
Official photo dimensions for Australia documents. Create print-ready photos at 300 DPI — free, private, no signup.
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Plain light-colored background (white, off-white, or light grey). No patterns, textures, or shadows.
Neutral expression with mouth closed. Both eyes open, looking directly at the camera.
Even, natural lighting. No harsh shadows on the face or background.
Not allowed unless worn for religious or medical reasons
Allowed if eyes are clearly visible with no glare on lenses
Printed on high-quality photo paper, between 35-40mm wide and 45-50mm high
For Australia documents: Must be taken within the last 6 months. Using an older photo is one of the most common reasons for passport application rejection.
Avoid these common mistakes when preparing your Australia passport photo:
Australia Post offices offer passport photo services for around AUD $19.95, or you can use our free tool and print at home.
Last verified: 2026-04-08 — Official source
The Australian Passport Office, a division of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), processes roughly 2.5 million passport applications each year. Photo non-compliance is the leading cause of application delays, with DFAT reporting that approximately 1 in 5 photos submitted through online renewal channels fail automated checks on the first attempt. Australia follows the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) 9303 standard but applies several country-specific rules that catch applicants off guard -- particularly around background shade, head proportions, and the treatment of glasses.
All requirements outlined here apply equally to Australian passport books, travel documents issued under the Migration Act, and Certificates of Identity. The authoritative source is passports.gov.au, which DFAT updates periodically without notice.
Australia also sits in that interesting middle ground where the formal rules are ICAO-based, but the real-world failure points are local: SmartGate compatibility, scanned-print detection, and portrait-mode phone processing. If you want the underlying travel-document framework, ICAO's official TRIP programme overview is the best non-government reference. If you are comparing retail options, Officeworks' official Passport & ID Photos page is a practical local benchmark.
Physical dimensions:
Digital specifications (online renewal):
Background:
Expression and pose:
Glasses policy (current as of 2024):
Clothing and accessories:
Recency: Taken within the last 6 months and must accurately represent your current appearance.
Australian ePassports issued since 2005 contain a chip storing the holder's facial biometric data. At airports, SmartGate kiosks (and the newer Contactless Traveller pathway) compare a live camera capture against the stored chip photo. A passport photo that does not meet ICAO biometric standards can cause SmartGate failures, forcing travellers into manual processing queues.
To ensure SmartGate compatibility: maintain a perfectly neutral expression (even a subtle smile alters the geometry facial recognition systems rely on), keep hair off the forehead and away from the eyes, and avoid any accessories that change the shape of your face outline. DFAT has noted that heavily filtered or retouched photos are a growing cause of SmartGate mismatches at border control.
Australian passport photo rules for infants differ meaningfully from adult requirements, and DFAT provides specific guidance:
Infants under 12 months: Lay the baby face-up on a plain white sheet or blanket. Photograph from directly above. Eyes do not need to be open -- DFAT accepts photos of sleeping newborns under 12 months. No pacifiers, dummies, or toys visible. The child must be the only person in the frame; if a parent's hand is supporting the baby's head, it must be covered by the white sheet and not visible.
Children aged 1 to 5: Eyes must be open. Mouth closed, neutral expression -- though DFAT acknowledges this is difficult and applies more lenient review for toddlers. Sit the child in a highchair or car seat draped with a white cloth, positioned in front of a plain background. Another person holding the child is acceptable as long as the holder is completely hidden behind the child or cropped out.
Children aged 6 to 15: Standard adult photo rules apply in full. A parent or guardian must sign the photo declaration on the reverse.
All children: The child's face must fill the correct proportion of the frame (32-36 mm head height). Photos taken in car seats with visible straps, or with colourful blankets, are rejected.
Since 2022, eligible Australian adults can renew their passport entirely online through passports.gov.au. The digital photo requirements for online renewal are stricter than for paper applications because the photo passes through DFAT's automated Photo Quality Assessment system before a human reviews it.
Key digital requirements:
Who is eligible for online renewal: Australian citizens aged 16+ whose previous passport was issued no more than 3 years ago (expired passports) or is still valid, and whose name, date of birth, and gender have not changed.
In late 2023, DFAT updated its passport photo policy to provide greater flexibility for people with disability, bringing Australia in line with updated ICAO guidance on inclusive identity documentation:
Budget DIY approach: Use a free online passport photo tool to validate your image against DFAT specs, then print a 6x4 inch photo at Officeworks or Kmart for under $1. Two 35x45mm passport photos fit on a single 6x4 print.
DFAT's Photo Quality Assessment system and manual reviewers flag these issues most frequently:
Q: Does seasonal tanning affect my passport photo compliance? A: DFAT requires the photo to represent your current appearance. A summer tan is fine, but significant seasonal changes may cause SmartGate mismatches. Take your photo at your most typical baseline appearance.
Q: What are the rules for religious and cultural head coverings? A: Hijabs, turbans, yarmulkes, and other religious head coverings are permitted. The full face must remain visible and the covering must not cast shadows. DFAT requires a statutory declaration confirming the covering is worn for religious or cultural belief.
Q: Can I use my phone's Portrait Mode? A: No. Portrait Mode applies artificial background blur that DFAT's automated system detects and rejects. Use standard photo mode and disable beauty filters, HDR, and AI scene optimization.
Q: Can I take my own passport photo for online renewal? A: Yes. DFAT supports self-taken photos for online renewal. Use the rear camera, have someone take the photo or use a timer, and ensure a plain light background. The system gives immediate feedback if any check fails.
Q: I wear a hearing aid -- do I need to remove it? A: No. Hearing aids and cochlear implant processors may remain in place. DFAT's 2023 accessibility updates confirmed that visible medical devices are permitted.
Q: What if my baby will not open their eyes for the photo? A: For infants under 12 months, DFAT does not require open eyes. You may submit a photo of a sleeping baby. For children 12 months and older, eyes must be open.
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