Australia and its people
Practise national symbols, important dates, states and territories, capital cities, Federation and basic Australian history.
AusMockTest free study resource
Use AusMockTest to practise Australian citizenship test questions, review Australian Values, study Our Common Bond topics and build confidence with English-only mock tests.
This free Australian citizenship practice test page is designed for learners who want a simple way to revise the key testable areas from Australian Citizenship: Our Common Bond. The live AusMockTest app gives you a 20-question mock test, separate Australian Values practice, topic-based questions, daily quick practice, recent mistake review and favourite questions.
The official test is conducted in English only, so AusMockTest keeps the question and answer choices in English. Traditional Chinese and Simplified Chinese support can be selected as a study aid to help understand difficult ideas, but the final practice experience should be done in English so that you build confidence with the real wording.
The practice question bank is grouped around the main citizenship study areas: Australia and its people, democratic beliefs, rights and liberties, government and the law in Australia, and Australian values based on freedom, respect and equality. A balanced mock test gives broad coverage instead of repeating only one narrow topic.
Practise national symbols, important dates, states and territories, capital cities, Federation and basic Australian history.
Revise voting, democracy, equality, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of association and civic participation.
Review Parliament, the Constitution, courts, police, local councils, state and federal responsibilities, and the rule of law.
Practise the values questions separately. AusMockTest highlights them because they are a critical part of citizenship test preparation.
The dashboard saves light progress on your own device, including completed questions, accuracy, mock test count and recent mistakes. No login is required.
Yes. The web practice app is free to use for revision and reference.
No. It is an independent practice tool. Always use the official Home Affairs materials as the source of truth.
Use Chinese support to understand difficult topics, but practise the questions in English because the official test is conducted in English only.
Many learners try to memorise a list of answers, but citizenship test questions can be written in different ways. A better study method is to connect each answer to the idea behind it. For example, questions about voting, Parliament, the Constitution and the rule of law may look different, but they all connect to democratic government and the legal system. Questions about freedom, respect and equality connect to Australian Values.
AusMockTest is organised to help with that style of revision. Each question includes a topic area, and wrong answers can be reviewed again later. This makes it easier to notice patterns, such as confusing state and federal responsibilities, mixing up capital cities, or choosing an answer that sounds friendly but does not match the legal principle being tested.
A simple routine is often more useful than one long study session. On day one, read the official booklet and try one mock test without pressure. On days two and three, focus on weak areas from the review list. On day four, practise Australian Values only. On day five, repeat the mock test in English-only mode. On day six, review official material again. On day seven, do a final mock test and check whether your mistakes are reducing.
For learners who use Chinese study support, the recommended approach is to understand the concept in Chinese first, then return to the English wording. The goal is not to translate every word during the real test; the goal is to recognise the English question pattern quickly and confidently.
AusMockTest is an independent educational tool. It is not an official Australian Government app and is not endorsed by the Department of Home Affairs. Always confirm important details using official Home Affairs materials before your appointment.