Sponsoring Your Parents to Melbourne
Bringing your parents to live in Melbourne permanently is one of the most common immigration goals for settled migrants in Victoria. The parent visa category includes several subclasses—the standard Parent visa (subclass 103), Contributory Parent visa (subclass 143), Aged Parent visa (subclass 804), and Contributory Aged Parent visa (subclass 864). Each has different costs, waiting times, and requirements, but the core document checklist is largely the same. As a Melbourne-based sponsor, you will need to provide evidence of your settled status in Victoria, your financial capacity, and your parents' identity and relationship to you.
Sponsor Documents (Melbourne-Based Child)
As the sponsoring child living in Melbourne, you must demonstrate that you are a settled Australian citizen or permanent resident. The following documents are typically required:
- Proof of Australian citizenship or permanent residency – citizenship certificate, Australian passport, or visa grant notice
- Proof of Melbourne residence – Victorian driver licence, council rate notices, utility bills, or lease agreement for your Melbourne property
- Evidence of employment or income in Victoria – payslips from a Melbourne employer, tax returns lodged with the ATO, or business registration with Consumer Affairs Victoria
- Proof of relationship to the applicant – your birth certificate showing the parent-child relationship (NAATI translation required if not in English)
- Statutory declaration of support – witnessed by a Victorian JP or authorised witness
Balance of Family Test
To be eligible for a parent visa, your parents must pass the balance of family test. This means at least half of their children must be living lawfully and permanently in Australia, or more of their children live in Australia than in any other single country. You will need to provide:
- Birth certificates or family register documents for all of your parents' children (not just the sponsor)
- Evidence of where each sibling resides – this may include overseas address evidence, visa records, or statutory declarations
- NAATI-certified translations of all documents not originally in English
Applicant Documents (Parents)
Your parents, as the visa applicants, must provide comprehensive identity and character documentation:
- Passport – current passports for both parents, with NAATI translations if not in English
- Birth certificates – for both parents
- Marriage certificate – if your parents are married and applying together
- Police clearance certificates – from every country where each parent has lived for 12 months or more since turning 16, with NAATI translations
- Health examination results – arranged through a Bupa Medical Visa Services panel clinic. Melbourne panel clinics are located in the CBD and several suburban locations.
- Passport-sized photographs – meeting Australian visa photo specifications
Assurance of Support (AoS)
For contributory parent visas (subclass 143 and 864), an Assurance of Support is required. This is a legal commitment by the sponsor (or another eligible person in Australia) to repay the Australian Government for any welfare payments made to the visa holder during the assurance period. The AoS process involves:
- Lodging an AoS application with Services Australia (Centrelink)
- Providing evidence of income and assets – Melbourne property valuations, Victorian payslips, bank statements from Australian banks
- Depositing a bond with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (the designated bond holder)
- The bond amount varies but is typically $5,000–$15,000 per parent, held for 10 years
Victorian-Specific Evidence for Sponsors
Melbourne-based sponsors can strengthen their application with evidence demonstrating established community ties in Victoria:
- Property ownership documents – title searches from Land Use Victoria, mortgage statements
- Victorian school enrolment records for your own children (the applicant's grandchildren)
- Membership of Victorian community organisations, religious institutions, or cultural associations
- Evidence of volunteer work or community involvement in Melbourne
- Letters from Victorian employers confirming ongoing employment and income stability
Health Insurance Requirements
Parent visa holders in Australia must maintain adequate health insurance. While Medicare eligibility depends on the visa subclass, many parent visa holders will need private health insurance. Melbourne-based options include policies from Medibank, Bupa, NIB, and other insurers with extensive provider networks across metropolitan Melbourne and regional Victoria. Ensure the policy covers hospital and general treatment before your parents arrive.
Common Documents Requiring NAATI Translation
For parent visa applications sponsored from Melbourne, the most frequently translated documents include:
- Parents' birth certificates and marriage certificates
- Birth certificates of all siblings (for the balance of family test)
- Police clearance certificates from parents' home country and any country of prior residence
- Family register or household registration books
- Adoption papers (if applicable)
- Death certificates (if one parent is deceased and the surviving parent is applying alone)
- Divorce decrees (if the parents are separated and only one is applying)
