Dhiraj Kandel
Managing DirectorSchedule a free consultation with our expert counselors to discuss your study
The moment you decide to study in Australia, one thing becomes very important for your Student visa file: the Genuine Student (GS) requirement. Many Nepali students think GS is a “statement” you write once and submit, but GS is bigger than that. It is how your overall application proves you are going to Australia mainly to study, and that your course choice and background make sense.
This guide explains what the Australia GS requirement is, what Nepali students should prepare, and a simple checklist you can follow so your GS answers match your documents.
GS stands for Genuine Student. It replaced the older GTE requirement and is used in Student visa (subclass 500) assessments.
In simple terms, GS is the part of the visa process where you show:
your study plan is real and reasonable
your course choice matches your background and future plan
you understand your course, provider, and life in Australia
your documents support what you say
You do not need fancy words. You need a clear story supported by evidence. Most GS assessments focus on:
1) Your background and situation in Nepal
Your previous study, work (if any), family ties, and why you chose not to study a similar course in Nepal if it exists.
2) Your study plan in Australia
Your knowledge of the course, provider, location, costs, and living arrangements. Also your reason for choosing that specific course level.
3) The value of the course for your future
How the course helps your future career, especially in Nepal or in your broader career plan. Your plan should look realistic for your profile.
4) Your overall history and consistency
Gaps, course changes, travel history, and whether your documents and answers match.
Use this as your practical checklist before you lodge the visa.
| GS area | What you should prepare | Nepal-focused tips |
|---|---|---|
| Course choice and level | Course details, units overview, why this level | Avoid random downgrades or unrelated courses without a strong reason |
| Provider and location research | Why this provider, why this city, living plan | Mention real research, costs, accommodation options |
| Education history | Transcripts, certificates, backlog explanation if needed | Keep scans clear, include all pages and stamps |
| Work history (if any) | Experience letters, salary slips, appointment letters | Only claim what you can prove |
| Study gaps | Gap explanation with supporting proof | Training, work, family reasons, prepare simple evidence |
| Financial capacity | Sponsor plan, bank statements, income source proof | Keep the story clean and explainable, avoid sudden unexplained deposits |
| Home ties and future plan | Career plan, links to Nepal (family, job plan, business plan) | Keep it realistic, avoid vague promises |
Requirements can vary by profile, but this base list covers what most Nepali students should keep ready.
Passport
Academic transcripts and certificates (SEE, +2, Bachelor, Master as applicable)
Provisional, character certificate if available
CV (especially for postgraduate applicants)
English test result (IELTS or PTE if required by your provider)
Offer letter and CoE (Confirmation of Enrolment) when issued
Course and provider research notes (a few bullet points is enough)
Gap explanation documents (only if needed)
Employment or business documents (only if you mention work)
Sponsor documents
Bank statements
Income source proof (salary, business, tax, rent, etc)
Overseas Student Health Cover (OSHC) details as required for your visa stage
Health examination steps if requested in your visa process
When answering GS style questions, keep your answers short and specific. A practical structure is:
Your current situation in Nepal (study, work, family)
Why this course and why now
Why this provider and why this location
How it fits your future plan (realistic job direction)
How you will fund your study (brief and consistent)
Tip: The best GS answers are the ones that match the documents in your file. If your documents say one thing and your GS answer says another, that is when problems start.
Choosing a course that does not match your previous study or work, then giving a weak reason
Writing generic GS answers that could fit anyone
Claiming a job, income, or sponsor support without proper proof
Ignoring study gaps, then getting stuck when asked to explain them
Copying content from the internet (it often looks obvious and can conflict with your real profile)
Is GS the same as SOP?
Not exactly. SOP is usually for admission. GS is for the visa decision. They should be consistent, but the purpose is different.
Do I need to write a long GS statement?
Usually no. Clear, honest answers with matching documents work better than long dramatic writing.
What is the most important part of GS?
Consistency. Your course choice, background, finances, and future plan should match each other.
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