Australia Visa Social Media Screening
Australia's Department of Home Affairs may review your social media as part of the character assessment under Section 501 of the Migration Act.
Australia's Character Requirement
Under Section 501 of the Migration Act 1958, all Australian visa applicants must pass a "character test." The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) may review publicly available social media as part of this assessment.
- Social media may be checked for evidence of criminal conduct, hate speech, or association with extremist groups
- DHA has confirmed using open-source intelligence (OSINT) including social media in character assessments
- Visa cancellations under Section 501 have increased significantly in recent years
What DHA Looks For Online
Australian immigration officers focus on content that relates to the character test criteria defined in the Migration Act.
- Violent, threatening, or extremist content that fails the character test
- Posts suggesting intent to work illegally on a tourist (subclass 600) visa
- Student visa (subclass 500) applicants posting about work exceeding the 48-hour fortnightly limit
Visa Subclass-Specific Concerns
Different Australian visa categories carry different social media scrutiny levels. Work visas (482/494), student visas (500), and visitor visas (600) each have unique red flags.
- Subclass 482 (TSS): LinkedIn must match your nominated occupation and employer exactly
- Subclass 500 (Student): Social media should reflect genuine temporary entrant (GTE) criteria
- Subclass 600 (Visitor): Content should not suggest plans to work, study, or overstay
Audit Before Your Australian Visa Application
See what DHA officers can find in your public social media profiles. Identify character test concerns before you apply.
Start Free AuditThis tool analyzes publicly accessible information only. Not affiliated with any government agency. Not legal advice.