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Short Description: Complete guide to Australia’s Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114): eligibility, sponsorship, documents, costs, waiting times, rights, limits, and risks.

Last Verified On: 2026-03-15

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Australia
Visa name Aged Dependent Relative Visa
Visa short name 114
Category Family / permanent residence visa
Main purpose Permanent migration for an older dependent relative of a settled Australian sponsor
Typical applicant An older relative outside Australia who is financially dependent on an eligible Australian relative and meets the “aged” requirement
Validity Permanent visa
Stay duration Indefinite permanent stay, if granted
Entries allowed Travel facility usually for 5 years from grant, then resident return arrangements may be needed for re-entry
Extension possible? Not an extension-based visa; it is permanent. Re-entry after travel may later require a Resident Return Visa if the initial travel facility expires
Work allowed? Yes
Study allowed? Yes
Family allowed? Limited. This visa is for the main applicant; separate eligibility rules apply for any family members included, if permitted under current rules and application settings
PR path? Yes. It is itself a permanent visa
Citizenship path? Indirect. Permanent residence can support a later citizenship application if residence and other citizenship requirements are met

The Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114) is an Australian permanent family visa for a person who is:

  • old enough to meet Australia’s definition of “aged” for this visa context,
  • dependent on a relative in Australia,
  • sponsored by an eligible relative or the relative’s partner, and
  • outside Australia when applying and when the visa is decided.

It exists to allow a narrow family-reunion pathway for older dependent relatives who rely on family members settled in Australia.

In Australia’s immigration system, this is a permanent residence visa subclass under the family migration program. It is not a visitor visa, work visa, or temporary permit. It is also not an eVisitor/ETA-style travel authorization. Australia issues visa status digitally; there is generally no visa label requirement.

Key official identity of this visa

  • Official long name: Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114)
  • Subclass code: 114
  • Program area: Family migration
  • Application location rule: offshore only

Important context

This is one of Australia’s very limited and heavily queued non-contributory family visas. In practical terms, this means:

  • the visa is legally available,
  • but places are capped each program year,
  • and processing can take many years due to queueing and low annual planning levels.

Warning: This visa is often technically “open” but practically subject to extremely long waiting times.

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-suited applicants

This visa is mainly suitable for a person who:

  • is older and meets the visa’s aged requirement,
  • is single/widowed/divorced/separated in a way that fits the dependency rules,
  • has been financially dependent on an eligible relative in Australia,
  • has an eligible sponsor who is a settled Australian citizen, Australian permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen,
  • wants to live permanently in Australia rather than visit temporarily.

Who this visa is generally for

Applicant type Suitable for Subclass 114? Notes
Retirees who are dependent on Australian family Yes, if they meet the strict dependency and aged criteria
Elderly relatives seeking permanent family reunion Yes
Tourists No Consider visitor options instead
Business visitors No Wrong visa type
Job seekers No This is not an employment route
Employees with job offers No Consider a work visa
Students No Consider a student visa
Spouses/partners No Consider partner visas
Children/dependents of Australians Usually no Consider child-related visas
Entrepreneurs/investors No Consider business/investment routes if available
Medical travelers No Consider visitor options for medical treatment if eligible
Transit passengers No Wrong visa type
Digital nomads No Not designed for this purpose

Who should not use this visa

Do not use Subclass 114 if your main purpose is:

  • tourism,
  • short visits,
  • work,
  • study,
  • joining a spouse or de facto partner,
  • joining parents,
  • business expansion,
  • retirement without dependency,
  • medical treatment only.

Common alternative visas people confuse with it

  • Remaining Relative Visa (Subclass 115) — for a person whose only near relatives are usually in Australia
  • Carer Visa (Subclass 116) — for someone needed to give substantial ongoing care
  • Aged Parent Visa categories — for parents, not other relatives
  • Partner visas — for spouses/de facto partners
  • Visitor visas — for temporary stays only

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purpose

The Subclass 114 visa is used for:

  • permanent residence in Australia
  • family reunion with an eligible sponsoring relative
  • living in Australia as a permanent resident once granted
  • working and studying in Australia after grant, subject to general Australian laws

Prohibited or incorrect uses

This is not the correct visa for:

  • tourism
  • business meetings as a short-term visitor
  • short-term family visits
  • transit
  • temporary medical treatment
  • internships
  • short-term study as the main reason for travel
  • taking up a job offer as the basis of migration
  • marriage-only travel
  • investment/business setup as the visa purpose
  • journalism assignments
  • performance tours or sports events
  • temporary religious work

Grey areas and misunderstandings

Remote work

Because this is a permanent visa, normal work rights apply after grant. The “remote work on a visitor visa” grey area does not really arise here the way it does for temporary visitor visas.

Volunteering

Permitted volunteering depends on the nature of the activity and whether it is effectively unpaid work replacing a paid role. For permanent residents, general employment law matters more than visa restrictions.

Marriage

You do not use this visa simply because you want to marry in Australia. If the family relationship and dependency criteria are not met, this is the wrong visa.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official classification

  • Program: Family migration
  • Visa subclass: 114
  • Official name: Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114)

Internal or related categories

Commonly associated family subclasses include:

  • Subclass 115 — Remaining Relative
  • Subclass 116 — Carer
  • Subclass 838 — Aged Dependent Relative (onshore counterpart, if applicable under current law/settings)

Important: Subclass 114 is the offshore version. People often confuse it with Subclass 838, which is the aged dependent relative visa for applicants in Australia.

Old vs current naming

The current public official naming remains Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114).

5. Eligibility criteria

This is the heart of the visa. The rules are strict.

Core eligibility overview

To be eligible in general, the applicant must usually:

  • be outside Australia when applying
  • be outside Australia when the visa is granted
  • be sponsored
  • be aged
  • be dependent on an eligible relative in Australia or that relative’s partner
  • usually be single / not in a relationship in the legally required sense for this visa category
  • meet health requirements
  • meet character requirements
  • have any debts to the Australian Government resolved or formally arranged
  • sign/comply with any required Australian values statement or related obligations if requested in the application process

Eligibility matrix

Requirement General rule for Subclass 114
Location at application Must be outside Australia
Location at grant Must be outside Australia
Age Must meet the “aged” requirement under Australian law
Sponsorship Required
Relationship Must be a dependent relative of the sponsor or sponsor’s partner
Dependency Must show financial dependency for a substantial period
Marital/relationship status Usually must not have a partner
Health Must meet health requirements
Character Must meet character requirements
Nationality No public nationality restriction in the core visa criteria, but practical processing may vary by location

Nationality rules

There is no general public rule that this visa is limited to specific nationalities. In principle, eligible applicants of various nationalities can apply, provided they meet the visa criteria and can lodge from outside Australia.

However:

  • document requirements,
  • police certificate requirements,
  • health examination arrangements,
  • biometrics procedures, and
  • application logistics

may vary by country of residence or nationality.

Passport validity

Applicants need a valid passport or other accepted travel/identity document for processing and travel. Exact minimum validity is not always stated on the visa page itself, but in practice a valid passport is essential.

Pro Tip: Renew a passport early if it is close to expiry, especially given the potentially long processing period.

Age requirement

For this visa, “aged” does not simply mean any elderly age. It usually means old enough to qualify for the Age Pension age standard used in migration law.

Because age pension age can change over time, applicants should verify the current legal threshold on the official visa page and legislative definitions.

Education, language, work experience

Not generally central eligibility criteria for this visa.

  • Education: Not a core requirement
  • English language: No general points-test style English requirement is central to eligibility
  • Work experience: Not a core requirement

Sponsorship

A valid sponsor is required.

An eligible sponsor is generally:

  • an Australian citizen
  • an Australian permanent resident
  • an eligible New Zealand citizen

The sponsor must usually be settled in Australia and be:

  • a relative of the applicant, or
  • the relative’s partner, depending on the exact relationship structure allowed by law.

Relationship proof

This is critical. The applicant must prove they are a dependent relative in the legally required way. This usually involves proving:

  • the exact family relationship,
  • that the sponsor is eligible,
  • that the applicant has been dependent on the sponsor or sponsor-related household,
  • and that the dependency has existed for the required period.

Invitation, job offer, points, admission letter, investment thresholds

Not applicable in the normal sense for this visa:

  • Invitation rounds: Not generally applicable like points-tested visas
  • Job offer: Not required
  • Points requirement: No
  • Admission letter: No
  • Business/investment threshold: No

Maintenance funds / accommodation / onward travel

There is no standard published minimum maintenance fund threshold like a visitor or student visa. However, practical evidence of dependency and support can matter.

Health requirement

Applicants must meet Australia’s health requirement. This may involve:

  • health examinations,
  • chest x-rays,
  • blood tests,
  • other tests based on age, nationality, medical history, or intended stay circumstances.

Character requirement

Applicants usually must provide police clearances and answer character questions. Serious criminal issues, security concerns, or misleading answers can cause refusal.

Insurance

There is no standard visa-specific private insurance rule published as a core criterion like for some temporary visas. But applicants should still plan healthcare access and Medicare eligibility after grant.

Biometrics

Biometrics may be requested depending on nationality, location, and processing arrangements.

Intent requirements

This is a permanent visa, so it is not about proving temporary stay intent. Instead, the case turns on:

  • genuine eligibility,
  • dependency,
  • sponsorship,
  • health/character,
  • and legal criteria.

Quotas/caps/queue

Yes. This visa is affected by family migration planning levels and queueing.

Warning: Even if eligible, applicants can wait a very long time because of low numbers of available places.

Embassy-specific or location-specific rules

Lodgement and follow-up procedures can vary by processing office, country of residence, and service center arrangements. Use the Department of Home Affairs account and instructions for your case.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Common ineligibility factors

You may not be eligible if:

  • you are not outside Australia at lodgement or grant
  • you do not meet the legal definition of aged
  • you cannot prove financial dependency
  • you have a partner when the visa requires you not to
  • the sponsor is not eligible
  • the family relationship does not fit the legal category
  • you fail health or character checks
  • you owe money to the Australian Government and do not resolve it
  • you provide false, inconsistent, or unverifiable information

Common refusal triggers

Refusal issue Why it matters
Weak proof of dependency Central legal criterion
Unclear family relationship Relationship must fit the law exactly
Wrong sponsor Sponsor may be ineligible or not sufficiently settled
Applicant not “aged” Core threshold failure
Applicant is married/in a qualifying relationship May break eligibility
Incomplete documents Delays or refusal
Bad translations Evidence may be disregarded
Character concerns Mandatory criterion
Health concerns Can lead to refusal under health rules
Lodging in wrong location/status Offshore requirement is strict
Misleading statements Can trigger refusal and exclusion consequences

Items from generic visa refusals that are less central here

These are common in temporary visas but less central here:

  • weak travel history,
  • poor home-country ties,
  • suspicious itinerary,
  • onward ticket issues.

This is because Subclass 114 is a permanent family visa, not a temporary visitor category.

7. Benefits of this visa

If granted, the Subclass 114 visa gives the holder permanent residence in Australia.

Main benefits

  • live in Australia permanently
  • work in Australia
  • study in Australia
  • enroll in Medicare if eligible under Australia’s public health rules
  • sponsor eligible relatives for certain visas, subject to law
  • travel to and from Australia for the period of the visa’s travel facility
  • later apply for Australian citizenship if all citizenship requirements are met

Family benefits

The main benefit is long-term family reunification for an older dependent relative.

PR and citizenship benefit

This is already a permanent visa, so it is one of the direct family-based PR routes, though heavily limited by waiting times.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Major practical limitation: very long processing queue

The biggest restriction is not what you can do after grant. It is how long it may take to get granted.

Other limitations

  • must apply from outside Australia
  • must be outside Australia at grant
  • strict dependency rules
  • strict sponsor rules
  • not suitable for temporary travel
  • not a shortcut around partner, parent, work, or visitor visa rules
  • travel facility is not indefinite; long-term permanent residents later may need a Resident Return Visa for re-entry after travel facility expiry

Public funds / social benefits

Being a permanent resident does not automatically mean immediate full access to every welfare benefit. Waiting periods and separate eligibility rules may apply.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity

This is a permanent visa.

Stay duration

  • You can stay in Australia indefinitely as a permanent resident after grant.

Entries allowed

  • Permanent visas normally include a travel facility, commonly for 5 years from grant.
  • During that travel facility period, you can usually leave and re-enter Australia.
  • After that period, if you are overseas and want to return to Australia as a permanent resident, you may need a Resident Return Visa (RRV).

When the clock starts

  • Permanent residence begins on visa grant.
  • Travel facility timing usually runs from the date of grant.

Overstay consequences

Not applicable in the normal temporary-visa sense once the permanent visa is granted, but any travel and residency rules still matter.

Bridging/interim status

Because this is an offshore visa, Australian bridging visa concepts do not usually provide the same practical benefit they do for onshore applicants.

10. Complete document checklist

Document needs can vary by case. Always follow the personalized official checklist in ImmiAccount and any Department requests.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Completed visa application Official application form/process Starts the case Incomplete answers
Sponsorship form/documents Sponsor’s formal support documents Required for sponsor eligibility Wrong sponsor details
Identity pages Passport biodata pages Identity and nationality Expired passport
Birth certificate Civil identity record Proves age and family links Missing parent names
Relationship evidence Family records Proves relation to sponsor Inconsistent names/dates

B. Identity/travel documents

  • current passport
  • previous passports if relevant
  • national identity card if available
  • birth certificate
  • name change documents
  • marriage, divorce, annulment, or death certificates where relevant to show current status

C. Financial documents

This visa is about dependency, so financial evidence is often crucial:

  • bank statements
  • money transfer records
  • remittance evidence
  • proof of regular support from sponsor
  • proof the applicant relied on that support
  • pension/non-employment records if relevant
  • affidavits may support but should not replace primary records

D. Employment/business documents

Usually not core, but may help show dependency or lack of independent support:

  • retirement evidence
  • employment cessation records
  • pension records
  • tax records if relevant

E. Education documents

Usually not applicable for this visa, unless specifically requested for identity/history clarification.

F. Relationship/family documents

These are often central:

  • birth certificates linking family members
  • family registration books, if used in the country of issue
  • adoption records if relevant
  • divorce decrees
  • death certificate of spouse, if widowed
  • evidence applicant does not have a partner if that is legally relevant
  • sponsor’s proof of Australian status
  • evidence sponsor is settled in Australia

G. Accommodation/travel documents

Not usually a primary eligibility focus, but may include:

  • sponsor’s address evidence
  • proof of current residence
  • possible statement on intended living arrangements

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • sponsor’s passport
  • proof of Australian citizenship/permanent residence/eligible NZ status
  • proof of residence in Australia
  • evidence of relationship to applicant
  • sponsorship undertaking
  • financial support evidence if requested

I. Health/insurance documents

  • health exam referral/results if requested
  • medical history documents where needed
  • insurance is not usually a core visa criterion, but private health planning can still be sensible

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on nationality or residence:

  • military records
  • household registration documents
  • local police certificates
  • exit/entry records
  • family census records
  • local court records

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

Not commonly central because this visa is for an aged dependent relative, but if any secondary applicants are permitted in the case:

  • birth certificates
  • custody papers
  • parental consent
  • adoption papers

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

  • Non-English documents generally need English translations
  • The Department may require or prefer translations meeting Australian standards
  • Whether notarization/apostille is needed depends on the document and country; Australia often accepts scans/uploads but may later request originals or certified copies

Common Mistake: Uploading informal translations done by family members when formal translations are expected.

M. Photo specifications

If photographs are requested, follow the current Department photo specifications. Digital passport-style identity images may be required depending on the stage/process.

11. Financial requirements

Is there a minimum funds requirement?

There is no standard public “minimum bank balance” rule on the main visa criteria page comparable to visitor or student visas.

However, financial evidence matters because the visa requires dependency.

What financial proof usually matters most

  • records showing the applicant has been dependent on the sponsor for basic living needs
  • long-term remittance records
  • proof of sponsor’s ability to provide support where requested
  • evidence the applicant is not independently self-supporting, if relevant to the legal definition

Hidden cost issue

The real financial burden is often not a minimum funds test, but:

  • visa fees,
  • medicals,
  • police checks,
  • translations,
  • and potentially very long waiting periods.

Proof strength tips

  • show a pattern, not one-off transfers
  • explain large deposits
  • use chronological bank evidence
  • match money transfers with recipient statements
  • add a simple summary table of support history

12. Fees and total cost

Fees change. Always check the latest official fee page before paying.

Main government fee

The visa application charge for family visas can be substantial and may include staged or additional charges depending on the subclass and included applicants.

Because fees are updated regularly, readers should use the official Visa Pricing Estimator and the visa page.

Typical cost components

Cost item Official status
Visa application charge Required
Biometrics fee If biometrics requested
Health examination cost If medicals required
Police certificate cost Usually required for character checks
Translation costs If documents are not in English
Notary/certification costs If needed
Courier / VAC service costs May apply depending on location
Travel costs Personal cost
Legal or migration agent fee Optional, not a government fee

Fee guidance

Warning: Do not rely on old blog posts for exact family visa fees. Australia updates charges periodically.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa

Make sure Subclass 114 is correct and not:

  • Subclass 838,
  • a parent visa,
  • a carer visa,
  • a remaining relative visa,
  • or a visitor visa.

2. Check location eligibility

You must be outside Australia to apply and usually outside Australia at decision.

3. Gather documents

Collect:

  • identity records
  • relationship proof
  • dependency evidence
  • sponsor documents
  • police certificates
  • civil status records
  • translations

4. Create or access ImmiAccount

Most Australian visa applications are managed through ImmiAccount.

5. Complete the application carefully

Answer all questions consistently with documents.

6. Arrange sponsorship documents

The sponsor may need to submit separate forms or linked material.

7. Pay the fee

Pay the visa application charge through official channels.

8. Submit application

Upload documents as instructed.

9. Biometrics if requested

Some applicants will receive instructions for biometrics.

10. Health examinations if requested

Complete medicals only when instructed or when the system allows valid upfront action.

11. Police certificates

Provide police clearances from required countries.

12. Track the application

Use ImmiAccount and official correspondence.

13. Respond to requests quickly

If the Department asks for more evidence, answer within the deadline.

14. Decision

If granted, the decision letter will set out grant details and travel conditions.

15. Travel to Australia

Enter before any required initial entry date if stated.

16. After arrival

As a permanent resident, you can settle, access services where eligible, and later manage Medicare, tax file number, banking, housing, and other practical steps.

14. Processing time

Official reality

For this visa, the biggest issue is queueing rather than ordinary short-term processing.

Australia publishes processing information and planning levels, but for certain queued family visas, actual waiting times can be extremely long.

What affects timing

  • annual planning places
  • queue date
  • document completeness
  • health/character checks
  • sponsor verification
  • country-specific delays for police or civil documents

Priority options

There is generally no normal premium processing shortcut for this visa class.

Practical expectation

Expect a very long wait, potentially measured in years, not months.

Warning: Do not make irreversible life decisions assuming quick approval.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

  • May be required depending on nationality/location.
  • If required, the Department will instruct where and how.

Interview

An interview is not guaranteed in every case. If one is requested, it may focus on:

  • relationship to sponsor
  • dependency history
  • civil status
  • personal history
  • inconsistencies in documents

Medical

Applicants usually must meet the health requirement. Tests may vary by age and medical history.

Police checks

Police certificates are commonly required from:

  • the country of citizenship,
  • the country of residence,
  • and other countries where the applicant lived for the required period.

Exemptions

Any exemptions are case-specific and not something applicants should assume.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Australia does not always publish simple visa-specific public approval percentages in a way that is current and decision-ready for this exact subclass.

So:

  • official up-to-date approval-rate data may not be publicly presented in a simple subclass-specific format
  • applicants should not rely on unofficial “success rate” claims

Practical refusal patterns

Officially grounded refusal risks usually involve:

  • failure to prove dependency
  • wrong family relationship category
  • failure to meet “aged” status
  • ineligible sponsor
  • character issues
  • health issues
  • poor document quality
  • inconsistent civil status evidence

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Official-rule-based strengthening steps

  • Match every legal criterion to documentary proof
  • Build a dependency timeline
  • Use civil records to prove the exact family chain
  • Include sponsor’s settlement evidence in Australia
  • Resolve name/date inconsistencies before filing
  • Translate all non-English documents properly
  • Explain missing records clearly and truthfully

Practical tips

Stronger cover explanation

Write a short submission note that maps evidence to each criterion:

  1. aged requirement
  2. relationship to sponsor
  3. sponsor’s status
  4. sponsor’s settled status
  5. financial dependency
  6. health/character compliance

Stronger funds/dependency presentation

If support was given by bank transfer, create a table with:

  • date
  • amount
  • sender
  • recipient
  • reason/support note
  • supporting document filename

Stronger relationship evidence

Use primary documents first:

  • birth certificates
  • registry extracts
  • household records
  • official family books

Affidavits should support, not replace, official records.

18. Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Best timing windows

  • Apply only when your documentary trail is organized.
  • Because waiting is long, avoid delaying solely to create “perfect” packaging if you already clearly qualify and have essential proof.

File organization strategy

Applicants often reduce confusion by uploading in themed bundles:

  • Identity
  • Civil status
  • Sponsor status
  • Relationship proof
  • Dependency proof
  • Police/health
  • Explanatory letter

How to handle large deposits transparently

If there are unusual deposits in sponsor or applicant accounts:

  • explain them in writing,
  • attach supporting proof,
  • do not hope the case officer ignores them.

Invitation/support letter strategy

The sponsor’s letter should clearly explain:

  • relationship,
  • length of support,
  • why the applicant is dependent,
  • sponsor’s life in Australia,
  • intended living arrangements.

Old refusals

If the applicant has past refusals for Australia or other countries:

  • disclose them honestly if asked,
  • attach the refusal letter,
  • explain what is different now.

When to contact the Department

Contact only when:

  • there is a major change in circumstances,
  • a requested document cannot be obtained and you need to explain why,
  • personal details change,
  • or you must notify a passport change.

Do not send repeated status enquiries during normal queue waiting periods unless there is a real issue.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often useful in this visa.

What to include

  • applicant identity
  • visa subclass sought
  • sponsor identity and status
  • relationship summary
  • statement of aged status
  • dependency history
  • list of attached evidence
  • explanation of any irregularities

What not to include

  • emotional claims without evidence
  • exaggerated hardship claims unsupported by records
  • inconsistent dates
  • unnecessary criticism of prior decisions or systems

Sample outline

  1. Introduction
  2. Applicant details
  3. Sponsor details
  4. Relationship and family chain
  5. Dependency history
  6. Civil status explanation
  7. Health/character document status
  8. Document index
  9. Closing confirmation

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor

Usually:

  • Australian citizen
  • Australian permanent resident
  • eligible New Zealand citizen

who is settled in Australia and fits the qualifying relationship structure.

Sponsor obligations

The sponsor may need to:

  • complete sponsorship paperwork,
  • provide identity and status evidence,
  • prove residence in Australia,
  • support the factual case on dependency.

Good sponsor document pack

  • passport
  • citizenship certificate or PR evidence if relevant
  • proof of address
  • proof of length of residence in Australia
  • financial support records
  • relationship proof

Sponsor mistakes

  • vague support letters
  • no proof of settlement
  • no proof of actual financial support
  • contradictory family relationship descriptions

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

This area can be sensitive because this visa is for an aged dependent relative, and one core criterion is often that the applicant is not partnered in the way defined by law.

Spouse/partner issues

If the applicant is married or in a qualifying de facto relationship, that may defeat eligibility.

Children/dependents

Whether family members can be included depends on current law, application settings, and whether they meet the definition of a member of the family unit. For this visa type, that is often limited in practice and may not fit many real-world scenarios because of the applicant profile.

Important: Check the current visa page and application form instructions for whether any secondary applicants can be included in your case.

Custody/consent issues

If any minor is involved, expect:

  • birth certificates,
  • custody orders,
  • travel consent,
  • adoption records if relevant.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Once granted, this is a permanent visa.

Work rights

Activity Allowed? Notes
Employment Yes Subject to general law
Self-employment Yes Subject to licensing/tax rules
Remote work Yes As a permanent resident, standard tax/employment rules apply
Volunteering Yes, generally Must comply with labor laws
Paid internships Yes If lawful under general rules

Study rights

  • Yes, the holder can study in Australia.
  • Standard institutional admission rules and fees still apply.

Business activity

  • General lawful business activity is possible as a permanent resident.
  • This visa is not a business migration visa, but it does not prohibit lawful business activity after grant.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Final admission is always at the border

Even with a granted visa, border officers can still assess identity and admissibility.

Documents to carry

Carry:

  • current passport
  • visa grant notice
  • sponsor contact details
  • copies of key civil documents if name discrepancies exist
  • medication/medical papers if relevant

Re-entry issues

The permanent visa’s travel facility is time-limited. Later re-entry may require an RRV if the travel facility has expired.

New passport

If your passport changes, update details with the Department.

Dual nationals

Use consistent identity details and disclose other citizenships where required.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Not in the usual temporary-visa sense. It is already permanent.

Renewal

The visa itself is permanent, but the travel facility can expire. For later overseas travel and return, a Resident Return Visa may be needed.

Switching

Switching before grant is not the right framework here. If circumstances change, another visa category may be more appropriate, but that depends on separate eligibility.

Onshore conversion

Subclass 114 is offshore. People in Australia who qualify under an onshore aged dependent relative pathway may need to look at the appropriate onshore subclass, if available.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

PR status

This visa is itself a permanent resident visa.

Citizenship path

It can support a future citizenship application if the person later meets:

  • lawful residence requirements,
  • permanent residence timing requirements,
  • character requirements,
  • citizenship test/interview requirements where applicable.

When this visa does not help PR

This section is mostly not applicable because the visa is already PR.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Once in Australia as a permanent resident, the holder may need to manage:

  • tax residency issues
  • obtaining a Tax File Number
  • Medicare enrollment if eligible
  • address updates where required
  • compliance with Australian law generally
  • any social security waiting period rules

Overstays and status violations

Because it is permanent, classic overstay issues differ from temporary visas. But serious legal breaches can still affect future citizenship or travel rights.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

General rule

There is no broad public rule that this visa is waived for certain nationalities.

What can vary by nationality or residence

  • biometrics requirements
  • available panel physicians
  • police certificate format
  • document legalization practices
  • processing logistics

Special passport or treaty rights

Not generally relevant in a way that removes the need for this visa.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not usually the standard profile for this visa.

Divorced/separated applicants

Must prove current civil status clearly. Divorce decrees or separation evidence may be needed.

Widowed applicants

Provide death certificate of spouse.

Same-sex partners

Australian law generally recognizes same-sex relationships, so if the applicant has a qualifying partner, that may affect eligibility the same way as any other partnership.

Stateless persons / refugees

Possible but document burdens can be complex. Additional identity and police/character issues may arise.

Prior refusals

Must be disclosed where required. They do not automatically bar approval, but hidden refusals can be very damaging.

Overstays / prior immigration violations

Past violations may affect character or credibility and should be addressed honestly.

Expired passport but valid visa

Before travel, passport validity must be practically managed. Update passport details with the Department as needed.

Applying from a third country

Possible in some circumstances if you are outside Australia and can meet processing/document requirements, but local service availability may vary.

Change of name / gender marker mismatch

Provide legal change documents and a short explanation note. Keep identity evidence consistent.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“It’s basically a retirement visa.” No. It is a family dependency visa with strict relationship and dependency rules.
“Any elderly relative can apply.” No. The relationship and dependency criteria are narrow.
“You can apply while visiting Australia.” Subclass 114 is generally an offshore visa.
“If your sponsor is a citizen, approval is easy.” No. Sponsor status alone is not enough.
“A support affidavit is enough.” No. Primary civil and financial records matter most.
“This is a quick PR route.” No. Waiting times can be extremely long.
“Once granted, travel rights last forever.” Permanent residence lasts, but the travel facility does not.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After refusal

The refusal letter will explain:

  • the legal provisions used,
  • the factual findings,
  • and whether review rights exist.

Review rights

Administrative review rights depend on:

  • where the application was made,
  • who applied,
  • who sponsored,
  • and the exact legislative setting at the time of decision.

If review rights exist, they are usually time-limited and strict.

Refunds

Application charges are generally not refunded just because a visa is refused, unless a specific legal basis provides otherwise.

Reapplying

Possible in many cases, but only after fixing the refusal reasons.

When to get legal help

Strongly consider professional help if refusal involves:

  • dependency findings,
  • family relationship disputes,
  • character issues,
  • health issues,
  • section 48 or other bar concerns,
  • document authenticity concerns.

31. Arrival in Australia: what happens next?

At immigration clearance

You may be asked to confirm:

  • identity,
  • purpose of migration,
  • sponsor details,
  • address in Australia.

First practical steps after arrival

Within the first days or weeks, many new permanent residents will want to:

  • enroll in Medicare if eligible
  • apply for a Tax File Number
  • open a bank account
  • get a SIM card
  • secure housing or move in with sponsor
  • understand public transport and local services
  • update contact details where needed

Permit card pickup

Not applicable in the normal Australian visa-card sense. Australia uses digital visa records.

32. Real-world timeline examples

Because this is not a tourist or worker visa, “solo tourist/student/worker” examples are not truly applicable as primary use cases. Still, here are realistic family-based scenarios.

Scenario 1: Elderly widowed aunt dependent on Australian nephew

  • Month 1–3: gather civil records, remittance history, sponsor documents
  • Month 4: lodge offshore application
  • Following period: biometrics/medical/police as requested
  • Long queue period: wait based on planning places
  • Grant stage: decision when place becomes available and criteria remain met
  • Arrival: settle in Australia as permanent resident

Scenario 2: Elderly divorced sibling dependent on Australian sister

  • Preparation: prove sibling relationship and dependency
  • Filing: offshore via ImmiAccount/process instructions
  • Delay period: extended queueing
  • Finalization: health/character cleared, visa granted offshore
  • Travel: enter Australia and begin permanent residence

Scenario 3: Applicant discovers they are actually better suited to another family subclass

  • Preparation reveals relationship does not fit dependent relative law
  • Before filing: switch strategy to remaining relative, carer, parent, or partner route if legally appropriate

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file organization

Naming convention

Use clear filenames such as:

  • 01_Passport_Applicant.pdf
  • 02_Birth_Certificate_Applicant.pdf
  • 03_Birth_Certificate_Sponsor.pdf
  • 04_Sponsor_Citizenship_Evidence.pdf
  • 05_Dependency_Remittances_2021_2025.pdf
  • 06_Civil_Status_Divorce_Decree.pdf
  • 07_Police_Certificate_CountryX.pdf
  • 08_Explanatory_Letter.pdf

PDF order

  1. Document index
  2. Cover letter
  3. Identity documents
  4. Civil status documents
  5. Sponsor status documents
  6. Relationship evidence
  7. Dependency evidence
  8. Police/health documents
  9. Other explanations

Scan quality tips

  • color scans where possible
  • full page visible
  • no cropped edges
  • readable stamps/seals
  • one logical PDF per category, not dozens of random image files

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm Subclass 114 is the correct visa
  • Confirm you are outside Australia
  • Confirm you meet the aged requirement
  • Confirm you meet dependency rules
  • Confirm sponsor eligibility
  • Gather identity and civil records
  • Gather dependency evidence
  • Arrange translations
  • Check police certificate requirements
  • Prepare explanation for any missing records

Submission-day checklist

  • All forms complete
  • Names and dates consistent
  • Sponsor details match supporting docs
  • Passport valid
  • Fees ready
  • Document uploads labeled clearly
  • Cover letter attached
  • Contact details correct

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Appointment confirmation
  • Passport
  • Instruction letter
  • Any requested originals
  • Updated contact details
  • Short summary of case facts for your own reference

Arrival checklist

  • Passport and visa grant notice
  • Sponsor contact details
  • Australian address
  • Medicare steps planned
  • TFN application planned
  • Banking/SIM/housing plan

Extension/renewal checklist

Not applicable in the ordinary sense for this permanent visa, except travel-facility planning:

  • Check travel facility expiry date
  • Assess need for Resident Return Visa before overseas return travel

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reasons carefully
  • Identify unmet criteria
  • Obtain missing evidence
  • Fix inconsistencies
  • Consider review deadlines
  • Get professional advice if needed
  • Reapply only when refusal reasons are genuinely cured

35. FAQs

1. Is Subclass 114 a permanent visa?

Yes. It is a permanent residence visa.

2. Do I have to be outside Australia to apply?

Yes, generally this is an offshore visa.

3. Do I have to be outside Australia when it is granted?

Yes, generally yes.

4. Is this the same as a parent visa?

No. It is for an aged dependent relative, not specifically for parents.

5. Can an elderly parent use this instead of a parent visa?

Usually the correct parent categories should be checked first. Family relationship classification matters.

6. What does “aged” mean for this visa?

It usually means meeting the relevant age threshold tied to Australia’s age pension framework under migration law. Verify the current official threshold.

7. What does “dependent” mean here?

Usually financial dependency on the sponsor for basic needs for the required period.

8. Can I apply if I am married?

Often no, because this visa generally requires the applicant not to have a partner in the relevant legal sense.

9. Can I include my spouse?

Usually this is problematic because being partnered may itself affect eligibility.

10. Can I work after grant?

Yes.

11. Can I study after grant?

Yes.

12. Is there a minimum bank balance?

There is no simple published minimum-balance rule like a visitor visa, but financial dependency evidence is critical.

13. How long does processing take?

Often a very long time due to queueing and annual planning limits.

14. Is there priority processing?

Not generally in the premium service sense.

15. Do I need biometrics?

Maybe, depending on your nationality/location and Department instructions.

16. Do I need a medical exam?

Usually yes, or at least you must meet the health requirement and may be instructed to complete exams.

17. Do I need police certificates?

Usually yes.

18. Can my sponsor be a permanent resident?

Yes, if otherwise eligible and settled in Australia.

19. Can my sponsor be an eligible New Zealand citizen?

Yes, if they meet the relevant rules.

20. Can I travel freely forever once granted?

Permanent residence continues, but your travel facility can expire, after which you may need a Resident Return Visa to return from overseas.

21. Is this visa digital or a sticker?

Australia generally uses digital visa records.

22. Can I apply from a third country?

Possibly, if you are outside Australia and can meet processing/document requirements.

23. What if my documents are not in English?

They need English translations.

24. Are affidavits enough to prove dependency?

Usually not by themselves. Primary financial records are much stronger.

25. What if I changed my name?

Provide official name-change evidence and keep the record trail clear.

26. Can past visa refusals hurt this application?

Yes, especially if undisclosed or linked to credibility issues.

27. Can I use this visa for temporary family visits while it processes?

No. This visa is for permanent migration; a separate temporary visa may be needed for visits, subject to eligibility.

28. Can I stay in Australia while waiting?

Subclass 114 itself is offshore. Any stay in Australia would depend on another separate visa and compliance with that visa’s conditions.

29. Does approval depend only on the sponsor’s income?

No. The legal relationship and dependency criteria are central.

30. Is there a cap on grants?

Yes, family migration planning levels affect available places.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources only. Check them again before applying because rules, fees, and planning levels can change.

Primary official source list

  • Department of Home Affairs visa page for Aged Dependent Relative visa (subclass 114)
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/getting-a-visa/visa-listing/aged-dependent-relative-114

  • Department of Home Affairs main visas and immigration portal
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/

  • ImmiAccount
    https://online.immi.gov.au/lusc/login

  • Visa pricing estimator
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/visa-pricing-estimator

  • Visa processing times
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/getting-a-visa/visa-processing-times

  • Family migration program information
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/what-we-do/family-migration-program

  • Form and document resources via Department of Home Affairs
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/help-support/applying-online-or-on-paper/forms-and-guides

  • Character requirements / police certificates guidance
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/help-support/meeting-our-requirements/character

  • Health requirements guidance
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/help-support/meeting-our-requirements/health

  • Australian citizenship overview
    https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/citizenship

Law and policy references

  • Federal Register of Legislation (migration legislation access point)
    https://www.legislation.gov.au/

Note: Exact legal criteria sit across the Migration Act, Migration Regulations, legislative instruments, and policy guidance. Public-facing visa pages summarize rather than reproduce all legal text.

37. Final verdict

The Aged Dependent Relative Visa (Subclass 114) is best for a small, specific group: older relatives outside Australia who are genuinely financially dependent on an eligible relative settled in Australia and who meet the strict aged and relationship rules.

Biggest benefits

  • permanent residence
  • work and study rights
  • family reunion
  • possible Medicare access
  • pathway to citizenship later

Biggest risks

  • very long queue/waiting times
  • strict dependency evidence requirements
  • sponsor/relationship classification mistakes
  • health and character issues
  • filing the wrong family visa subclass

Top preparation advice

  • confirm the correct subclass first
  • build a strong dependency evidence file
  • prove the family chain with primary civil documents
  • keep sponsor evidence clear and current
  • expect a long process
  • verify all current rules and fees on official pages before lodging

When to consider another visa

Consider another visa if your real situation is:

  • parent migration,
  • partner migration,
  • carer migration,
  • remaining relative migration,
  • temporary visit only,
  • work or study migration.

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

Before applying, verify these points on official sources because they can vary by time, location, or personal circumstances:

  • the current legal meaning of “aged” for this visa
  • current visa application charge
  • current family migration planning levels and queue implications
  • whether any members of the family unit can be included in your specific case
  • current biometrics requirements by nationality/location
  • current police certificate rules for each country where you lived
  • current health examination instructions and panel physician availability
  • whether your sponsor meets the current definition of settled in Australia
  • any country-specific document certification or translation rules
  • whether there have been recent changes to travel facility or resident return arrangements
  • whether any public policy or legislative updates affect non-contributory family visas

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