the sponsor) must be an Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen
You must meet Australian health requirements (medical examination)
You must meet character requirements (police clearance from every country you have lived in for 12+ months)

5 Types of Spouse Visas
The Australian immigration department has designed 5 types of spouse visas to suit individual situations and needs.
| Visa Subclass | Where You Apply | What It Is | Leads To | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subclass 309 | Outside Australia | Temporary Spouse Visa | Subclass 100 | 9–13 months |
| Subclass 100 | Follows the 309 | Permanent Spouse Visa | Permanent Residency | 13–32 months |
| Subclass 820 | Inside Australia | Temporary Spouse Visa | Subclass 801 | 12–26 months |
| Subclass 801 | Follows the 820 | Permanent Spouse Visa | Permanent Residency | 11–30 months |
| Subclass 300 | Outside Australia | Fiancé Visa | Subclass 820 | 12–26 months |
Important: You apply once and pay one fee. The temporary and permanent stages are bundled into a single application — there is no second fee when you move to the permanent stage.
Subclass 309 — Australia Spouse Visa (Offshore)
The subclass 309 is for applicants who are outside Australia, offshore, at the time of lodgment. If you are based in Bangladesh, this is the visa you apply for. It allows you to live, work, and study in Australia while the Department of Home Affairs monitors your relationship over a two-year period. If you are currently in Australia, then learn about 820 visa.
The Two-Stage Journey
- Stage 1 — Temporary (subclass 309): Live, work, and study in Australia for two years while your relationship is assessed.
- Stage 2 — Permanent (subclass 100): After two years, the Department confirms your relationship is genuine and ongoing, then grants permanent residency.
Requirements for Spouse Visa (Offshore)
- Be outside Australia when applying
- Be married to, or in a genuine de facto relationship with an Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen
- Show the relationship is genuine and ongoing
- Have a sponsor — your partner must formally sponsor you
- Meet health requirements (medical examination)
- Meet character requirements (police clearance)
- Meet identity requirements
Subclass 100 — Permanent Spouse Visa
Australia spouse visa is the easiest pathway for you to join your Australian Partner. The Subclass 100 is the permanent stage of the offshore pathway. It follows automatically from the Subclass 309 — there is no separate application or additional fee required. Once granted, it gives you the right to live, work, and study in Australia permanently with no end date.
Requirements for Subclass 100
- You must already hold the Subclass 309 visa
- At least two years must have passed since the original application was lodged
- You must still be in a genuine and continuing relationship with the same sponsor
- You and any family members included must continue to meet health and character requirements
Fast-track note: If your relationship was already well-established at the time of applying — typically 3 or more years together, or 2 years if you have a dependent child — you may be granted the 100 visa at the same time as the 309, skipping the two-year wait entirely.
Subclass 820 — Spouse Visa Onshore (Temporary)
The Subclass 820 is for applicants who are already inside Australia when they apply. It allows you to remain in Australia lawfully, work, study, and access Medicare while your permanent residency is being assessed.
Stages of the Onshore Process
- Stage 1 — Temporary (820): Remain in Australia while your relationship is assessed. Work, study, and access Medicare.
- Stage 2 — Permanent (801): After approximately two years, immigration authorities review your situation and grant permanent residency if all requirements are met.
Requirements for Subclass 820
- You must be physically present in Australia at the time of lodging the application
- You must be sponsored by an Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen
- The relationship must be authentic, continuing, and committed
- De facto couples must generally show at least 12 months of living together
- You must satisfy Australian health and character standards
- You must normally hold a valid visa when lodging the application
It is important to know that once you apply for an Australia spouse visa, your current visa will be replaced with a bridging visa unless the 820 visa is approved.
- Bridging Visa A (BVA – Subclass 010): Automatically granted when you apply for a new substantive visa while holding a valid visa. It allows you to stay legally in Australia but does not permit re-entry if you leave the country.
- Bridging Visa B (BVB – Subclass 020): Designed for BVA holders who need to travel outside Australia and return while their new visa application is being processed.
- Bridging Visa C (BVC – Subclass 030): Granted when you apply for a new substantive visa after your previous visa has expired or while holding a bridging visa.
- Bridging Visa E (BVE – Subclass 050/051): An emergency visa for individuals whose visa has expired and who are awaiting a decision or making arrangements to leave Australia legally.
Subclass 801 — Permanent Partner Visa (Onshore)
The Subclass 801 is the permanent stage of the onshore visa pathway. It follows the Subclass 820 and is assessed automatically — no new application or fee is needed. Once granted, you can remain in Australia permanently.
Requirements for Subclass 801
- You must be holding the Subclass 820 visa at the time of assessment
- At least two years must have passed since the original 820/801 application was lodged
- You must still be in a genuine, ongoing relationship with your sponsor
- You must continue to satisfy health and character requirements at the point of decision
Family violence protection: If the relationship ends during the waiting period due to family violence, you may still be eligible for the permanent 801 visa. This is an important protection built into Australian law.
Subclass 300 — Prospective Marriage (Fiancé) Visa
The Subclass 300, also known as the Fiancé Visa, is for couples who are engaged but not yet married. It allows you to travel to Australia, marry your partner within the validity period, and then apply for a Partner Visa to live together permanently.
Key Details
- Must be outside Australia when applying
- You and your partner must intend to marry each other
- The visa is temporary — you must marry within the visa validity period
- After marriage, you apply for the Subclass 820 (onshore) Partner Visa to continue living in Australia
- Processing time is typically 12–26 months
Processing Steps
Confirm your eligibility
check that both you and your partner meet all requirements.
Gather documents
relationship evidence, identity documents, police clearances, and medical results.
Sponsor submits sponsorship application
your partner lodges as your sponsor via ImmiAccount.
Applicant lodges visa application
submit your visa application online, pay the fee, and upload all documents.
Medical examination
attend a medical exam at a Home Affairs-approved clinic.
Police clearance
obtain police clearance from Bangladesh and any other country you have lived in.
Provisional visa granted (309 or 820)
you can now live in Australia.
Two-year wait
continue living together and maintain your relationship evidence.
Permanent visa granted (100 or 801)
permanent residency with no further application or fee.
Processing Times
Processing times vary based on the volume of applications and individual case complexity. The following are approximate current timeframes:
- Subclass 309 (offshore temporary) — 9 to 13 months
- Subclass 100 (offshore permanent) — 13 to 32 months from lodgment
- Subclass 820 (onshore temporary) — 12 to 26 months
- Subclass 801 (onshore permanent) — 11 to 30 months from lodgment
- Subclass 300 (fiancé) — 12 to 26 months
Processing times are indicative only. The Department of Home Affairs updates these regularly. Your individual case may be faster or slower depending on how complete your application is and whether additional information is requested.
Why Your Visa Might Get Refused
Partner visas are refused when the Department is not satisfied that the relationship is genuine. The most common reasons for refusal are:
- Insufficient relationship evidence — no shared finances, address, or social proof
- Inconsistent statements — your answers and your partner’s answers do not match
- Short relationship history — the couple has not been together long enough to establish credibility
- Failure to meet health or character requirements
- Documents that appear incomplete, inconsistent, or fraudulent
- Previous visa refusals or immigration history issues
Strong applications include a wide range of relationship evidence across all four categories the Department assesses: financial, social, household, and commitment. The more categories you can evidence, the stronger your case.
Why Live in Australia?
Once your visa is granted, you and your partner can build a life together in one of the world’s most livable countries. Here is what Australia offers:
- Universal healthcare through Medicare
- World-class public education system
- Right to work in any occupation — no restrictions
- Pathway to Australian citizenship after four years of residence
- High standard of living with strong wages and worker protections
- Vibrant multicultural communities — large Bangladeshi community in major cities
- Safe, stable, and democratic society
FAQ
and this is where many Bangladeshi applicants get caught out. A marriage certificate only proves the wedding happened. It does not prove the relationship is genuine and ongoing, which is what the Department actually needs to see. This matters especially for arranged marriages, where the couple may have known each other for a short time before marrying. In these cases, the evidence you build after the wedding — shared finances, living together, regular contact, visits — carries far more weight than the certificate itself.
You need to demonstrate at least Competent English, which IELTS 6.0 in each band satisfies. However, you can also use PTE Academic, TOEFL iBT, OET, or Cambridge C1 Advanced. Without one of these results, you cannot submit an EOI.
The government visa fee for 2025–2026 is AUD 9,365 for the primary applicant. This covers both stages — the temporary and the permanent — so you do not pay a second time when your permanent residency is granted. On top of that, expect costs for the medical examination, police clearances from Bangladesh and any other country you have lived in, and translation of documents. None of the government fees are refunded if the visa is refused, which is why it is worth getting the application right the first time.
Not if it is properly explained and evidenced. The Department understands that couples are sometimes separated by work, study, or visa conditions — and this alone will not cause a refusal. What matters is showing that the relationship stayed genuine throughout the time apart. That means providing things like call logs, chat history, video call records, money transfers between partners, and evidence of visits. The key is to tell the story clearly — when you were apart, why, and how you maintained the relationship — rather than leaving the case officer to guess.
The Australian government’s preferred method is online through ImmiAccount, and this is how most Bangladeshi applicants lodge. If you need to submit in person, the Australian Visa Application Centre (AVAC) in Dhaka handles lodgement and biometric collection. Either way, your application will be assessed by the Department of Home Affairs offices in Colombo or Delhi — not locally. This means communication comes from those offices, and any requests for further information will reference those processing locations.
