Australia has slightly different rules about relationships than the U.S. does. Getting married is one way to do it, but if you and your partner live together in an exclusive relationship for the span of a year or two you can be recognised with “de facto” status. It’s a legal step between “single” and “married”, and it’s another legal basis on which you can apply for a longer-term visa in Australia and CAN be done from within Australia.
It is, however, just as expensive to travel back to the U.S. and apply for the de facto visa from there (Flights + ~$2k), as it is to apply for the de facto visa from within Australia (~$3k). And of course you need to be able to show that you’ve been in that relationship for a year or more, and that the relationship is both long-term and stable, which is out of the question for most Work/Holiday visa holders.
The de facto visa also gives you the right to live, work and study in Australia for two years, after which if the de facto relationship is still stable, exclusive, etc. you’re then eligible for permanent residency.
The de facto visa also gives you the right to live, work and study in Australia for two years, after which if the de facto relationship is still stable, exclusive, etc. you’re then eligible for permanent residency.
Well damn. That’s inconvenient. How about “still stable, exclusive and any time we have sex with others it is because we are Bad People and cheating”? ie. It would be a shame if polyamorous people in stable primary relationships were penalized for using different moral vocabulary.
Well, they aren’t exactly going to be checking who you have sex with. I’d guess the exclusive clause is to prevent one person from inviting several in such a manner. That being said, migration law is absolutely despicable in general; i can understand the pragmatic point of operating the developed countries as a rich gated community to keep the proles away, but that doesn’t explain why US/Australia/EU migration would need to be encumbered.
As an Australian with an American partner:
Australia has slightly different rules about relationships than the U.S. does. Getting married is one way to do it, but if you and your partner live together in an exclusive relationship for the span of a year or two you can be recognised with “de facto” status. It’s a legal step between “single” and “married”, and it’s another legal basis on which you can apply for a longer-term visa in Australia and CAN be done from within Australia.
It is, however, just as expensive to travel back to the U.S. and apply for the de facto visa from there (Flights + ~$2k), as it is to apply for the de facto visa from within Australia (~$3k). And of course you need to be able to show that you’ve been in that relationship for a year or more, and that the relationship is both long-term and stable, which is out of the question for most Work/Holiday visa holders.
The de facto visa also gives you the right to live, work and study in Australia for two years, after which if the de facto relationship is still stable, exclusive, etc. you’re then eligible for permanent residency.
Well damn. That’s inconvenient. How about “still stable, exclusive and any time we have sex with others it is because we are Bad People and cheating”? ie. It would be a shame if polyamorous people in stable primary relationships were penalized for using different moral vocabulary.
Well, they aren’t exactly going to be checking who you have sex with. I’d guess the exclusive clause is to prevent one person from inviting several in such a manner. That being said, migration law is absolutely despicable in general; i can understand the pragmatic point of operating the developed countries as a rich gated community to keep the proles away, but that doesn’t explain why US/Australia/EU migration would need to be encumbered.
I’m not exactly up to date on these things, but don’t you need a conviction to be sent to Australia?