Andrei.Hicks wrote on Jan 5
th, 2011 at 6:57pm:
[quote author=scope link=1291167686/630#631 date=1294213687]Obviously Hicks you do not know all there is to know about moving countries.
You broke the law here by driving for more than 3 months on your foreign license.
So much for the "higher" education you claimed you received, you couldn't even find out the license rules for your adopted country.
The requirement to change your overseas driver licence to a Victorian driver licence depends on whether your stay in Victoria is temporary or permanent.
If you are in Victoria on a temporary visa, you can drive on your overseas driver licence for as long as it is current providing it is in English or accompanied by an English translation or International Driving Permit.
There is no requirement to get a Victorian driver licence.
But you claim you are an Australian citizen, therefore this clause does not apply as you would not have entered the country on a temporary visa.
Here is the rest that you failed to post.
If you have entered Victoria on a permanent visa issued under the Migration Act 1958, you may drive on your overseas driver licence for:
* six months from the date you first entered Australia if the permanent visa was issued before you entered Australia; or,
* six months from the date when the permanent visa was issued to you if the permanent visa was issued to you whilst in Australia.
If you want to continue driving in Victoria after this time you must change your overseas licence to a Victorian driver licence.
Wrong, (yet) again.
I am an Australian citizen BUT was a non-resident of Australia 'temporarily residing' in Victoria on secondment for 2 years.
Both the ATO and Victoria recognized me as having 'every intention of returning to the United Kingdom on completion of the secondment'.
Hence I drove perfectly legally on a UK issued drivers licence.
If you can prove you are staying a finite period of time (such as a temporary visa or in my case a defined contract period with repatriation clauses) you can drive on any issued licence as long as it is in English and the pass standards are equivalent to Victoria.