Birth Certificate Translation for Melbourne Residents
Birth certificate translation is one of the most commonly requested NAATI services in Melbourne, driven by the city's extraordinarily diverse population. Whether you are enrolling a child at a Melbourne school, applying for Australian citizenship at the Melbourne office, or lodging a visa application through ImmiAccount, a NAATI certified English translation of a foreign-language birth certificate is a standard requirement across Victorian and federal government agencies.
The Victorian Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages (BDM Victoria), located at 595 Collins Street in Melbourne's CBD, may request certified translations when processing name changes, registering overseas-born children, or recording foreign births for Victorian records. Similarly, Melbourne-based offices of the Department of Home Affairs at Casselden Place on Lonsdale Street require NAATI translations for all visa subclasses — including skilled migration (subclass 189, 190, 491), partner visas (subclass 820/801), and parent visas (subclass 143).
Melbourne is home to large communities from countries whose birth certificate formats differ substantially from Australian standards. Chinese birth certificates (出生医学证明) are multi-page booklets, Iranian shenasnameh (شناسنامه) serve as combined identity and birth records, Japanese koseki tohon (戸籍謄本) are family registers rather than individual certificates, and Vietnamese giấy khai sinh may be handwritten entries in communal registers. Our NAATI certified translators are experienced with every format used across Melbourne's language communities, ensuring accurate, complete translations every time.
For families settling in Melbourne's suburbs — from Footscray and Sunshine in the west to Springvale and Dandenong in the south-east, Box Hill and Glen Waverley in the east, or Broadmeadows and Craigieburn in the north — a certified birth certificate translation is often the first document needed to access essential services including school enrolment, Medicare registration, Centrelink family payments, and childcare subsidies.