If you’re applying for a job, volunteer position, or professional license in Australia, you’ll likely need a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check (formerly called a National Police Check). But what exactly appears on your certificate?
This comprehensive guide breaks down:
- What disclosable court outcomes appear on your check
- What doesn’t show up
- Exact spent convictions waiting periods for every state and territory
- When spent convictions are still disclosed
- Common scenarios explained
What Appears on Your Police Check Certificate
Your police check certificate shows Naisisiwalat na Mga Resulta ng Hukuman (DCOs) from all Australian states and territories. These include:
✅ Mga naitalang hatol where the court found you guilty and recorded a conviction
✅ Mga natuklasan ng pagkakasala nang walang paniniwala (Seksyon 10 ng mga pagpapaalis, mga piyansa para sa mabuting pag-uugali)
✅ Good behaviour bonds with conviction recorded
✅ Community correction orders with conviction
✅ Suspended sentences with conviction
✅ Fines where a conviction was recorded
✅ Nakabinbing singil (in most states – see state variations below)
Ano ang HINDI Lumalabas sa Iyong Police Check
❌ Charges that were withdrawn or dismissed
❌ Mga pagpapawalang-sala (napatunayang hindi nagkasala)
❌ Mga nagastos na paniniwala (in most circumstances – see below)
❌ Police cautions or warnings (in most states)
❌ Traffic infringements paid on time (parking fines, speeding tickets)
❌ Mga libangan ng kabataan that didn’t result in court
❌ Intelligence information or suspicions
Spent Convictions: State-by-State Breakdown
Mga nagastos na paniniwala are older, minor offences that no longer appear on your police check after a crime-free waiting period. However, the rules differ significantly between states.
NEW SOUTH WALES
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Rekord ng Kriminal 1991 (NSW)
| Offender Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Adult conviction | 10 consecutive years |
| Children’s Court order | 3 magkakasunod na taon |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensyang pagkabilanggo nang higit sa 6 na buwan (hindi kasama ang home detention)
- Mga sekswal na pagkakasala
- Mga pagkakasala ng korporasyon
Agad na ginastos:
- Mga pagpapawalang-bisa sa ilalim ng Seksyon 10 (walang naitalang hatol)
- Mga babala ng Korte ng mga Bata
Halimbawa: John received a conviction for drink driving in 2014 (aged 25). He received a $500 fine with conviction recorded. No further offences. As of 2024, this conviction is spent and won’t appear on his police check for general employment.
VICTORIA
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Nagastos na Hatol 2021 (VIC) – nagsimula noong 1 Disyembre 2021
| Age at Sentencing | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Under 15 years | Immediately spent |
| 15-20 taon | 5 taon |
| 21+ taon | 10 taon |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensiya ng pagkakakulong nang mahigit 30 buwan (2.5 taon)
- Malubhang karahasan/sekswal na pagkakasala na may anumang sentensya sa bilangguan (kung may edad na 21+ pataas sa panahon ng paghatol)
Halimbawa: Sarah was convicted of shoplifting aged 19 (2019), sentenced to community work. No conviction recorded = immediately spent. If a conviction was recorded, it becomes spent in 2024 (5 years, as she was under 21 at sentencing).
QUEENSLAND
Lehislasyon: Batas sa Batas Kriminal (Rehabilitasyon ng mga Nagkasala) 1986 (QLD)
| Court Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Supreme/District Court (adult) | 10 taon |
| All other cases (including juveniles) | 5 taon |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensyang pagkakakulong nang higit sa 30 buwan (kasama ang mga ganap na suspendidong sentensya)
- Mga pagkakasala ng korporasyon
Halimbawa: Maria was convicted in Magistrates Court aged 22 for minor fraud (2019), received 12-month good behaviour bond. Five years later (2024), this conviction is spent.
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Nagastos na Hatol 2009 (SA)
| Offender Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Mga Matanda | 10 consecutive years |
| Mga Kabataan (unless dealt with as adult) | 5 consecutive years |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Adults: Prison over 12 months
- Juveniles: Prison over 24 months
Special rules:
- Ang mga pagkakasalang sekswal ay nangangailangan ng pag-iral ng utos ng mahistrado
- No conviction recorded = immediately spent
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Nagastos na Kombiksyon 1988 (WA)
| Conviction Type | Process |
|---|---|
| Mas mababang mga paniniwala | Automatic after 10 years PLUS any imprisonment term served |
| Serious convictions | Kinakailangan ang aplikasyon sa Korte ng Distrito |
“Lesser conviction” defined:
- Imprisonment 12 months or less, OR
- Fine under $15,000
Mahalaga: WA is the ONLY state requiring court application for serious convictions.
Halimbawa: David received 18 months imprisonment (2012). This is a “serious conviction” – he must apply to District Court for it to be spent. It will NOT be spent automatically.
TASMANIA
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Pinawalang-bisang Hatol 2003 (TAS)
| Offender Type | Good Behaviour Period |
|---|---|
| Mga Matanda | 10 taon |
| Under 18 | 5 taon |
Hindi maaaring mapawalang-bisa:
- Bilangguan/detensyon nang 6+ na buwan
- Mga sekswal na pagkakasala
- Prescribed offences
NORTHERN TERRITORY
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Rekord ng Kriminal (Mga Nagastos na Hatol) 1992 (NT)
| Court Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Mga Matanda | 10 years from conviction (or 10 years after imprisonment ends) |
| Youth Justice Court | 5 years from conviction (or 5 years after imprisonment) |
| Children in adult court | 5 years (requires Police Commissioner application) |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensiya ng pagkakakulong nang mahigit 6 na buwan
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Nagastos na Hatol 2000 (ACT)
| Offender Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Mga Matanda | 10 taon |
| Mga Kabataan | 5 taon |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensiya ng pagkakakulong nang mahigit 6 na buwan
COMMONWEALTH OFFENCES
Lehislasyon: Batas sa mga Krimen 1914 (Cth) Bahagi VIIC
| Offender Type | Waiting Period |
|---|---|
| Mga Matanda | 10 years from conviction |
| Mga Kabataan | 5 years from conviction |
Hindi maaaring maubos:
- Sentensiya ng pagkakakulong nang mahigit 30 buwan
Nalalapat sa: Pag-angkat ng droga, pandaraya laban sa Commonwealth, mga pagkakasala sa imigrasyon
Kapag ang mga Nagastos na Hatol ay Isiniwalat Pa Rin
Even if your conviction is technically “spent,” it WILL appear on your police check if you’re applying for roles involving:
🚨 Paggawa kasama ang mga bata:
- Mga guro
- Childcare workers
- School support staff
- Youth workers
🚨 Pakikipagtulungan sa mga mahihinang tao:
- Aged care workers
- NDIS support workers
- Disability support
- Healthcare positions
🚨 Pagpapatupad ng batas at seguridad:
- Police officers
- Prison officers
- Security guards (some roles)
- Court staff
🚨 Mga Reguladong Propesyon:
- Lawyers
- Doctors and nurses
- Financial advisors
- Real estate agents
Bakit? These exemptions exist for public safety. A spent conviction for theft may still be disclosed if you’re applying to work in aged care, where vulnerable people are at risk.
Mga Nakabinbing Kaso sa mga Tseke ng Pulisya
Do Pending Charges Appear?
OO – Pending charges appear in most states
EXCEPTION: Victoria – pending charges do NOT appear on standard employment checks (changed December 2021)
| Estado/Teritoryo | May mga Nakabinbing Singil na Ipinapakita? |
|---|---|
| NSW | Oo |
| VIC | No (for employment) |
| QLD | Oo |
| SA | Oo |
| WA | Oo |
| TAS | Oo |
| NT | Oo |
| ACT | Oo |
Mahalaga: Pending charges are NOT convictions. Employers must assess them carefully and cannot automatically reject candidates based on unproven allegations.
Common Scenarios Explained
“I got a speeding fine 5 years ago. Will it show up?”
Answer: Only if you were convicted in court. Standard traffic infringements paid on-time don’t appear.
Shows up: Court-convicted drink driving, dangerous driving causing injury
Doesn’t show up: $200 speeding fine paid within 28 days
“I was convicted 12 years ago as an adult. Is it spent?”
Depends on your state and the offence severity:
- NSW: Yes, if prison was 6 months or less
- VIC: Yes, if prison was 30 months or less (and you were 21+ at sentencing)
- QLD: Yes, if prison was 30 months or less
- WA: Only if it was a “lesser conviction” (12 months prison or less)
“I got a Section 10 in NSW. Will it show?”
Answer: No. Section 10 dismissals (no conviction recorded) are immediately spent in NSW and won’t appear on your check for general employment.
Exception: May still appear for roles requiring disclosure of all court outcomes (e.g., becoming a lawyer, police officer).
“My charges were dropped. Why do they still appear?”
Answer: In most states, pending charges appear until the court finalises them. This can take weeks to update in police databases.
What to do: Contact WorkerChecks with court documentation showing dismissal/withdrawal. We can liaise with ACIC to update your record.
How Long Does Your Police Check Show History?
There is NO time limit on disclosable convictions unless they become spent under the legislation above.
A conviction from 1995 will still appear in 2026 if:
- It doesn’t meet the spent convictions criteria, OR
- You’re applying for an exempted role (working with children, etc.)
This is why spent convictions legislation matters – it’s the ONLY way older, minor convictions are removed.
What About Interstate Convictions?
YES – your police check shows convictions from ALL Australian states and territories.
Example: Convicted in Brisbane (2018), now living in Melbourne and applying for a job → Your QLD conviction will appear on your VIC police check.
The spent convictions rules of the convicting state apply, not where you currently live.
Can I Dispute My Police Check Results?
Yes. If you believe:
- Spent convictions are incorrectly shown
- Court outcomes are wrong
- Information belongs to someone else
Contact WorkerChecks immediately. We liaise with the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission (ACIC) on your behalf to resolve errors.
Common fixes:
- Updating finalised court outcomes
- Correcting name/DOB errors
- Applying state spent convictions legislation
Get Your Police Check with WorkerChecks
✅ ACIC-accredited na provider – opisyal na Pagsusuri sa Kasaysayan ng Kriminal na Pinag-ugnay ng Bansa
✅ Mga resulta sa loob ng 60 minuto – 75% of checks returned within 1 hour
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✅ Suporta ng eksperto – Tumutulong ang pangkat ng Australia sa paglutas ng mga pagkakamali
Mag-apply na para sa iyong police check ngayon →
Key Takeaways
What shows up:
- Recorded convictions (unless spent)
- Findings of guilt (even without conviction)
- Pending charges (most states)
What doesn’t show up:
- Dismissed/withdrawn charges
- Spent convictions (in most cases)
- Paid traffic fines
Spent convictions waiting periods:
- Generally 10 years (adults), 3-5 years (juveniles)
- Major differences between states (especially VIC, WA)
- Exemptions for working with vulnerable people
Your conviction from 2015 might be spent – or it might not. It depends on your state, your age at conviction, the sentence imposed, and the role you’re applying for.
Need help understanding your police check results? Contact WorkerChecks’ Australian support team – we’ll explain exactly what appears and why.
Mga Pinagmulan:
- Batas sa mga Rekord ng Kriminal 1991 (NSW)
- Spent Convictions Act 2021 (VIC)
- Batas sa Batas Kriminal (Rehabilitasyon ng mga Nagkasala) 1986 (QLD)
- Batas sa mga Nagastos na Hatol 2009 (SA)
- Batas sa mga Nagastos na Kombiksyon 1988 (WA)
- Batas sa mga Pinawalang-bisang Hatol 2003 (TAS)
- Batas sa mga Rekord ng Kriminal (Mga Nagastos na Hatol) 1992 (NT)
- Batas sa mga Nagastos na Hatol 2000 (ACT)
- Batas sa mga Krimen 1914 (Cth) Bahagi VIIC
