Please be ready with your application reference number starting with 'P'. For example P1234567
The information on this webpage is to be read in conjunction with this disclaimer:
Australian National Character Check (ANCC) makes every effort to provide updated and accurate information to its customers. However due to the continuously changing nature of legislations for the Commonwealth and various States and Territories, it is inevitable that some information may not be up to date. The information on the website is general information only. The contents on the website do not constitute legal or professional advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for legal or professional advice. While we endeavour to keep the information up to date and correct, we make no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, about the completeness, suitability, accuracy or availability with respect to the information.
It is getting harder for persons to apply for employment, probity, accreditation, contract or licenses without a valid Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check. Not only has it become mandatory by the government in specific sectors of the economy (Child teachers, school bus drivers, etc.) but it has become a means of suitability assessment in a number of job roles.
There are various ways to obtain valid nationally coordinated criminal history checks, but a convenient way is to apply via a medium that returns the results of your check in a timely manner. Applying via the online portal of services like Australian National Character Check (ANCC) is considered to be a relatively fast way to obtain nationally coordinated criminal history checks as the process can be completed completely online.
70 percent of nationally coordinated criminal history checks are returned to applicants within 24 hours. Results are emailed on the same day they are received. Approximately 30 percent of checks may be referred to one or more police agencies and can take longer than 10 business days to be returned, due to the manual nature of this process.
If a person has lived in various states/territories within a short time, their nationally coordinated criminal history checks will be referred to the respective police authorities in the States they lived in.
The bureaucracy involved in referring the Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check application among the different jurisdictions can further delay the time they receive the results of their Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Checks. The more states/territories the person has lived in, the higher the tendency for their check result to be delayed.
Also, where the applicant name is similar to another person of interest, their application will be referred to the relevant agency. It can lead to the application being delayed by a further 10 days or so.
About 20% of all applications forwarded to the check agency are usually flagged for manual review. When this happens, an official must supervise the application/checking of the applicant's data.
If an application is flagged for manual review, it is not a certainty of a finding of guilt. It could be an indication of a prospective match on the national database due to a shared name with someone else that has disclosable court outcomes.
Applicants should fill in the correct details and complete the required fields when submitting their Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check application. It helps to prevent errors at the checking algorithm e.g. due to incomplete addresses.
Common first names like David, Williams, Smith without a distinguishing middle name may confuse the algorithm. It can lead to the check algorithm conflating multiple records to an applicant with a similar name thus requiring manual supervision from an official.
Where there is a vacant field on the check application, the algorithm may flag it for "manual review". Where it cannot access a required field, it will need human input.
If an application gets flagged for "manual review" it may delay the applicant from receiving their Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check results for another 2-15 business days.
Furthermore, no check agency can know beforehand which applications are flagged for manual review or will be delayed.
While we understand that further delays to your check certificate can be frustrating, we do our best to keep you informed throughout the process.
Before applying for a check, choose a proper method/way of application. If you apply through the online portal of the Australian National Character Check, you will get your Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check delivered to you via email on the same day the results become available. This saves time on receiving the check via post. For example, if you are after a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check (VIC), you can get one from a local police station in Victoria which may post the results to you, or you can apply online via ANCC and get the results via email on the same day they become available.
Applying in-person at a post office or police station for a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check may require several trips to the and may not fit your schedule.
If your check gets delayed, there is nothing you can do to influence the process. You can however use ANCC's track a check feature to get real time updates on the progress of your check.
We return all applications completed via our portal on the same day we receive results from Australian police agencies. However, we cannot foretell if your application will be delayed once it is uploaded to the national checking database. The Australian Police agencies vet through checks that are referred for manual processing and accredited agencies like ANCC have no control over that.
Now, if you are requested to provide a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check for any role you have applied for, you should know that;
With this statistic, there is a higher tendency for you to get your check within 48 hours if you apply online.
Here are some convictions you can expect on a certificate;
Disclosable Court Outcome (DCO): Individual has offence(s) that are considered releasable by the State and are displayed in details
Disclosable Court Outcome (DCO): Individual has offence(s) that are considered releasable by the State and are displayed in details
Some of the offences that come up in a certificate are;
Some offences are either considered "not serious" or irrelevant to the purpose of the check. As such, those offences will not be displayed on your results:
Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Checks are point-in-time checks; they are valid from the point of issue until the applicant gets an updated one.
However, most organisations/employers will refuse a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check result older than 3 months.
ANCC provides timely and authentic results for all check applications.
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The contents of this website do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for legal or professional advice.