Submitting a visa application to the Australian Department of Home Affairs is one of the most important processes you’ll go through as a migrant or temporary resident. If any of your documents are in a language other than English, NAATI-certified translations are not optional — they are mandatory. This guide tells you exactly what to submit, how to prepare your translations, and how to avoid the most common document errors that cause delays.
What Home Affairs Requires: The Official Standard
The Department of Home Affairs (formerly the Department of Immigration and Border Protection) requires that all non-English documents submitted with visa applications be accompanied by a certified translation. As stated on the Department’s own website:
If you are providing documents that are not in English, you must also provide an English translation. In Australia, translations should be provided by a NAATI-accredited translator.
This is not a recommendation — it is the standard. Non-NAATI translations may be rejected even if they are accurate. The Department specifically looks for the NAATI credential number and certification statement on every translation.
What Documents Must Be Submitted With Certified Translation
The documents requiring NAATI-certified translation depend on your visa subclass. Below is a comprehensive list of document types and the visa applications they apply to:
| Document Type | Applicable Visa Subclasses | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Birth Certificate | All visa types where identity must be proven | Including any marginal notes and stamps |
| Marriage Certificate | Partner visas, parent visas, dependent applications | Foreign marriages must be fully translated |
| Passport (identity pages) | All visas where biographic data is in non-Roman script | Arabic, Chinese, Korean, etc. require translation |
| Police Clearance | All skilled, partner, and long-term visa subclasses | Every page; “no record” pages too |
| Academic Transcripts | Student (500), skilled migration (189/190/491) | Per-page charges for multi-page documents |
| Degree / Qualification Certificates | Skilled migration, employer sponsored (482/186) | Must match skills assessment submission |
| Employment Records | Employer sponsored, skilled migration | Payslips, reference letters, employment contracts |
| Divorce Certificate / Decree | Partner visas, parent visas where prior marriage relevant | Full document including dates and decree terms |
| Death Certificate | Partner visas (where prior spouse deceased), parent visas | Full document |
| Medical / Vaccination Records | Where pre-existing medical history relevant | For health examination support |
| Financial Documents | Student visas, retirement visas (405) | Bank statements, tax returns if in foreign language |
| Court / Legal Documents | Character assessments, where legal history is relevant | Full translation including court orders |
What Must Appear on a Compliant NAATI-Certified Translation
Home Affairs officers are trained to verify that translations include the following mandatory elements. If any are missing, the application may be returned or queried:
- Translator’s full name — as registered with NAATI
- NAATI credential number — this is the unique identifier officers use to verify the translator’s standing
- Certification statement — a declaration that the translation is accurate and complete
- Date of translation — the date the translation was completed
- Translator’s signature — original or digital signature
All five must be present. A translation missing even one element — particularly the NAATI credential number — is considered non-compliant and will be rejected.
How to Upload Certified Translations to ImmiAccount
When submitting your visa application online via ImmiAccount, follow these steps for attaching certified translations:
- Prepare your files. Each translated document should be a PDF containing the certified translation. You do not need to merge the original with the translation — upload them as separate attachments.
- Name your files clearly. Use names like “BirthCertificate_Original.pdf” and “BirthCertificate_NaatiTranslation.pdf” to help officers match documents.
- Upload both original and translation. Home Affairs requires both the scanned original foreign-language document AND the NAATI-certified translation. Uploading only one will flag your application for further information.
- Check file sizes. ImmiAccount accepts PDF files up to 5MB per attachment. Ensure scans are clear but compressed to avoid upload failures.
- Do not use image files. Always upload as PDF, not JPG or PNG, for official documents.
How Much Does It Cost to Get Your Documents Translated for a Visa?
At Immi Translating Service, standard personal documents are translated from $64.95 per document (before service fee and tax). This covers birth certificates, marriage certificates, passports, police checks, and other single-page documents. Multi-page documents like academic transcripts are charged per page.
All translations are performed by NAATI Certified Practising Translators onshore in Australia, with same-day delivery by email as a certified PDF — ready to upload directly to ImmiAccount.
Common Submission Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Mistake 1: Uploading a translation without the original
Home Affairs requires both the scanned original document and the certified translation. Upload both as separate files in the same document group in ImmiAccount.
Mistake 2: Using a non-NAATI translation
Overseas translation services, bilingual friends, or untitled translators are not acceptable. Only NAATI Certified Practising Translators (CPT) are recognised. If your translation doesn’t include a NAATI number, it will be rejected.
Mistake 3: Partial translations
Every piece of text visible on the original document must be translated or noted. This includes stamps, seals, handwritten annotations, and marginal notes. Missing annotations is one of the most frequent reasons translations are queried.
Mistake 4: Outdated translations
While there is no official expiry, the Department may request fresh translations for documents translated several years prior, particularly for ongoing or review applications. When in doubt, request a fresh translation.
Mistake 5: Not checking the certification statement before submitting
Before uploading, always verify that your certified translation PDF includes the translator’s name, NAATI number, certification statement, date, and signature. Immi Translating Service includes all five on every certified translation.
The Immi Translating Service Acceptance Guarantee
Every translation from Immi Translating Service comes with a 100% Department of Home Affairs acceptance guarantee. If your translation is rejected due to a translation error, we correct it immediately at no charge. Our Australian-based NAATI Certified Practising Translators are experienced specifically with Home Affairs requirements, ensuring your application documents are accepted first time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Home Affairs accept digital (emailed PDF) translations?
Yes. The Department of Home Affairs accepts digital PDF translations for visa applications submitted through ImmiAccount. There is no requirement for a physical stamp, notarisation, or paper original for most visa types. Your NAATI-certified PDF translation is sufficient.
Can I submit the same NAATI translation for a subsequent visa application?
Generally yes, if the original document and the translation are unchanged. However, if you are submitting the same document as part of a new application years later, a fresh translation may be advisable. The Department has discretion to query old translations.
What if my document is damaged or partially illegible?
The NAATI translator will note any portions of the original that are illegible or missing due to damage in their certification statement. This is the correct approach — do not substitute or guess missing text. Home Affairs understands that some original documents may be damaged.
Do I need a NAATI translation for a document issued in another English-speaking country?
Generally no. Documents originally issued in English do not require translation, even if they come from overseas. The requirement is for documents that are in a non-English language.
How quickly can I get a NAATI-certified translation for an urgent visa application?
At Immi Translating Service, most standard personal documents are translated and delivered same business day. For truly urgent cases — including same-day or within-a-few-hours requirements — contact us directly via our website and we will advise on availability.