{"id":"qld:act-2023-017","name":"Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 2023","slug":"births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"qld","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"17 of 2023","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":29558,"registerId":"qld-act-2023-017-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-01","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"pt.1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"# Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"sec.1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"### sec.1 Short title\n\nThis Act may be cited as the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 2023 .","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"sec.2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"### sec.2 Commencement\n\nThis Act commences on a day to be fixed by proclamation.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"sec.3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Objects","content":"### sec.3 Objects\n\nThe objects of this Act are to provide for—\nthe collection and maintenance, in registers kept by the registrar, of information about—\nbirths, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, changes of name and alterations of sex; and\ntransfers of parentage under the Surrogacy Act 2010 ; and\ntransfers of parentage under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 ; and\nanother matter that the registrar is required to keep information about under another Act; and\nthe issue of documents that acknowledge the name and sex of persons who are resident in Queensland and were born outside of Queensland; and\naccess, in appropriate cases, to information—\nin a register mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) ; or\ncollected and maintained under section&#160;105 ; and\nthe issue of certified and uncertified information from a register; and\nthe collection and dissemination of statistical information.\n- (a) the collection and maintenance, in registers kept by the registrar, of information about— (i) births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, changes of name and alterations of sex; and (ii) transfers of parentage under the Surrogacy Act 2010 ; and (iii) transfers of parentage under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 ; and (iv) another matter that the registrar is required to keep information about under another Act; and\n- (i) births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, changes of name and alterations of sex; and\n- (ii) transfers of parentage under the Surrogacy Act 2010 ; and\n- (iii) transfers of parentage under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 ; and\n- (iv) another matter that the registrar is required to keep information about under another Act; and\n- (b) the issue of documents that acknowledge the name and sex of persons who are resident in Queensland and were born outside of Queensland; and\n- (c) access, in appropriate cases, to information— (i) in a register mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) ; or (ii) collected and maintained under section&#160;105 ; and\n- (i) in a register mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) ; or\n- (ii) collected and maintained under section&#160;105 ; and\n- (d) the issue of certified and uncertified information from a register; and\n- (e) the collection and dissemination of statistical information.\n- (i) births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, changes of name and alterations of sex; and\n- (ii) transfers of parentage under the Surrogacy Act 2010 ; and\n- (iii) transfers of parentage under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 ; and\n- (iv) another matter that the registrar is required to keep information about under another Act; and\n- (i) in a register mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) ; or\n- (ii) collected and maintained under section&#160;105 ; and","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"sec.4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"### sec.4 Definitions\n\nThe dictionary in schedule&#160;2 defines particular words used in this Act.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"pt.2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Births","content":"# Births","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"sec.5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notification of birth","content":"### sec.5 Notification of birth\n\nFor each child born in Queensland, the responsible person must give a notice, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, to the registrar.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nThe responsible person is—\nif the child was born in a hospital, or brought to a hospital within 24 hours after birth—the person in charge of the hospital; or\notherwise—\na doctor present at the birth; or\nif a doctor was not present at the birth—a midwife present at the birth; or\nif neither a doctor nor a midwife were present at the birth—a person, other than the birth parent, present at the birth; or\nif the birth parent was alone at the birth—the birth parent; or\nif the birth parent dies or abandons the child—the person who takes physical custody of the child, for example, a person who discovers the child with the body of the birth parent.\nThe notice must be given within 2 working days after the birth.\nA person need not comply with subsection&#160;(1) if someone else has complied with subsection&#160;(1) .\nIn this section—\nmidwife means a person registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law to practise in the midwifery profession, other than as a student.\n(sec.5-ssec.1) For each child born in Queensland, the responsible person must give a notice, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, to the registrar. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.5-ssec.2) The responsible person is— if the child was born in a hospital, or brought to a hospital within 24 hours after birth—the person in charge of the hospital; or otherwise— a doctor present at the birth; or if a doctor was not present at the birth—a midwife present at the birth; or if neither a doctor nor a midwife were present at the birth—a person, other than the birth parent, present at the birth; or if the birth parent was alone at the birth—the birth parent; or if the birth parent dies or abandons the child—the person who takes physical custody of the child, for example, a person who discovers the child with the body of the birth parent.\n(sec.5-ssec.3) The notice must be given within 2 working days after the birth.\n(sec.5-ssec.4) A person need not comply with subsection&#160;(1) if someone else has complied with subsection&#160;(1) .\n(sec.5-ssec.5) In this section— midwife means a person registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law to practise in the midwifery profession, other than as a student.\n- (a) if the child was born in a hospital, or brought to a hospital within 24 hours after birth—the person in charge of the hospital; or\n- (b) otherwise— (i) a doctor present at the birth; or (ii) if a doctor was not present at the birth—a midwife present at the birth; or (iii) if neither a doctor nor a midwife were present at the birth—a person, other than the birth parent, present at the birth; or (iv) if the birth parent was alone at the birth—the birth parent; or (v) if the birth parent dies or abandons the child—the person who takes physical custody of the child, for example, a person who discovers the child with the body of the birth parent.\n- (i) a doctor present at the birth; or\n- (ii) if a doctor was not present at the birth—a midwife present at the birth; or\n- (iii) if neither a doctor nor a midwife were present at the birth—a person, other than the birth parent, present at the birth; or\n- (iv) if the birth parent was alone at the birth—the birth parent; or\n- (v) if the birth parent dies or abandons the child—the person who takes physical custody of the child, for example, a person who discovers the child with the body of the birth parent.\n- (i) a doctor present at the birth; or\n- (ii) if a doctor was not present at the birth—a midwife present at the birth; or\n- (iii) if neither a doctor nor a midwife were present at the birth—a person, other than the birth parent, present at the birth; or\n- (iv) if the birth parent was alone at the birth—the birth parent; or\n- (v) if the birth parent dies or abandons the child—the person who takes physical custody of the child, for example, a person who discovers the child with the body of the birth parent.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"sec.6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Births that must be registered in Queensland","content":"### sec.6 Births that must be registered in Queensland\n\nThe birth of a child must be registered if—\nthe child is born in Queensland; or\na Queensland court—\nfinds that the child was born in Queensland; and\nmakes an order that—\ndirects that the birth be registered; and\nstates the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\nFor subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) (B) , the Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the birth that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\nIn this section—\nchild includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n(sec.6-ssec.1) The birth of a child must be registered if— the child is born in Queensland; or a Queensland court— finds that the child was born in Queensland; and makes an order that— directs that the birth be registered; and states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.6-ssec.2) For subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) (B) , the Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the birth that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\n(sec.6-ssec.3) In this section— child includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n- (a) the child is born in Queensland; or\n- (b) a Queensland court— (i) finds that the child was born in Queensland; and (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the birth be registered; and (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) finds that the child was born in Queensland; and\n- (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the birth be registered; and (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (A) directs that the birth be registered; and\n- (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) finds that the child was born in Queensland; and\n- (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the birth be registered; and (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (A) directs that the birth be registered; and\n- (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (A) directs that the birth be registered; and\n- (B) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"sec.7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Births that may be registered in Queensland","content":"### sec.7 Births that may be registered in Queensland\n\nThe birth of a child may be registered under this Act if—\nthe child is born in an aircraft or vessel outside Queensland; and\nthe child is not, between the time when the child is born and when the child arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland.\nA woman gives birth on a ship travelling non-stop from Sydney to Tokyo. The mother and child are flown by helicopter from the ship to Brisbane to enable them to receive medical care. The birth may be registered in Queensland.\nThe birth of a child outside Australia may be registered under this Act if—\nthe child’s parents intend to live in Queensland; and\nwhen the application for registration is made, the child is—\nresident in Queensland; and\nnot older than 18 months.\nThe birth of a child may be registered under this Act if a non-Queensland court—\nfinds that the child was born in Queensland; and\nmakes an order that—\ndirects that the birth be registered; and\nstates the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\nFor subsection&#160;(3) (b) (ii) , the non-Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the birth that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\nThe birth of a stillborn child born in Queensland before 1 May 1989 may be registered under this Act if, at the same time, the registrar is able to register the death of the child.\nThe registrar must not register under this section a birth that has been registered in another State or country.\nIn this section—\nplace does not include an aircraft or vessel.\n(sec.7-ssec.1) The birth of a child may be registered under this Act if— the child is born in an aircraft or vessel outside Queensland; and the child is not, between the time when the child is born and when the child arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland. A woman gives birth on a ship travelling non-stop from Sydney to Tokyo. The mother and child are flown by helicopter from the ship to Brisbane to enable them to receive medical care. The birth may be registered in Queensland.\n(sec.7-ssec.2) The birth of a child outside Australia may be registered under this Act if— the child’s parents intend to live in Queensland; and when the application for registration is made, the child is— resident in Queensland; and not older than 18 months.\n(sec.7-ssec.3) The birth of a child may be registered under this Act if a non-Queensland court— finds that the child was born in Queensland; and makes an order that— directs that the birth be registered; and states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.7-ssec.4) For subsection&#160;(3) (b) (ii) , the non-Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the birth that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\n(sec.7-ssec.5) The birth of a stillborn child born in Queensland before 1 May 1989 may be registered under this Act if, at the same time, the registrar is able to register the death of the child.\n(sec.7-ssec.6) The registrar must not register under this section a birth that has been registered in another State or country.\n(sec.7-ssec.7) In this section— place does not include an aircraft or vessel.\n- (a) the child is born in an aircraft or vessel outside Queensland; and\n- (b) the child is not, between the time when the child is born and when the child arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland. Example of paragraph&#160;(b) — A woman gives birth on a ship travelling non-stop from Sydney to Tokyo. The mother and child are flown by helicopter from the ship to Brisbane to enable them to receive medical care. The birth may be registered in Queensland.\n- (a) the child’s parents intend to live in Queensland; and\n- (b) when the application for registration is made, the child is— (i) resident in Queensland; and (ii) not older than 18 months.\n- (i) resident in Queensland; and\n- (ii) not older than 18 months.\n- (i) resident in Queensland; and\n- (ii) not older than 18 months.\n- (a) finds that the child was born in Queensland; and\n- (b) makes an order that— (i) directs that the birth be registered; and (ii) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) directs that the birth be registered; and\n- (ii) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) directs that the birth be registered; and\n- (ii) states the particulars about the birth that are prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"sec.8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Responsibility to apply to have birth registered","content":"### sec.8 Responsibility to apply to have birth registered\n\nIf the birth of a child must be registered in Queensland, the following persons must apply to register the birth—\nboth parents of the child;\nif the child was found abandoned as a newborn—the person taking care of the child.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nHowever, the registrar may accept an application completed by only 1 of the parents if the registrar is satisfied—\nthe applicant is unable or unwilling to give information as to the other parent’s identity or whereabouts; or\nThe applicant does not know the other parent’s identity.\nThe applicant does not know the other parent’s whereabouts.\nthe other parent is unable, unwilling or unlikely to sign the application; or\nThe other parent is dead.\nThe other parent can not be located.\nthe requirement under subsection&#160;(1) (a) for the other parent to apply to register the birth would cause the applicant unnecessary distress.\nThe applicant is too frightened to contact the other parent because of a domestic violence situation.\nContact between the applicant and the other parent would breach a domestic violence order.\nIf the registrar accepts an application under subsection&#160;(2) (a) or (b) and has an address for the other parent, the registrar must, before registering the birth—\ngive the other parent—\nwritten notice of the application; and\nat least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to register the birth; and\nask the other parent to sign an application.\nA failure of the registrar to comply with subsection&#160;(3) , or a failure of the parent of a child to sign an application as requested under subsection&#160;(3) (b) , does not prevent the registration of the child’s birth or affect the validity of the registration.\nAlso, the registrar may accept an application from a person who is not responsible for having the child’s birth registered if the registrar is satisfied—\nthe child’s parents are unable, or unlikely, to apply to register the birth; and\nthe person knows the relevant facts.\nIf the registrar does not receive an application under subsection&#160;(1) , (2) or (5) for a birth, the registrar may require 1 of the following persons to apply to register the birth—\nthe person in charge of the place where the child was born;\na person present at the birth;\na person whom the registrar reasonably believes knows the relevant facts.\nA person must comply with the registrar’s requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.8-ssec.1) If the birth of a child must be registered in Queensland, the following persons must apply to register the birth— both parents of the child; if the child was found abandoned as a newborn—the person taking care of the child. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.8-ssec.2) However, the registrar may accept an application completed by only 1 of the parents if the registrar is satisfied— the applicant is unable or unwilling to give information as to the other parent’s identity or whereabouts; or The applicant does not know the other parent’s identity. The applicant does not know the other parent’s whereabouts. the other parent is unable, unwilling or unlikely to sign the application; or The other parent is dead. The other parent can not be located. the requirement under subsection&#160;(1) (a) for the other parent to apply to register the birth would cause the applicant unnecessary distress. The applicant is too frightened to contact the other parent because of a domestic violence situation. Contact between the applicant and the other parent would breach a domestic violence order.\n(sec.8-ssec.3) If the registrar accepts an application under subsection&#160;(2) (a) or (b) and has an address for the other parent, the registrar must, before registering the birth— give the other parent— written notice of the application; and at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to register the birth; and ask the other parent to sign an application.\n(sec.8-ssec.4) A failure of the registrar to comply with subsection&#160;(3) , or a failure of the parent of a child to sign an application as requested under subsection&#160;(3) (b) , does not prevent the registration of the child’s birth or affect the validity of the registration.\n(sec.8-ssec.5) Also, the registrar may accept an application from a person who is not responsible for having the child’s birth registered if the registrar is satisfied— the child’s parents are unable, or unlikely, to apply to register the birth; and the person knows the relevant facts.\n(sec.8-ssec.6) If the registrar does not receive an application under subsection&#160;(1) , (2) or (5) for a birth, the registrar may require 1 of the following persons to apply to register the birth— the person in charge of the place where the child was born; a person present at the birth; a person whom the registrar reasonably believes knows the relevant facts.\n(sec.8-ssec.7) A person must comply with the registrar’s requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n- (a) both parents of the child;\n- (b) if the child was found abandoned as a newborn—the person taking care of the child.\n- (a) the applicant is unable or unwilling to give information as to the other parent’s identity or whereabouts; or Examples— 1 The applicant does not know the other parent’s identity. 2 The applicant does not know the other parent’s whereabouts.\n- 1 The applicant does not know the other parent’s identity.\n- 2 The applicant does not know the other parent’s whereabouts.\n- (b) the other parent is unable, unwilling or unlikely to sign the application; or Examples— 1 The other parent is dead. 2 The other parent can not be located.\n- 1 The other parent is dead.\n- 2 The other parent can not be located.\n- (c) the requirement under subsection&#160;(1) (a) for the other parent to apply to register the birth would cause the applicant unnecessary distress. Examples— 1 The applicant is too frightened to contact the other parent because of a domestic violence situation. 2 Contact between the applicant and the other parent would breach a domestic violence order.\n- 1 The applicant is too frightened to contact the other parent because of a domestic violence situation.\n- 2 Contact between the applicant and the other parent would breach a domestic violence order.\n- 1 The applicant does not know the other parent’s identity.\n- 2 The applicant does not know the other parent’s whereabouts.\n- 1 The other parent is dead.\n- 2 The other parent can not be located.\n- 1 The applicant is too frightened to contact the other parent because of a domestic violence situation.\n- 2 Contact between the applicant and the other parent would breach a domestic violence order.\n- (a) give the other parent— (i) written notice of the application; and (ii) at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to register the birth; and\n- (i) written notice of the application; and\n- (ii) at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to register the birth; and\n- (b) ask the other parent to sign an application.\n- (i) written notice of the application; and\n- (ii) at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to register the birth; and\n- (a) the child’s parents are unable, or unlikely, to apply to register the birth; and\n- (b) the person knows the relevant facts.\n- (a) the person in charge of the place where the child was born;\n- (b) a person present at the birth;\n- (c) a person whom the registrar reasonably believes knows the relevant facts.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"sec.9","sectionType":"section","heading":"How to apply to register the birth of a child","content":"### sec.9 How to apply to register the birth of a child\n\nAn application to register the birth of a child must be—\nin the form required by the registrar (a birth registration application ); and\nmade in an approved way.\nThe birth registration application must be given to the registrar—\nin the case of a birth where variations of sex characteristics have been identified—within 180 days after the birth; or\notherwise—within 60 days after the birth.\nHowever, the registrar may accept a birth registration application given—\nin the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (a) —more than 180 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened; or\nin the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (b) —more than 60 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened.\nIf the birth of the child is being registered under an order of a court directing the birth to be registered, the birth registration application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\nThe registrar may require the applicant to give to the registrar other information the registrar believes is relevant to the birth registration application.\n(sec.9-ssec.1) An application to register the birth of a child must be— in the form required by the registrar (a birth registration application ); and made in an approved way.\n(sec.9-ssec.2) The birth registration application must be given to the registrar— in the case of a birth where variations of sex characteristics have been identified—within 180 days after the birth; or otherwise—within 60 days after the birth.\n(sec.9-ssec.3) However, the registrar may accept a birth registration application given— in the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (a) —more than 180 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened; or in the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (b) —more than 60 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened.\n(sec.9-ssec.4) If the birth of the child is being registered under an order of a court directing the birth to be registered, the birth registration application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\n(sec.9-ssec.5) The registrar may require the applicant to give to the registrar other information the registrar believes is relevant to the birth registration application.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar (a birth registration application ); and\n- (b) made in an approved way.\n- (a) in the case of a birth where variations of sex characteristics have been identified—within 180 days after the birth; or\n- (b) otherwise—within 60 days after the birth.\n- (a) in the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (a) —more than 180 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened; or\n- (b) in the case of a birth mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (b) —more than 60 days after the birth, if satisfied the birth happened.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"sec.10","sectionType":"section","heading":"How births are registered","content":"### sec.10 How births are registered\n\nThe registrar registers the birth of a child by entering in the register of births—\nfor a birth that is directed by a court to be registered—\nthe particulars about the birth stated in the court’s order; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\nfor another birth—\nthe particulars prescribed by regulation; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\nDespite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the birth of a child even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the birth are not available to the registrar.\n(sec.10-ssec.1) The registrar registers the birth of a child by entering in the register of births— for a birth that is directed by a court to be registered— the particulars about the birth stated in the court’s order; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or for another birth— the particulars prescribed by regulation; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n(sec.10-ssec.2) Despite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the birth of a child even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the birth are not available to the registrar.\n- (a) for a birth that is directed by a court to be registered— (i) the particulars about the birth stated in the court’s order; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars about the birth stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (b) for another birth— (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars about the birth stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"sec.11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registration of parentage details","content":"### sec.11 Registration of parentage details\n\nThis section applies if a person applies—\nto register the birth of a child; or\nto include information about the identity of a child’s parent in the register of births after the child’s birth has been registered.\nThe registrar must not include information in the register of births that identifies a person as the parent of a child unless—\nboth—\nthe person signed a birth registration application; and\nthe registrar is satisfied that the person is a parent of the child; or\nthe registrar is entitled under the Status of Children Act 1978 , section&#160;26 to presume that the person is a parent of the child.\nHowever, the registrar may include information about the identity of a parent who did not sign a birth registration application if—\nthe registrar is satisfied that the parent did not sign because—\nthe parent is dead; or\nthe parent’s whereabouts are unknown; or\nthe parent is, for another justifiable reason, unable to sign; or\nthe registrar is satisfied that the parent does not dispute the correctness of the information; or\nthe registrar is entitled under a law, including a law of another State or the Commonwealth, to make a presumption as to the identity of the child’s parent.\nThe registrar may require a person who claims that someone is a parent of a child to prove it by giving the registrar a copy of a court finding mentioned in the Status of Children Act 1978 , section&#160;26 .\n(sec.11-ssec.1) This section applies if a person applies— to register the birth of a child; or to include information about the identity of a child’s parent in the register of births after the child’s birth has been registered.\n(sec.11-ssec.2) The registrar must not include information in the register of births that identifies a person as the parent of a child unless— both— the person signed a birth registration application; and the registrar is satisfied that the person is a parent of the child; or the registrar is entitled under the Status of Children Act 1978 , section&#160;26 to presume that the person is a parent of the child.\n(sec.11-ssec.3) However, the registrar may include information about the identity of a parent who did not sign a birth registration application if— the registrar is satisfied that the parent did not sign because— the parent is dead; or the parent’s whereabouts are unknown; or the parent is, for another justifiable reason, unable to sign; or the registrar is satisfied that the parent does not dispute the correctness of the information; or the registrar is entitled under a law, including a law of another State or the Commonwealth, to make a presumption as to the identity of the child’s parent.\n(sec.11-ssec.4) The registrar may require a person who claims that someone is a parent of a child to prove it by giving the registrar a copy of a court finding mentioned in the Status of Children Act 1978 , section&#160;26 .\n- (a) to register the birth of a child; or\n- (b) to include information about the identity of a child’s parent in the register of births after the child’s birth has been registered.\n- (a) both— (i) the person signed a birth registration application; and (ii) the registrar is satisfied that the person is a parent of the child; or\n- (i) the person signed a birth registration application; and\n- (ii) the registrar is satisfied that the person is a parent of the child; or\n- (b) the registrar is entitled under the Status of Children Act 1978 , section&#160;26 to presume that the person is a parent of the child.\n- (i) the person signed a birth registration application; and\n- (ii) the registrar is satisfied that the person is a parent of the child; or\n- (a) the registrar is satisfied that the parent did not sign because— (i) the parent is dead; or (ii) the parent’s whereabouts are unknown; or (iii) the parent is, for another justifiable reason, unable to sign; or\n- (i) the parent is dead; or\n- (ii) the parent’s whereabouts are unknown; or\n- (iii) the parent is, for another justifiable reason, unable to sign; or\n- (b) the registrar is satisfied that the parent does not dispute the correctness of the information; or\n- (c) the registrar is entitled under a law, including a law of another State or the Commonwealth, to make a presumption as to the identity of the child’s parent.\n- (i) the parent is dead; or\n- (ii) the parent’s whereabouts are unknown; or\n- (iii) the parent is, for another justifiable reason, unable to sign; or","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"sec.12","sectionType":"section","heading":"How parentage details may be registered","content":"### sec.12 How parentage details may be registered\n\nIn relation to the registration of a relevant event for a child—\neach of the child’s parents may be registered as the child’s—\nmother; or\nfather; or\nparent; and\nnot more than 2 people in total may be registered as the child’s parents (however described).\nIn this section—\nfinal adoption discharge order means—\nan order for the discharge of a final adoption order under the Adoption Act 2009 ; or\nan order of another Australian jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) .\nrelevant event , for a child, means—\nthe child’s birth; or\nthe child’s adoption; or\nthe child’s transfer of parentage under—\na parentage order or parentage discharge order; or\na final adoption discharge order; or\na cultural recognition order or the discharge of a cultural recognition order.\n(sec.12-ssec.1) In relation to the registration of a relevant event for a child— each of the child’s parents may be registered as the child’s— mother; or father; or parent; and not more than 2 people in total may be registered as the child’s parents (however described).\n(sec.12-ssec.2) In this section— final adoption discharge order means— an order for the discharge of a final adoption order under the Adoption Act 2009 ; or an order of another Australian jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) . relevant event , for a child, means— the child’s birth; or the child’s adoption; or the child’s transfer of parentage under— a parentage order or parentage discharge order; or a final adoption discharge order; or a cultural recognition order or the discharge of a cultural recognition order.\n- (a) each of the child’s parents may be registered as the child’s— (i) mother; or (ii) father; or (iii) parent; and\n- (i) mother; or\n- (ii) father; or\n- (iii) parent; and\n- (b) not more than 2 people in total may be registered as the child’s parents (however described).\n- (i) mother; or\n- (ii) father; or\n- (iii) parent; and\n- (a) an order for the discharge of a final adoption order under the Adoption Act 2009 ; or\n- (b) an order of another Australian jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (a) the child’s birth; or\n- (b) the child’s adoption; or\n- (c) the child’s transfer of parentage under— (i) a parentage order or parentage discharge order; or (ii) a final adoption discharge order; or (iii) a cultural recognition order or the discharge of a cultural recognition order.\n- (i) a parentage order or parentage discharge order; or\n- (ii) a final adoption discharge order; or\n- (iii) a cultural recognition order or the discharge of a cultural recognition order.\n- (i) a parentage order or parentage discharge order; or\n- (ii) a final adoption discharge order; or\n- (iii) a cultural recognition order or the discharge of a cultural recognition order.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"sec.13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court order relating to birth register","content":"### sec.13 Court order relating to birth register\n\nA court, on application by an interested person or on its own initiative, may order the registrar to—\nregister the birth of a child born in Queensland; or\ninclude or correct particulars about a child’s birth, other than the child’s name, in the register of births.\nHowever, a person may not apply for an order under subsection&#160;(1) if the person has, under section&#160;124 , applied to QCAT for a review of a decision of the registrar in relation to the same matter.\nIn this section—\ncourt means—\nfor particulars about a child’s parentage—the Supreme Court; or\notherwise—the District Court.\n(sec.13-ssec.1) A court, on application by an interested person or on its own initiative, may order the registrar to— register the birth of a child born in Queensland; or include or correct particulars about a child’s birth, other than the child’s name, in the register of births.\n(sec.13-ssec.2) However, a person may not apply for an order under subsection&#160;(1) if the person has, under section&#160;124 , applied to QCAT for a review of a decision of the registrar in relation to the same matter.\n(sec.13-ssec.3) In this section— court means— for particulars about a child’s parentage—the Supreme Court; or otherwise—the District Court.\n- (a) register the birth of a child born in Queensland; or\n- (b) include or correct particulars about a child’s birth, other than the child’s name, in the register of births.\n- (a) for particulars about a child’s parentage—the Supreme Court; or\n- (b) otherwise—the District Court.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"sec.14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Child’s name","content":"### sec.14 Child’s name\n\nA birth registration application, other than an application to register the birth of a stillborn child, must state the child’s name.\nIf a birth registration application states only 1 name for the child, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the child’s surname.\nSubsection&#160;(4) applies if—\nthe name stated in the birth registration application is a prohibited name; or\nfor a birth registration application that is made by both parents—the registrar is satisfied that the parents can not agree on the child’s name; or\nno name is stated in the birth registration application.\nThe registrar may choose a name for the child and enter it in the register.\nHowever, the registrar can not choose a first name for a stillborn child if the applicants have indicated that they do not wish to name the child.\nOne of the ways in which the applicants may indicate that they do not wish to name the child is by not putting a name for the child in the birth registration application.\nBefore entering a name in the register for a child under subsection&#160;(4) , the registrar must give the applicants at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to do so.\nIf a child’s parents can not agree on a name for the child, either parent may apply to a Magistrates Court to decide the child’s name.\nThe Magistrates Court may—\nchoose a name for the child, other than a prohibited name, that is in the child’s best interests; and\norder that the name be entered in the register of births for the child.\n(sec.14-ssec.1) A birth registration application, other than an application to register the birth of a stillborn child, must state the child’s name.\n(sec.14-ssec.2) If a birth registration application states only 1 name for the child, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the child’s surname.\n(sec.14-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(4) applies if— the name stated in the birth registration application is a prohibited name; or for a birth registration application that is made by both parents—the registrar is satisfied that the parents can not agree on the child’s name; or no name is stated in the birth registration application.\n(sec.14-ssec.4) The registrar may choose a name for the child and enter it in the register.\n(sec.14-ssec.5) However, the registrar can not choose a first name for a stillborn child if the applicants have indicated that they do not wish to name the child.\n(sec.14-ssec.6) One of the ways in which the applicants may indicate that they do not wish to name the child is by not putting a name for the child in the birth registration application.\n(sec.14-ssec.7) Before entering a name in the register for a child under subsection&#160;(4) , the registrar must give the applicants at least 14 days written notice of the registrar’s intention to do so.\n(sec.14-ssec.8) If a child’s parents can not agree on a name for the child, either parent may apply to a Magistrates Court to decide the child’s name.\n(sec.14-ssec.9) The Magistrates Court may— choose a name for the child, other than a prohibited name, that is in the child’s best interests; and order that the name be entered in the register of births for the child.\n- (a) the name stated in the birth registration application is a prohibited name; or\n- (b) for a birth registration application that is made by both parents—the registrar is satisfied that the parents can not agree on the child’s name; or\n- (c) no name is stated in the birth registration application.\n- (a) choose a name for the child, other than a prohibited name, that is in the child’s best interests; and\n- (b) order that the name be entered in the register of births for the child.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"sec.15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to change child’s first name within a year of birth","content":"### sec.15 Application to change child’s first name within a year of birth\n\nThis section applies if a child’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland.\nThe child’s parents may apply to register a change of the child’s first name.\nHowever, 1 of the parents may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if—\nthe parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or\nthe other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\nthe parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about—\nmajor long-term issues for the child; or\nthe child’s name; or\na Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;16 .\nA person may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\nthe person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nTwo or more persons may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\nthe persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nAn application made under this section—\nmust be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\nmust be accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\nmay be made only once and within a year of the child’s birth.\nThe registrar may register, or refuse to register, a change of a child’s first name.\nThe registrar must refuse to register a change of a child’s first name to a prohibited name.\nBefore registering a change of a child’s first name the registrar may require the applicant to provide evidence to satisfy the registrar of the applicant’s identity.\nIn this section—\nregister a change , of a child’s first name, means register a change of the child’s first name in the relevant child register.\n(sec.15-ssec.1) This section applies if a child’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland.\n(sec.15-ssec.2) The child’s parents may apply to register a change of the child’s first name.\n(sec.15-ssec.3) However, 1 of the parents may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if— the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— major long-term issues for the child; or the child’s name; or a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;16 .\n(sec.15-ssec.4) A person may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.15-ssec.5) Two or more persons may apply to register a change of the child’s first name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.15-ssec.6) An application made under this section— must be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and must be accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and may be made only once and within a year of the child’s birth.\n(sec.15-ssec.7) The registrar may register, or refuse to register, a change of a child’s first name.\n(sec.15-ssec.8) The registrar must refuse to register a change of a child’s first name to a prohibited name.\n(sec.15-ssec.9) Before registering a change of a child’s first name the registrar may require the applicant to provide evidence to satisfy the registrar of the applicant’s identity.\n(sec.15-ssec.10) In this section— register a change , of a child’s first name, means register a change of the child’s first name in the relevant child register.\n- (a) the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or\n- (b) the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (c) the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— (i) major long-term issues for the child; or (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (d) a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;16 .\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) must be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) must be accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (c) may be made only once and within a year of the child’s birth.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"sec.16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Magistrates Court may approve change of child’s first name","content":"### sec.16 Magistrates Court may approve change of child’s first name\n\nA Magistrates Court may, on application by an eligible person for a child whose birth or adoption was registered in Queensland, make an order approving a proposed change of first name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Adoptions and transfers of parentage","content":"# Adoptions and transfers of parentage","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Preliminary","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"sec.17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions for part","content":"### sec.17 Definitions for part\n\nIn this part—\nrelevant parentage register —\nfor an event that is an adoption or a discharge of an adoption—means the adopted children register; or\nfor an event that is a transfer of parentage under a cultural recognition order or a discharge of a transfer of parentage under a cultural recognition order—means the cultural recognition register; or\nfor an event that is a transfer of parentage under a parentage order or a discharge of parentage under a parentage order—means the parentage order register.\nState includes New Zealand.\n- (a) for an event that is an adoption or a discharge of an adoption—means the adopted children register; or\n- (b) for an event that is a transfer of parentage under a cultural recognition order or a discharge of a transfer of parentage under a cultural recognition order—means the cultural recognition register; or\n- (c) for an event that is a transfer of parentage under a parentage order or a discharge of parentage under a parentage order—means the parentage order register.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Registrar receives initial notice or initial order","content":"## Registrar receives initial notice or initial order","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"sec.18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of division","content":"### sec.18 Application of division\n\nThis division applies if—\nthe registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice (an initial notice ) of the making of a final adoption order; or\nthe registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;290B , a notice (also an initial notice ) to record an adoption granted in another country.\nThis division also applies if—\nthe registrar receives—\nan order (an initial order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to a final adoption order; or\na notice (also an initial notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to a final adoption order, of another State; and\nthe order relates to a person whose birth or previous adoption is registered in Queensland.\nThis division also applies if—\na parentage order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a child whose birth was registered in Queensland; and\nthe registrar receives—\nan application to register the initial order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\nan original copy of the initial order.\nThis division further applies if—\na cultural recognition order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a person whose birth was registered in Queensland; and\nthe registrar receives a copy of the initial order from the commissioner.\nIn this section—\ncommissioner means the person appointed as commissioner under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 .\n(sec.18-ssec.1) This division applies if— the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice (an initial notice ) of the making of a final adoption order; or the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;290B , a notice (also an initial notice ) to record an adoption granted in another country.\n(sec.18-ssec.2) This division also applies if— the registrar receives— an order (an initial order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to a final adoption order; or a notice (also an initial notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to a final adoption order, of another State; and the order relates to a person whose birth or previous adoption is registered in Queensland.\n(sec.18-ssec.3) This division also applies if— a parentage order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a child whose birth was registered in Queensland; and the registrar receives— an application to register the initial order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and an original copy of the initial order.\n(sec.18-ssec.4) This division further applies if— a cultural recognition order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a person whose birth was registered in Queensland; and the registrar receives a copy of the initial order from the commissioner.\n(sec.18-ssec.5) In this section— commissioner means the person appointed as commissioner under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 .\n- (a) the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice (an initial notice ) of the making of a final adoption order; or\n- (b) the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;290B , a notice (also an initial notice ) to record an adoption granted in another country.\n- (a) the registrar receives— (i) an order (an initial order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to a final adoption order; or (ii) a notice (also an initial notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to a final adoption order, of another State; and\n- (i) an order (an initial order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to a final adoption order; or\n- (ii) a notice (also an initial notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to a final adoption order, of another State; and\n- (b) the order relates to a person whose birth or previous adoption is registered in Queensland.\n- (i) an order (an initial order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to a final adoption order; or\n- (ii) a notice (also an initial notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to a final adoption order, of another State; and\n- (a) a parentage order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a child whose birth was registered in Queensland; and\n- (b) the registrar receives— (i) an application to register the initial order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and (ii) an original copy of the initial order.\n- (i) an application to register the initial order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the initial order.\n- (i) an application to register the initial order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the initial order.\n- (a) a cultural recognition order (also an initial order ) is made in relation to a person whose birth was registered in Queensland; and\n- (b) the registrar receives a copy of the initial order from the commissioner.","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"sec.19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registering event in relevant parentage register","content":"### sec.19 Registering event in relevant parentage register\n\nThe registrar must register the event to which the initial notice or initial order relates by incorporating the initial notice or initial order into the relevant parentage register for the event.\nIf the registrar receives an original copy of an initial order mentioned in section&#160;18 (3) (a) , the registrar must also incorporate into the parentage order register information from the application mentioned in section&#160;18 (3) (b) (i) .\nThe registrar must close the person’s birth entry and any previous entry in the adopted children register by—\nnoting on the birth entry or previous entry in the adopted children register (each of which is a closed entry ) a reference to the registration mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; and\nnoting on the relevant parentage register for the event a reference to the closed entry or entries.\n(sec.19-ssec.1) The registrar must register the event to which the initial notice or initial order relates by incorporating the initial notice or initial order into the relevant parentage register for the event.\n(sec.19-ssec.2) If the registrar receives an original copy of an initial order mentioned in section&#160;18 (3) (a) , the registrar must also incorporate into the parentage order register information from the application mentioned in section&#160;18 (3) (b) (i) .\n(sec.19-ssec.3) The registrar must close the person’s birth entry and any previous entry in the adopted children register by— noting on the birth entry or previous entry in the adopted children register (each of which is a closed entry ) a reference to the registration mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; and noting on the relevant parentage register for the event a reference to the closed entry or entries.\n- (a) noting on the birth entry or previous entry in the adopted children register (each of which is a closed entry ) a reference to the registration mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; and\n- (b) noting on the relevant parentage register for the event a reference to the closed entry or entries.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Registrar receives discharge notice or discharge order","content":"## Registrar receives discharge notice or discharge order","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"sec.20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of division","content":"### sec.20 Application of division\n\nThis division applies if the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice (a discharge notice ) of the making of an order of the Supreme Court discharging a final adoption order.\nThis division also applies if—\nthe registrar receives—\nan order (a discharge order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; or\na notice (also a discharge notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) , of another State; and\nthe order relates to a person with an entry in the adopted children register.\nThis division also applies if—\nthe registrar has registered a parentage order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and\na parentage discharge order (also a discharge order ) is made discharging the parentage order; and\nthe registrar receives—\nan application to register the discharge order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\nan original copy of the discharge order.\nThis division further applies if—\nthe registrar has registered a cultural recognition order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and\na discharge order, within the meaning of the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , schedule&#160;1 (also a discharge order ), is made discharging the cultural recognition order; and\nthe registrar receives—\nan application to register the discharge order; and\nan original copy of the discharge order under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;79 .\n(sec.20-ssec.1) This division applies if the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice (a discharge notice ) of the making of an order of the Supreme Court discharging a final adoption order.\n(sec.20-ssec.2) This division also applies if— the registrar receives— an order (a discharge order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; or a notice (also a discharge notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) , of another State; and the order relates to a person with an entry in the adopted children register.\n(sec.20-ssec.3) This division also applies if— the registrar has registered a parentage order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and a parentage discharge order (also a discharge order ) is made discharging the parentage order; and the registrar receives— an application to register the discharge order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and an original copy of the discharge order.\n(sec.20-ssec.4) This division further applies if— the registrar has registered a cultural recognition order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and a discharge order, within the meaning of the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , schedule&#160;1 (also a discharge order ), is made discharging the cultural recognition order; and the registrar receives— an application to register the discharge order; and an original copy of the discharge order under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;79 .\n- (a) the registrar receives— (i) an order (a discharge order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; or (ii) a notice (also a discharge notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) , of another State; and\n- (i) an order (a discharge order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; or\n- (ii) a notice (also a discharge notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) , of another State; and\n- (b) the order relates to a person with an entry in the adopted children register.\n- (i) an order (a discharge order ) of another jurisdiction that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) ; or\n- (ii) a notice (also a discharge notice ) of the making of an order, that corresponds to an order mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) , of another State; and\n- (a) the registrar has registered a parentage order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and\n- (b) a parentage discharge order (also a discharge order ) is made discharging the parentage order; and\n- (c) the registrar receives— (i) an application to register the discharge order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and (ii) an original copy of the discharge order.\n- (i) an application to register the discharge order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the discharge order.\n- (i) an application to register the discharge order accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the discharge order.\n- (a) the registrar has registered a cultural recognition order about a person under section&#160;19 ; and\n- (b) a discharge order, within the meaning of the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , schedule&#160;1 (also a discharge order ), is made discharging the cultural recognition order; and\n- (c) the registrar receives— (i) an application to register the discharge order; and (ii) an original copy of the discharge order under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;79 .\n- (i) an application to register the discharge order; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the discharge order under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;79 .\n- (i) an application to register the discharge order; and\n- (ii) an original copy of the discharge order under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;79 .","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"sec.21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Re-registering birth","content":"### sec.21 Re-registering birth\n\nThe registrar must re-register the person’s birth by making a new entry in the birth register that includes—\nthe person’s names as declared in the discharge order or discharge notice; and\nall of the information that was in the entry closed under section&#160;19 (3) other than information about the making or discharge of the initial order or the order to which the initial notice relates; and\na note that the new entry was made under this section; and\na reference to the entry closed under subsection&#160;(3) .\nThe registrar must note on the entry closed under section&#160;19 (3) —\nthat the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and\na reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\nThe registrar must close the entry in the relevant parentage register that was made to register the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates by—\nincorporating, in the entry, the discharge notice or discharge order; and\nnoting on the entry—\nthat the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates has been discharged; and\nthat the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and\na reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\nIf the registrar receives an original copy of a discharge order mentioned in section&#160;20 (3) (b) , the registrar must also incorporate information from the application mentioned in section&#160;20 (3) (c) (i) into the parentage order register.\nIf the registrar receives an original copy of a discharge order mentioned in section&#160;20 (4) (b) , the registrar must also incorporate information from the application mentioned in section&#160;20 (4) (c) (i) into the cultural recognition register.\nThe registrar may make any other notations in the register that the registrar considers necessary to ensure the register includes the correct information for the person.\n(sec.21-ssec.1) The registrar must re-register the person’s birth by making a new entry in the birth register that includes— the person’s names as declared in the discharge order or discharge notice; and all of the information that was in the entry closed under section&#160;19 (3) other than information about the making or discharge of the initial order or the order to which the initial notice relates; and a note that the new entry was made under this section; and a reference to the entry closed under subsection&#160;(3) .\n(sec.21-ssec.2) The registrar must note on the entry closed under section&#160;19 (3) — that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\n(sec.21-ssec.3) The registrar must close the entry in the relevant parentage register that was made to register the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates by— incorporating, in the entry, the discharge notice or discharge order; and noting on the entry— that the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates has been discharged; and that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\n(sec.21-ssec.4) If the registrar receives an original copy of a discharge order mentioned in section&#160;20 (3) (b) , the registrar must also incorporate information from the application mentioned in section&#160;20 (3) (c) (i) into the parentage order register.\n(sec.21-ssec.5) If the registrar receives an original copy of a discharge order mentioned in section&#160;20 (4) (b) , the registrar must also incorporate information from the application mentioned in section&#160;20 (4) (c) (i) into the cultural recognition register.\n(sec.21-ssec.6) The registrar may make any other notations in the register that the registrar considers necessary to ensure the register includes the correct information for the person.\n- (a) the person’s names as declared in the discharge order or discharge notice; and\n- (b) all of the information that was in the entry closed under section&#160;19 (3) other than information about the making or discharge of the initial order or the order to which the initial notice relates; and\n- (c) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (d) a reference to the entry closed under subsection&#160;(3) .\n- (a) that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (b) a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\n- (a) incorporating, in the entry, the discharge notice or discharge order; and\n- (b) noting on the entry— (i) that the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates has been discharged; and (ii) that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and (iii) a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\n- (i) that the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates has been discharged; and\n- (ii) that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (iii) a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .\n- (i) that the initial order or order to which the initial notice relates has been discharged; and\n- (ii) that the person’s birth has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (iii) a reference to the new entry made under subsection&#160;(1) .","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"pt.3-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Other provisions","content":"## Other provisions","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"sec.22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Sending notice of particular adoption orders and discharges to other States","content":"### sec.22 Sending notice of particular adoption orders and discharges to other States\n\nThis section applies if—\nthe registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice of a final adoption order or an order discharging a final adoption order; and\nthe registrar knows or suspects there is an entry for the adopted person’s birth or adoption in a register kept under a law of another State.\nThe registrar must give a notice of the making of the order to the appropriate officer in that State with responsibility for keeping the register.\n(sec.22-ssec.1) This section applies if— the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice of a final adoption order or an order discharging a final adoption order; and the registrar knows or suspects there is an entry for the adopted person’s birth or adoption in a register kept under a law of another State.\n(sec.22-ssec.2) The registrar must give a notice of the making of the order to the appropriate officer in that State with responsibility for keeping the register.\n- (a) the registrar receives, under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;289 , a notice of a final adoption order or an order discharging a final adoption order; and\n- (b) the registrar knows or suspects there is an entry for the adopted person’s birth or adoption in a register kept under a law of another State.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"sec.23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Addendum to birth certificate—parentage orders","content":"### sec.23 Addendum to birth certificate—parentage orders\n\nThis section applies if—\na person (the applicant )—\napplies to the registrar, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, for requested information or a certificate about an entry for the person in the birth register; and\nis at least 18 years at the time of making the application; and\na parentage order in relation to the applicant was registered in the parentage order register under section&#160;19 (even if the entry in the parentage order register was later closed under section&#160;21 ); and\nthe registrar gives the requested information or issues the certificate to the applicant.\nThe registrar must attach an addendum to the information or certificate stating that further information is available about the entry.\nTo remove any doubt, it is declared that the registrar must not issue the addendum to any person other than the applicant.\ns&#160;23 amd 2024 No.&#160;46 s&#160;157\n_____\ns&#160;23A ins 2024 No.&#160;46 s&#160;158 (uncommenced amendment)\n(sec.23-ssec.1) This section applies if— a person (the applicant )— applies to the registrar, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, for requested information or a certificate about an entry for the person in the birth register; and is at least 18 years at the time of making the application; and a parentage order in relation to the applicant was registered in the parentage order register under section&#160;19 (even if the entry in the parentage order register was later closed under section&#160;21 ); and the registrar gives the requested information or issues the certificate to the applicant.\n(sec.23-ssec.2) The registrar must attach an addendum to the information or certificate stating that further information is available about the entry.\n(sec.23-ssec.3) To remove any doubt, it is declared that the registrar must not issue the addendum to any person other than the applicant.\n- (a) a person (the applicant )— (i) applies to the registrar, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, for requested information or a certificate about an entry for the person in the birth register; and (ii) is at least 18 years at the time of making the application; and\n- (i) applies to the registrar, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, for requested information or a certificate about an entry for the person in the birth register; and\n- (ii) is at least 18 years at the time of making the application; and\n- (b) a parentage order in relation to the applicant was registered in the parentage order register under section&#160;19 (even if the entry in the parentage order register was later closed under section&#160;21 ); and\n- (c) the registrar gives the requested information or issues the certificate to the applicant.\n- (i) applies to the registrar, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, for requested information or a certificate about an entry for the person in the birth register; and\n- (ii) is at least 18 years at the time of making the application; and","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Change of name","content":"# Change of name","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Preliminary","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"sec.24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions for part","content":"### sec.24 Definitions for part\n\nIn this part—\nadult person includes a person under 18 years who is, or has been, married.\nchild does not include a person under 18 years who is, or has been, married.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"sec.25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Change of name by registration","content":"### sec.25 Change of name by registration\n\nA person’s name may be changed by registration of the change under this part, unless the change has been registered under a corresponding law.\nSee also sections&#160;19 and 21 for changes to a person’s name under a parentage order, parentage discharge order, cultural recognition order or discharge of a cultural recognition order.\nIt is no longer possible in Queensland to change a person’s name by deed poll.\nHowever, this part does not prevent the change of a person’s name by repute or usage.\n(sec.25-ssec.1) A person’s name may be changed by registration of the change under this part, unless the change has been registered under a corresponding law. See also sections&#160;19 and 21 for changes to a person’s name under a parentage order, parentage discharge order, cultural recognition order or discharge of a cultural recognition order.\n(sec.25-ssec.2) It is no longer possible in Queensland to change a person’s name by deed poll.\n(sec.25-ssec.3) However, this part does not prevent the change of a person’s name by repute or usage.","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Change of adult person’s name","content":"## Change of adult person’s name","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"sec.26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to register change of adult person’s name","content":"### sec.26 Application to register change of adult person’s name\n\nAn adult person may apply to register a change of the person’s name only if—\nthe person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or\nboth of the following apply—\nthe person was born outside Australia and the person’s birth was not registered in another State; and\nthe person has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes the application.\nDespite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may accept an application to register a change of an adult person’s name if the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for accepting the application.\nDespite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) , the registrar may accept an application to register a change of an adult person’s name if—\nthe application relates to a marriage or divorce of the person; or\nthe registrar is satisfied the application is for the purpose of protecting the person, a child of the person or another person associated with the person.\nThe application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person or a child of the adult person from domestic violence.\nAn application made under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nIn this section—\nregister a change , of an adult person’s name, means register a change of the person’s name in the change of name register.\n(sec.26-ssec.1) An adult person may apply to register a change of the person’s name only if— the person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or both of the following apply— the person was born outside Australia and the person’s birth was not registered in another State; and the person has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes the application.\n(sec.26-ssec.2) Despite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may accept an application to register a change of an adult person’s name if the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for accepting the application.\n(sec.26-ssec.3) Despite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) , the registrar may accept an application to register a change of an adult person’s name if— the application relates to a marriage or divorce of the person; or the registrar is satisfied the application is for the purpose of protecting the person, a child of the person or another person associated with the person. The application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person or a child of the adult person from domestic violence.\n(sec.26-ssec.4) An application made under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.26-ssec.5) In this section— register a change , of an adult person’s name, means register a change of the person’s name in the change of name register.\n- (a) the person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or\n- (b) both of the following apply— (i) the person was born outside Australia and the person’s birth was not registered in another State; and (ii) the person has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes the application.\n- (i) the person was born outside Australia and the person’s birth was not registered in another State; and\n- (ii) the person has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes the application.\n- (i) the person was born outside Australia and the person’s birth was not registered in another State; and\n- (ii) the person has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes the application.\n- (a) the application relates to a marriage or divorce of the person; or\n- (b) the registrar is satisfied the application is for the purpose of protecting the person, a child of the person or another person associated with the person. Example for paragraph&#160;(b) — The application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person or a child of the adult person from domestic violence.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"sec.27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Limit on number of name changes for adult person","content":"### sec.27 Limit on number of name changes for adult person\n\nThe registrar must not approve an application to register a change of name for an adult person if the registrar is aware that—\n3 or more changes of the person’s name have been registered in Queensland or another State; or\nthe person has had a change of name registered in Queensland or another State in the 12 months immediately before the person makes the application.\nFor the purpose of counting the previous registrations of changes of an adult person’s name under subsection&#160;(1) , a change of name by the person when the person was a child is not to be counted.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not apply if—\nthe application is made under section&#160;39 (4) or 50 (4) or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the person’s sex; or\nthe application relates to a marriage or divorce of the adult person; or\nthe registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person, a child of the adult person or another person associated with the adult person; or\nThe change of name is sought for the protection of the adult person or the person’s children from domestic violence.\nthe registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application.\n(sec.27-ssec.1) The registrar must not approve an application to register a change of name for an adult person if the registrar is aware that— 3 or more changes of the person’s name have been registered in Queensland or another State; or the person has had a change of name registered in Queensland or another State in the 12 months immediately before the person makes the application.\n(sec.27-ssec.2) For the purpose of counting the previous registrations of changes of an adult person’s name under subsection&#160;(1) , a change of name by the person when the person was a child is not to be counted.\n(sec.27-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(1) does not apply if— the application is made under section&#160;39 (4) or 50 (4) or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the person’s sex; or the application relates to a marriage or divorce of the adult person; or the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person, a child of the adult person or another person associated with the adult person; or The change of name is sought for the protection of the adult person or the person’s children from domestic violence. the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application.\n- (a) 3 or more changes of the person’s name have been registered in Queensland or another State; or\n- (b) the person has had a change of name registered in Queensland or another State in the 12 months immediately before the person makes the application.\n- (a) the application is made under section&#160;39 (4) or 50 (4) or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the person’s sex; or\n- (b) the application relates to a marriage or divorce of the adult person; or\n- (c) the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the adult person, a child of the adult person or another person associated with the adult person; or Example for paragraph&#160;(c) — The change of name is sought for the protection of the adult person or the person’s children from domestic violence.\n- (d) the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application.","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Change of eligible child’s name","content":"## Change of eligible child’s name","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"sec.28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of eligible child","content":"### sec.28 Meaning of eligible child\n\nA child is an eligible child , for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if—\nthe child’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or\nboth of the following apply—\nthe child was born outside Australia and the child’s birth was not registered in another State;\neither—\nthe child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or\nthe application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\nDespite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) , a child is an eligible child, for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for accepting the application.\nDespite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) , a child is an eligible child, for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if—\nthe application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or\nthe registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or\nThe application is for the purpose of protecting the child from domestic violence.\na non-Queensland court has directed the registrar to accept the application.\n(sec.28-ssec.1) A child is an eligible child , for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if— the child’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or both of the following apply— the child was born outside Australia and the child’s birth was not registered in another State; either— the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n(sec.28-ssec.2) Despite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) , a child is an eligible child, for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for accepting the application.\n(sec.28-ssec.3) Despite any restriction in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) , a child is an eligible child, for an application to register a change of the child’s name, if— the application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or The application is for the purpose of protecting the child from domestic violence. a non-Queensland court has directed the registrar to accept the application.\n- (a) the child’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; or\n- (b) both of the following apply— (i) the child was born outside Australia and the child’s birth was not registered in another State; (ii) either— (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (i) the child was born outside Australia and the child’s birth was not registered in another State;\n- (ii) either— (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or\n- (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (i) the child was born outside Australia and the child’s birth was not registered in another State;\n- (ii) either— (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or\n- (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (A) the child has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made; or\n- (B) the application is made within 12 months of the child’s birth and at least 1 person who makes the application has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the application is made.\n- (a) the application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or\n- (b) the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or Example for paragraph&#160;(b) — The application is for the purpose of protecting the child from domestic violence.\n- (c) a non-Queensland court has directed the registrar to accept the application.","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"sec.29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application by parents and others to register change of eligible child’s name","content":"### sec.29 Application by parents and others to register change of eligible child’s name\n\nAn eligible child’s parents may apply to register a change of the child’s name.\nHowever, 1 of the parents may apply to register a change of the eligible child’s name if—\nthe parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or\nthe other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\nthe parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about—\nmajor long-term issues for the child; or\nthe child’s name; or\na Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 .\nA person may apply to register a change of an eligible child’s name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\nthe person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nTwo or more persons may apply to register a change of an eligible child’s name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\nthe persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nAn application made under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nIn this section—\nregister a change , of an eligible child’s name, means register a change of the child’s name in the change of name register.\n(sec.29-ssec.1) An eligible child’s parents may apply to register a change of the child’s name.\n(sec.29-ssec.2) However, 1 of the parents may apply to register a change of the eligible child’s name if— the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— major long-term issues for the child; or the child’s name; or a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 .\n(sec.29-ssec.3) A person may apply to register a change of an eligible child’s name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.29-ssec.4) Two or more persons may apply to register a change of an eligible child’s name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.29-ssec.5) An application made under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.29-ssec.6) In this section— register a change , of an eligible child’s name, means register a change of the child’s name in the change of name register.\n- (a) the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or\n- (b) the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (c) the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— (i) major long-term issues for the child; or (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (d) a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 .\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"sec.30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Magistrates Court may approve change of eligible child’s name","content":"### sec.30 Magistrates Court may approve change of eligible child’s name\n\nA Magistrates Court may, on application by an eligible person for an eligible child, make an order approving a proposed change of name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"sec.31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Eligible child’s consent to change of name","content":"### sec.31 Eligible child’s consent to change of name\n\nThe registrar must not approve an application to register the change of the name of an eligible child who is 12 years or more unless the registrar is satisfied that the child—\nconsents to the change of name; or\nis unable to understand the meaning and implications of the change of name.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not apply if a Magistrates Court has approved the change of name.\n(sec.31-ssec.1) The registrar must not approve an application to register the change of the name of an eligible child who is 12 years or more unless the registrar is satisfied that the child— consents to the change of name; or is unable to understand the meaning and implications of the change of name.\n(sec.31-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not apply if a Magistrates Court has approved the change of name.\n- (a) consents to the change of name; or\n- (b) is unable to understand the meaning and implications of the change of name.","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"sec.32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Limit on number of name changes for child","content":"### sec.32 Limit on number of name changes for child\n\nThe registrar must not approve an application to—\nregister the change of a child’s first name if the registrar is aware a change of name, other than a change of name under section&#160;15 , has already been registered for the child in Queensland or another State; or\nregister the change of a child’s name, other than the child’s first name, more than once in a 1-year period.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not apply if—\nthe application is made under section&#160;42 or 53 or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the child’s sex; or\nthe application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or\nthe registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or\nThe change of name is sought for the protection of the child from domestic violence.\nthe registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application; or\na Magistrates Court or non-Queensland court has approved the change of name.\n(sec.32-ssec.1) The registrar must not approve an application to— register the change of a child’s first name if the registrar is aware a change of name, other than a change of name under section&#160;15 , has already been registered for the child in Queensland or another State; or register the change of a child’s name, other than the child’s first name, more than once in a 1-year period.\n(sec.32-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not apply if— the application is made under section&#160;42 or 53 or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the child’s sex; or the application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or The change of name is sought for the protection of the child from domestic violence. the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application; or a Magistrates Court or non-Queensland court has approved the change of name.\n- (a) register the change of a child’s first name if the registrar is aware a change of name, other than a change of name under section&#160;15 , has already been registered for the child in Queensland or another State; or\n- (b) register the change of a child’s name, other than the child’s first name, more than once in a 1-year period.\n- (a) the application is made under section&#160;42 or 53 or the registrar is otherwise satisfied the change of name is an affirmation or expression of the child’s sex; or\n- (b) the application relates to a marriage or divorce of at least 1 of the applicants; or\n- (c) the registrar is satisfied that the application is for the purpose of protecting the child or a person associated with the child; or Example for paragraph&#160;(c) — The change of name is sought for the protection of the child from domestic violence.\n- (d) the registrar is satisfied there are exceptional circumstances for approving the application; or\n- (e) a Magistrates Court or non-Queensland court has approved the change of name.","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"pt.4-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"General","content":"## General","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"sec.33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registration of change of name","content":"### sec.33 Registration of change of name\n\nBefore registering the change of a person’s name, the registrar may require—\nevidence of the following—\nthe identity, age and residence of the person;\nthat the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 —a copy of the written permission; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB —a copy of the written permission; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A —a copy of the written permission; and\nother information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\nThe registrar may register, or refuse to register, a change of a person’s name.\nThe registrar must refuse to register a change of name—\nif the registrar is not satisfied of—\nthe identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\nthe identity of the person whose change of name is to be registered; or\nif the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\nif the proposed name is a prohibited name.\nIf an application to register a person’s change of name states only 1 name for the person, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the person’s surname.\nIf the change of name of a person is being registered under an order of a court directing the change of name to be registered, the application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\nThe registrar may notify the registering authority under a corresponding law of a change of name under this Act.\n(sec.33-ssec.1) Before registering the change of a person’s name, the registrar may require— evidence of the following— the identity, age and residence of the person; that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 —a copy of the written permission; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB —a copy of the written permission; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A —a copy of the written permission; and other information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\n(sec.33-ssec.2) The registrar may register, or refuse to register, a change of a person’s name.\n(sec.33-ssec.3) The registrar must refuse to register a change of name— if the registrar is not satisfied of— the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and the identity of the person whose change of name is to be registered; or if the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or if the proposed name is a prohibited name.\n(sec.33-ssec.4) If an application to register a person’s change of name states only 1 name for the person, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the person’s surname.\n(sec.33-ssec.5) If the change of name of a person is being registered under an order of a court directing the change of name to be registered, the application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\n(sec.33-ssec.6) The registrar may notify the registering authority under a corresponding law of a change of name under this Act.\n- (a) evidence of the following— (i) the identity, age and residence of the person; (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (i) the identity, age and residence of the person;\n- (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (b) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (c) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (d) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (e) other information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\n- (i) the identity, age and residence of the person;\n- (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (a) if the registrar is not satisfied of— (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be registered; or\n- (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\n- (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be registered; or\n- (b) if the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\n- (c) if the proposed name is a prohibited name.\n- (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\n- (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be registered; or","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"sec.34","sectionType":"section","heading":"How changes of name are registered","content":"### sec.34 How changes of name are registered\n\nThe registrar registers the change of a person’s name by entering in the change of name register—\nfor a change of name ordered by a court—\nthe particulars about the change of name stated in the court’s order; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\nfor another change of name—\nthe particulars prescribed by regulation; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\nDespite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the change of a person’s name even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the change are not available to the registrar.\nIf the registrar registers a change of name of a person whose birth or adoption was registered in Queensland, the registrar must also—\nif the person requests the change be noted in the relevant child register—note the changed name in the relevant child register; or\notherwise—note in the relevant child register that a change of name has been entered in the change of name register.\nThe registrar must note the change of the person’s name on the previous entry, if any, for the person in the change of name register.\n(sec.34-ssec.1) The registrar registers the change of a person’s name by entering in the change of name register— for a change of name ordered by a court— the particulars about the change of name stated in the court’s order; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or for another change of name— the particulars prescribed by regulation; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n(sec.34-ssec.2) Despite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the change of a person’s name even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the change are not available to the registrar.\n(sec.34-ssec.3) If the registrar registers a change of name of a person whose birth or adoption was registered in Queensland, the registrar must also— if the person requests the change be noted in the relevant child register—note the changed name in the relevant child register; or otherwise—note in the relevant child register that a change of name has been entered in the change of name register.\n(sec.34-ssec.4) The registrar must note the change of the person’s name on the previous entry, if any, for the person in the change of name register.\n- (a) for a change of name ordered by a court— (i) the particulars about the change of name stated in the court’s order; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars about the change of name stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (b) for another change of name— (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars about the change of name stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (a) if the person requests the change be noted in the relevant child register—note the changed name in the relevant child register; or\n- (b) otherwise—note in the relevant child register that a change of name has been entered in the change of name register.","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"sec.35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notation of change of name other than by registration","content":"### sec.35 Notation of change of name other than by registration\n\nThis section applies if—\na person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; and\nthe person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process.\nan order of a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, including an order approving a change of name\na deed poll under the law of another State\nAn adult person may apply to the registrar to note the change of the person’s name.\nA child’s parents may apply to the registrar to note the change of the child’s name.\nHowever, 1 of the parents may apply to note the change of the child’s name if—\nthe parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or\nthe other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\nthe parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about—\nmajor long-term issues for the child; or\nthe child’s name; or\na Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 ; or\na Queensland court or non-Queensland court has ordered the change of name.\nA person may apply to note the change of the child’s name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\nthe person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nTwo or more persons may apply to note the change of the child’s name if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\nthe persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nAn application made under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by—\na document, prescribed by regulation, that evidences that the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process; and\nthe fee prescribed by regulation.\nBefore noting the change of a person’s name, the registrar may require—\nevidence of the following—\nthe identity and age of the person;\nthat the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\nother information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\nThe registrar must not approve an application to note the change of a person’s name—\nif the registrar is not satisfied of—\nthe identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\nthe identity of the person whose change of name is to be noted; or\nif the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\nif the name is a prohibited name.\nIf an application to note a person’s change of name states only 1 name for the person, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the person’s surname.\nIn this section—\nnote , a change of a person’s name, means note a change of the person’s name in the relevant child register.\n(sec.35-ssec.1) This section applies if— a person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; and the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process. an order of a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, including an order approving a change of name a deed poll under the law of another State\n(sec.35-ssec.2) An adult person may apply to the registrar to note the change of the person’s name.\n(sec.35-ssec.3) A child’s parents may apply to the registrar to note the change of the child’s name.\n(sec.35-ssec.4) However, 1 of the parents may apply to note the change of the child’s name if— the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— major long-term issues for the child; or the child’s name; or a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 ; or a Queensland court or non-Queensland court has ordered the change of name.\n(sec.35-ssec.5) A person may apply to note the change of the child’s name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.35-ssec.6) Two or more persons may apply to note the change of the child’s name if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.35-ssec.7) An application made under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by— a document, prescribed by regulation, that evidences that the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process; and the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.35-ssec.8) Before noting the change of a person’s name, the registrar may require— evidence of the following— the identity and age of the person; that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and other information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\n(sec.35-ssec.9) The registrar must not approve an application to note the change of a person’s name— if the registrar is not satisfied of— the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and the identity of the person whose change of name is to be noted; or if the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or if the name is a prohibited name.\n(sec.35-ssec.10) If an application to note a person’s change of name states only 1 name for the person, the name is taken, for this Act, to be the person’s surname.\n(sec.35-ssec.11) In this section— note , a change of a person’s name, means note a change of the person’s name in the relevant child register.\n- (a) a person’s birth or adoption was registered in Queensland; and\n- (b) the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process. Examples of other legal process— • an order of a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, including an order approving a change of name • a deed poll under the law of another State\n- • an order of a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, including an order approving a change of name\n- • a deed poll under the law of another State\n- • an order of a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, including an order approving a change of name\n- • a deed poll under the law of another State\n- (a) the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register; or\n- (b) the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (c) the parent has sole parental responsibility, under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, to make decisions about— (i) major long-term issues for the child; or (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (d) a Magistrates Court approves the change of name under section&#160;30 ; or\n- (e) a Queensland court or non-Queensland court has ordered the change of name.\n- (i) major long-term issues for the child; or\n- (ii) the child’s name; or\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by— (i) a document, prescribed by regulation, that evidences that the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process; and (ii) the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) a document, prescribed by regulation, that evidences that the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process; and\n- (ii) the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) a document, prescribed by regulation, that evidences that the person’s name has been changed under the law of another State or other legal process; and\n- (ii) the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) evidence of the following— (i) the identity and age of the person; (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (i) the identity and age of the person;\n- (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (b) other information the registrar believes is relevant to the application.\n- (i) the identity and age of the person;\n- (ii) that the change of name is not sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; and\n- (a) if the registrar is not satisfied of— (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be noted; or\n- (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\n- (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be noted; or\n- (b) if the registrar reasonably suspects that the change of name is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\n- (c) if the name is a prohibited name.\n- (i) the identity of the applicant, or each of the applicants; and\n- (ii) the identity of the person whose change of name is to be noted; or","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"sec.36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Re-registration of relevant event after change of name registered or noted","content":"### sec.36 Re-registration of relevant event after change of name registered or noted\n\nThis section applies if the registrar—\nregisters the change of a person’s name under section&#160;34 ; or\nnotes the change of a person’s name under section&#160;35 .\nIf the person is an adult person, the person may apply to re-register the person’s relevant event.\nIf the person is a child, the person or persons who applied under section&#160;29 to register the change of the child’s name, or under section&#160;35 to note the change of the child’s name, may apply to re-register the child’s relevant event.\nAn application made under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nThe registrar may re-register the person’s relevant event by—\nmaking a new entry in the register that includes—\nall the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\na note that the new entry was made under this section; and\nnoting on the closed entry—\nthat the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\na reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n(sec.36-ssec.1) This section applies if the registrar— registers the change of a person’s name under section&#160;34 ; or notes the change of a person’s name under section&#160;35 .\n(sec.36-ssec.2) If the person is an adult person, the person may apply to re-register the person’s relevant event.\n(sec.36-ssec.3) If the person is a child, the person or persons who applied under section&#160;29 to register the change of the child’s name, or under section&#160;35 to note the change of the child’s name, may apply to re-register the child’s relevant event.\n(sec.36-ssec.4) An application made under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.36-ssec.5) The registrar may re-register the person’s relevant event by— making a new entry in the register that includes— all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and a note that the new entry was made under this section; and noting on the closed entry— that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (a) registers the change of a person’s name under section&#160;34 ; or\n- (b) notes the change of a person’s name under section&#160;35 .\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) making a new entry in the register that includes— (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\n- (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (b) noting on the closed entry— (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\n- (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Acknowledgement of sex","content":"# Acknowledgement of sex","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Interpretation","content":"## Interpretation","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"sec.37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions for part","content":"### sec.37 Definitions for part\n\nIn this part—\nassessment , of a child, means a written assessment of the child by a developmentally informed practitioner who has a relationship with the child, stating—\nfor an application made under division&#160;2 —\nthat the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\nthat the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register; and\nthe information prescribed by regulation; or\nfor an application made under division&#160;3 —\nthat the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\nthat the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and\nthe information prescribed by regulation.\ndevelopmentally informed practitioner means a person who is a type of person prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) for an application made under division&#160;2 — (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register; and (iii) the information prescribed by regulation; or\n- (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\n- (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register; and\n- (iii) the information prescribed by regulation; or\n- (b) for an application made under division&#160;3 — (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and (iii) the information prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\n- (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and\n- (iii) the information prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\n- (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register; and\n- (iii) the information prescribed by regulation; or\n- (i) that the application is supported by the developmentally informed practitioner; and\n- (ii) that the child understands the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and\n- (iii) the information prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Persons whose birth or adoption is registered in Queensland","content":"## Persons whose birth or adoption is registered in Queensland","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"sec.38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of division","content":"### sec.38 Application of division\n\nThis division applies to a person whose birth or adoption is registered in Queensland.","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"sec.39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to alter record of sex of person 16 years or more in relevant child register","content":"### sec.39 Application to alter record of sex of person 16 years or more in relevant child register\n\nIf the person is 16 years or more, the person may apply to alter the record of sex of the person in the relevant child register.\nAn application must—\nbe in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\nnominate a sex descriptor; and\ninclude a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person—\nidentifies as the sex stated in the application; and\nlives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\nbe accompanied by—\na supporting statement; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\nthe fee prescribed by regulation; and\nany other documents or information required by the registrar.\nA supporting statement must—\nbe made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and\nstate that the person making the supporting statement—\nbelieves that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\nsupports the application.\nA person who makes an application under this section may apply at the same time to register a change of the person’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.39-ssec.1) If the person is 16 years or more, the person may apply to alter the record of sex of the person in the relevant child register.\n(sec.39-ssec.2) An application must— be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and nominate a sex descriptor; and include a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person— identifies as the sex stated in the application; and lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and be accompanied by— a supporting statement; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and the fee prescribed by regulation; and any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n(sec.39-ssec.3) A supporting statement must— be made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and state that the person making the supporting statement— believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and supports the application.\n(sec.39-ssec.4) A person who makes an application under this section may apply at the same time to register a change of the person’s first name in the change of name register.\n- (a) be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) nominate a sex descriptor; and\n- (c) include a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person— (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and\n- (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (d) be accompanied by— (i) a supporting statement; and (ii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and (iv) the fee prescribed by regulation; and (v) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) a supporting statement; and\n- (ii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iv) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (v) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and\n- (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (i) a supporting statement; and\n- (ii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iv) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (v) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (a) be made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and\n- (b) state that the person making the supporting statement— (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and (ii) supports the application.\n- (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\n- (ii) supports the application.\n- (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\n- (ii) supports the application.","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"sec.40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to alter record of sex of child under 16 years in relevant child register","content":"### sec.40 Application to alter record of sex of child under 16 years in relevant child register\n\nThis section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\nThe child’s parents may apply to alter the record of sex of the child.\nHowever, 1 of the parents may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if—\nthe parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or\nthe other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\nthe parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or\nthe parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;44 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or\nthe parent has obtained a dispensation order.\nA person may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\nthe person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nTwo or more persons may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\nthe persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nThe child may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if the child has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;45 directing the registrar to accept the application.\nIn this section—\nalter the record of sex , of a child, means alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\n(sec.40-ssec.1) This section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\n(sec.40-ssec.2) The child’s parents may apply to alter the record of sex of the child.\n(sec.40-ssec.3) However, 1 of the parents may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if— the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or the parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or the parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;44 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or the parent has obtained a dispensation order.\n(sec.40-ssec.4) A person may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.40-ssec.5) Two or more persons may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.40-ssec.6) The child may apply to alter the record of sex of the child if the child has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;45 directing the registrar to accept the application.\n(sec.40-ssec.7) In this section— alter the record of sex , of a child, means alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\n- (a) the parent is the only parent of the child entered in the relevant child register or shown on the child’s birth certificate; or\n- (b) the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (c) the parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or\n- (d) the parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;44 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or\n- (e) the parent has obtained a dispensation order.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"sec.41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Form of application to alter record of sex of child under 16 years","content":"### sec.41 Form of application to alter record of sex of child under 16 years\n\nAn application made under section&#160;40 must—\nbe in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\nnominate a sex descriptor; and\nbe accompanied by—\nthe fee prescribed by regulation; and\nany other documents or information required by the registrar.\nIf a dispensation order was made in relation to the application, the application must also—\ninclude a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and\nbe accompanied by—\na copy of the dispensation order; and\nan assessment of the child.\nIf a court order, other than a dispensation order, was made in relation to the application, the application must also be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\nIf the application is not an application in relation to which a court order, including a dispensation order, was made and the application is made by a person other than the child, the application must also—\ninclude a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and\nbe accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.41-ssec.1) An application made under section&#160;40 must— be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and nominate a sex descriptor; and be accompanied by— the fee prescribed by regulation; and any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n(sec.41-ssec.2) If a dispensation order was made in relation to the application, the application must also— include a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and be accompanied by— a copy of the dispensation order; and an assessment of the child.\n(sec.41-ssec.3) If a court order, other than a dispensation order, was made in relation to the application, the application must also be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n(sec.41-ssec.4) If the application is not an application in relation to which a court order, including a dispensation order, was made and the application is made by a person other than the child, the application must also— include a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n- (a) be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) nominate a sex descriptor; and\n- (c) be accompanied by— (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (a) include a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and\n- (b) be accompanied by— (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and\n- (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and\n- (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (a) include a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that alteration of the record of sex of the child is in the child’s best interests; and\n- (b) be accompanied by an assessment of the child.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"sec.42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to register change of child’s first name at the same time","content":"### sec.42 Application to register change of child’s first name at the same time\n\nSubsection&#160;(2) applies if—\n1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and\neither—\nthe application is not an application—\nfor which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or\nthat another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\na dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\nThe person or persons may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\nSubsection&#160;(4) applies if—\n1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and\neither—\nthe application is an application the Childrens Court directed the registrar to accept under section&#160;44 (2) and the court also made an order under section&#160;44 (7) approving a change of name for the child; or\nanother Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of name for the child.\nThe person or persons may apply at the same time to register the change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\nA child who makes an application under section&#160;40 may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register, if the Childrens Court makes an order approving the change of name under section&#160;45 (10) .\nIf an application is made under subsection&#160;(4) or (5) , the application must be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n(sec.42-ssec.1) Subsection&#160;(2) applies if— 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and either— the application is not an application— for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n(sec.42-ssec.2) The person or persons may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.42-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(4) applies if— 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and either— the application is an application the Childrens Court directed the registrar to accept under section&#160;44 (2) and the court also made an order under section&#160;44 (7) approving a change of name for the child; or another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of name for the child.\n(sec.42-ssec.4) The person or persons may apply at the same time to register the change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.42-ssec.5) A child who makes an application under section&#160;40 may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register, if the Childrens Court makes an order approving the change of name under section&#160;45 (10) .\n(sec.42-ssec.6) If an application is made under subsection&#160;(4) or (5) , the application must be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n- (a) 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and\n- (b) either— (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;44 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (a) 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;40 ; and\n- (b) either— (i) the application is an application the Childrens Court directed the registrar to accept under section&#160;44 (2) and the court also made an order under section&#160;44 (7) approving a change of name for the child; or (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of name for the child.\n- (i) the application is an application the Childrens Court directed the registrar to accept under section&#160;44 (2) and the court also made an order under section&#160;44 (7) approving a change of name for the child; or\n- (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of name for the child.\n- (i) the application is an application the Childrens Court directed the registrar to accept under section&#160;44 (2) and the court also made an order under section&#160;44 (7) approving a change of name for the child; or\n- (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of name for the child.","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"sec.43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Action by registrar","content":"### sec.43 Action by registrar\n\nThis section applies if an application is made to the registrar under section&#160;39 or 40 to alter the record of sex of a person in the relevant child register.\nThe registrar may alter, or refuse to alter, the record of sex of the person in the relevant child register.\nThe registrar must refuse to alter the record of sex if—\nthe alteration would result in the recorded sex being a prohibited sex descriptor; or\nthe registrar reasonably suspects that the alteration is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\na record of the person’s sex has been altered under this part within the 12 months immediately preceding the day when the application is made.\nThe registrar alters the record of sex of the person by re-registering the person’s relevant event.\nThe registrar re-registers the person’s relevant event by—\nmaking a new entry in the register that includes—\nall the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\na note stating the superseded information; and\na note that the new entry was made under this section; and\nnoting on the closed entry—\nthat the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\na reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n(sec.43-ssec.1) This section applies if an application is made to the registrar under section&#160;39 or 40 to alter the record of sex of a person in the relevant child register.\n(sec.43-ssec.2) The registrar may alter, or refuse to alter, the record of sex of the person in the relevant child register.\n(sec.43-ssec.3) The registrar must refuse to alter the record of sex if— the alteration would result in the recorded sex being a prohibited sex descriptor; or the registrar reasonably suspects that the alteration is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or a record of the person’s sex has been altered under this part within the 12 months immediately preceding the day when the application is made.\n(sec.43-ssec.4) The registrar alters the record of sex of the person by re-registering the person’s relevant event.\n(sec.43-ssec.5) The registrar re-registers the person’s relevant event by— making a new entry in the register that includes— all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and a note stating the superseded information; and a note that the new entry was made under this section; and noting on the closed entry— that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (a) the alteration would result in the recorded sex being a prohibited sex descriptor; or\n- (b) the registrar reasonably suspects that the alteration is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\n- (c) a record of the person’s sex has been altered under this part within the 12 months immediately preceding the day when the application is made.\n- (a) making a new entry in the register that includes— (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and (ii) a note stating the superseded information; and (iii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\n- (ii) a note stating the superseded information; and\n- (iii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (b) noting on the closed entry— (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded; and\n- (ii) a note stating the superseded information; and\n- (iii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"sec.44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to Childrens Court by parent or other person","content":"### sec.44 Application to Childrens Court by parent or other person\n\nThis section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\nThe Childrens Court may, on application by an eligible person for the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application to alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\nThe application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\nThe Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\nIn deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following—\nthe assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ;\nthe views of the child, however expressed;\nwhether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\nIf an eligible person for the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the person may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\nThe Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n(sec.44-ssec.1) This section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\n(sec.44-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may, on application by an eligible person for the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application to alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\n(sec.44-ssec.3) The application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.44-ssec.4) The Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\n(sec.44-ssec.5) In deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following— the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ; the views of the child, however expressed; whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n(sec.44-ssec.6) If an eligible person for the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the person may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\n(sec.44-ssec.7) The Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if— the name is not a prohibited name; and the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ;\n- (b) the views of the child, however expressed;\n- (c) whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"sec.45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to Childrens Court by child","content":"### sec.45 Application to Childrens Court by child\n\nThis section applies if—\nthe person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and\neach parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support an alteration of the record of sex of the child.\nThe Childrens Court may, on application by the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application to alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\nThe application must include the following statements by the child—\nthat the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;46 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents;\nthat the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;46 (5) .\nThe application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\nThe following persons are respondents to the application—\neach parent of the child;\neach person with parental responsibility for the child.\nThe child must serve a copy of the application on each of the respondents.\nThe Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\nIn deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following—\nthe assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ;\nthe views of the child, however expressed;\nwhether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\nIf the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the child may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\nThe Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n(sec.45-ssec.1) This section applies if— the person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and each parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support an alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n(sec.45-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may, on application by the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application to alter the record of sex of the child in the relevant child register.\n(sec.45-ssec.3) The application must include the following statements by the child— that the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;46 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents; that the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;46 (5) .\n(sec.45-ssec.4) The application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.45-ssec.5) The following persons are respondents to the application— each parent of the child; each person with parental responsibility for the child.\n(sec.45-ssec.6) The child must serve a copy of the application on each of the respondents.\n(sec.45-ssec.7) The Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\n(sec.45-ssec.8) In deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following— the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ; the views of the child, however expressed; whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n(sec.45-ssec.9) If the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the child may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\n(sec.45-ssec.10) The Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if— the name is not a prohibited name; and the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and\n- (b) each parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support an alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n- (a) that the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;46 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents;\n- (b) that the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;46 (5) .\n- (a) each parent of the child;\n- (b) each person with parental responsibility for the child.\n- (a) the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ;\n- (b) the views of the child, however expressed;\n- (c) whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the alteration of the record of sex of the child.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"sec.46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dispensing with service of application","content":"### sec.46 Dispensing with service of application\n\nThis section applies if a child makes an application under section&#160;45 .\nThe child may also apply to the Childrens Court for an order dispensing with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on 1 or more of the respondents (the requirement ).\nThe Childrens Court must not make an order under subsection&#160;(2) unless the court is satisfied that the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\nFor subsection&#160;(3) , a child is not adversely affected only because—\n1 or more of the respondents does not support the alteration of the record of sex of the child; and\nthat lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\nThe child may make submissions to the Childrens Court about whether the court should make an order under subsection&#160;(2) .\nIf the child makes submissions under subsection&#160;(5) , the Childrens Court must, after considering the submissions, decide whether the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\nIf the Childrens Court decides that the child could not reasonably be expected to be adversely affected by the requirement, the court must give the child a written notice stating—\nthe reasons for the court’s decision; and\nthat the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and\nthat the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.\n(sec.46-ssec.1) This section applies if a child makes an application under section&#160;45 .\n(sec.46-ssec.2) The child may also apply to the Childrens Court for an order dispensing with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on 1 or more of the respondents (the requirement ).\n(sec.46-ssec.3) The Childrens Court must not make an order under subsection&#160;(2) unless the court is satisfied that the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\n(sec.46-ssec.4) For subsection&#160;(3) , a child is not adversely affected only because— 1 or more of the respondents does not support the alteration of the record of sex of the child; and that lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\n(sec.46-ssec.5) The child may make submissions to the Childrens Court about whether the court should make an order under subsection&#160;(2) .\n(sec.46-ssec.6) If the child makes submissions under subsection&#160;(5) , the Childrens Court must, after considering the submissions, decide whether the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\n(sec.46-ssec.7) If the Childrens Court decides that the child could not reasonably be expected to be adversely affected by the requirement, the court must give the child a written notice stating— the reasons for the court’s decision; and that the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and that the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.\n- (a) 1 or more of the respondents does not support the alteration of the record of sex of the child; and\n- (b) that lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\n- (a) the reasons for the court’s decision; and\n- (b) that the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and\n- (c) that the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"sec.47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of alteration of record of sex of person in relevant child register","content":"### sec.47 Effect of alteration of record of sex of person in relevant child register\n\nIf the record of a person’s sex in the relevant child register is altered under this division, the person is a person of the sex as altered for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\nSubsection&#160;(3) applies to a person who has an entitlement—\nunder a will; or\nunder a trust; or\notherwise by operation of law.\nThe person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because the record of the person’s sex has been altered in the relevant child register.\n(sec.47-ssec.1) If the record of a person’s sex in the relevant child register is altered under this division, the person is a person of the sex as altered for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\n(sec.47-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(3) applies to a person who has an entitlement— under a will; or under a trust; or otherwise by operation of law.\n(sec.47-ssec.3) The person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because the record of the person’s sex has been altered in the relevant child register.\n- (a) under a will; or\n- (b) under a trust; or\n- (c) otherwise by operation of law.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Queensland residents born elsewhere","content":"## Queensland residents born elsewhere","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"sec.48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of division","content":"### sec.48 Application of division\n\nThis division applies in relation to a person who—\nwas born outside of Queensland; and\nhas been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes an application, or an application is made on behalf of the person, under this division.\n- (a) was born outside of Queensland; and\n- (b) has been ordinarily resident in Queensland for at least 12 consecutive months immediately before the person makes an application, or an application is made on behalf of the person, under this division.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"sec.49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of recognised details certificate","content":"### sec.49 Meaning of recognised details certificate\n\nA recognised details certificate , for a person, is a document that acknowledges the person’s name and sex.","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"sec.50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for recognised details certificate for person 16 years or more","content":"### sec.50 Application for recognised details certificate for person 16 years or more\n\nIf the person is 16 years or more the person may apply to the registrar for a recognised details certificate for the person.\nAn application must—\nbe in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\nnominate a sex descriptor; and\ninclude a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person—\nidentifies as the sex stated in the application; and\nlives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\nbe accompanied by—\na supporting statement; and\nevidence of the person’s name and residency; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\nif the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\nthe fee prescribed by regulation; and\nany other documents or information required by the registrar.\nA supporting statement must—\nbe made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and\nstate that the person making the supporting statement—\nbelieves that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\nsupports the application.\nA person who makes an application under this section, other than a person who was born in another State, may apply at the same time to register a change of the person’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.50-ssec.1) If the person is 16 years or more the person may apply to the registrar for a recognised details certificate for the person.\n(sec.50-ssec.2) An application must— be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and nominate a sex descriptor; and include a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person— identifies as the sex stated in the application; and lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and be accompanied by— a supporting statement; and evidence of the person’s name and residency; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and the fee prescribed by regulation; and any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n(sec.50-ssec.3) A supporting statement must— be made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and state that the person making the supporting statement— believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and supports the application.\n(sec.50-ssec.4) A person who makes an application under this section, other than a person who was born in another State, may apply at the same time to register a change of the person’s first name in the change of name register.\n- (a) be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) nominate a sex descriptor; and\n- (c) include a statement, verified by statutory declaration, that the person— (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and\n- (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (d) be accompanied by— (i) a supporting statement; and (ii) evidence of the person’s name and residency; and (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and (iv) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and (v) the fee prescribed by regulation; and (vi) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) a supporting statement; and\n- (ii) evidence of the person’s name and residency; and\n- (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iv) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (v) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (vi) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) identifies as the sex stated in the application; and\n- (ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person identified by that sex; and\n- (i) a supporting statement; and\n- (ii) evidence of the person’s name and residency; and\n- (iii) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (iv) if the person may only make the application with written permission under the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA —a copy of the written permission; and\n- (v) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (vi) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (a) be made by a person who is at least 18 years and who has known the person making the application for at least 12 months; and\n- (b) state that the person making the supporting statement— (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and (ii) supports the application.\n- (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\n- (ii) supports the application.\n- (i) believes that the person making the application makes the application in good faith; and\n- (ii) supports the application.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"sec.51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for recognised details certificate for child under 16 years","content":"### sec.51 Application for recognised details certificate for child under 16 years\n\nThis section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\nThe child’s parents may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child.\nHowever, 1 of the parents may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if—\nthe parent is the only parent named in a register kept under a corresponding law or the law of any place outside Australia; or\nthe other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\nthe parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or\nthe parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;55 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or\nthe parent has obtained a dispensation order.\nA person may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\nthe person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nTwo or more persons may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if—\ncircumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\nthe persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\nThe child may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if the child has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;56 directing the registrar to accept the application.\n(sec.51-ssec.1) This section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\n(sec.51-ssec.2) The child’s parents may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.51-ssec.3) However, 1 of the parents may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if— the parent is the only parent named in a register kept under a corresponding law or the law of any place outside Australia; or the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or the parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or the parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;55 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or the parent has obtained a dispensation order.\n(sec.51-ssec.4) A person may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.51-ssec.5) Two or more persons may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if— circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n(sec.51-ssec.6) The child may apply for a recognised details certificate for the child if the child has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;56 directing the registrar to accept the application.\n- (a) the parent is the only parent named in a register kept under a corresponding law or the law of any place outside Australia; or\n- (b) the other parent is dead and there is no other person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (c) the parent has sole parental responsibility to make decisions about major long-term issues for the child under a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII; or\n- (d) the parent has obtained an order from the Childrens Court under section&#160;55 , or from another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court, directing the registrar to accept the application; or\n- (e) the parent has obtained a dispensation order.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;1 apply to the person in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the person is a person mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.\n- (a) circumstances stated in column 1 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 apply to the persons in relation to the child; and\n- (b) the persons are persons mentioned in column 2 of the table opposite those circumstances.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"sec.52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Form of application for recognised details certificate for child under 16 years","content":"### sec.52 Form of application for recognised details certificate for child under 16 years\n\nAn application made under section&#160;51 must—\nbe in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\nnominate a sex descriptor; and\nbe accompanied by—\nthe fee prescribed by regulation; and\nany other documents or information required by the registrar.\nIf a dispensation order was made in relation to the application, the application must also—\ninclude a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and\nbe accompanied by—\na copy of the dispensation order; and\nan assessment of the child.\nIf a court order, other than a dispensation order, was made in relation to the application, the application must also be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\nIf the application is not an application in relation to which a court order, including a dispensation order, was made and the application is made by a person other than the child, the application must also—\ninclude a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and\nbe accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.52-ssec.1) An application made under section&#160;51 must— be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and nominate a sex descriptor; and be accompanied by— the fee prescribed by regulation; and any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n(sec.52-ssec.2) If a dispensation order was made in relation to the application, the application must also— include a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and be accompanied by— a copy of the dispensation order; and an assessment of the child.\n(sec.52-ssec.3) If a court order, other than a dispensation order, was made in relation to the application, the application must also be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n(sec.52-ssec.4) If the application is not an application in relation to which a court order, including a dispensation order, was made and the application is made by a person other than the child, the application must also— include a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n- (a) be in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) nominate a sex descriptor; and\n- (c) be accompanied by— (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (i) the fee prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other documents or information required by the registrar.\n- (a) include a statement that the applicant believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and\n- (b) be accompanied by— (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and\n- (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (i) a copy of the dispensation order; and\n- (ii) an assessment of the child.\n- (a) include a statement that the applicant, or each of the applicants, believes on reasonable grounds that the issue of a recognised details certificate is in the child’s best interests; and\n- (b) be accompanied by an assessment of the child.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"sec.53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to register change of child’s first name at the same time","content":"### sec.53 Application to register change of child’s first name at the same time\n\nSubsection&#160;(2) applies if—\n1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and\nthe child was not born in another State; and\neither—\nthe application is not an application—\nfor which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or\nthat another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\na dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\nThe person or persons may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\nSubsection&#160;(4) applies if—\n1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and\nthe child was not born in another State; and\neither—\nthe application is an application for which the Childrens Court made an order under section&#160;55 (2) directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order under section&#160;55 (8) approving a change of first name for the child; or\nanother Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of first name for the child.\nThe person or persons may apply at the same time to register the change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\nA child who makes an application under section&#160;51 may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register, if the Childrens Court makes an order approving the change of name under section&#160;56 (10) .\nIf an application is made under subsection&#160;(4) or (5) , the application must be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n(sec.53-ssec.1) Subsection&#160;(2) applies if— 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and the child was not born in another State; and either— the application is not an application— for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n(sec.53-ssec.2) The person or persons may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.53-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(4) applies if— 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and the child was not born in another State; and either— the application is an application for which the Childrens Court made an order under section&#160;55 (2) directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order under section&#160;55 (8) approving a change of first name for the child; or another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of first name for the child.\n(sec.53-ssec.4) The person or persons may apply at the same time to register the change of the child’s first name in the change of name register.\n(sec.53-ssec.5) A child who makes an application under section&#160;51 may apply at the same time to register a change of the child’s first name in the change of name register, if the Childrens Court makes an order approving the change of name under section&#160;56 (10) .\n(sec.53-ssec.6) If an application is made under subsection&#160;(4) or (5) , the application must be accompanied by a copy of the court order.\n- (a) 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and\n- (b) the child was not born in another State; and\n- (c) either— (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (i) the application is not an application— (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (ii) a dispensation order, that included an order about changing the child’s name, was made in relation to the application.\n- (A) for which an order of the Childrens Court was sought under section&#160;55 (2) ; or\n- (B) that another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court directed the registrar to accept; or\n- (a) 1 or more persons, other than the child, make an application under section&#160;51 ; and\n- (b) the child was not born in another State; and\n- (c) either— (i) the application is an application for which the Childrens Court made an order under section&#160;55 (2) directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order under section&#160;55 (8) approving a change of first name for the child; or (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of first name for the child.\n- (i) the application is an application for which the Childrens Court made an order under section&#160;55 (2) directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order under section&#160;55 (8) approving a change of first name for the child; or\n- (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of first name for the child.\n- (i) the application is an application for which the Childrens Court made an order under section&#160;55 (2) directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order under section&#160;55 (8) approving a change of first name for the child; or\n- (ii) another Queensland court or a non-Queensland court made an order directing the registrar to accept the application and the court also made an order approving a change of first name for the child.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"sec.54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Action by registrar","content":"### sec.54 Action by registrar\n\nThis section applies if an application is made under section&#160;50 or 51 to the registrar for a recognised details certificate for a person.\nThe registrar may issue, or refuse to issue, the recognised details certificate for the person.\nThe registrar must refuse to issue the recognised details certificate if—\nthe recognised details certificate would state a prohibited sex descriptor; or\nthe registrar reasonably suspects that the recognised details certificate is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\nwithin the 12 months immediately preceding the day the application is made, a recognised details certificate has been issued for the person under this division.\nThe recognised details certificate—\nmust state the name and sex of the person as stated in the application for the certificate; and\nmay only state any previous name or sex of the person if the applicant has requested the previous name or sex to be stated on the certificate; and\nmust state the person’s date and place of birth; and\nmay, if the registrar considers it appropriate, include any other information about the person’s birth requested in the application to be included; and\nmust include a statement to the effect that details about the person included in the certificate, except the person’s sex, are not certified by the registrar.\n(sec.54-ssec.1) This section applies if an application is made under section&#160;50 or 51 to the registrar for a recognised details certificate for a person.\n(sec.54-ssec.2) The registrar may issue, or refuse to issue, the recognised details certificate for the person.\n(sec.54-ssec.3) The registrar must refuse to issue the recognised details certificate if— the recognised details certificate would state a prohibited sex descriptor; or the registrar reasonably suspects that the recognised details certificate is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or within the 12 months immediately preceding the day the application is made, a recognised details certificate has been issued for the person under this division.\n(sec.54-ssec.4) The recognised details certificate— must state the name and sex of the person as stated in the application for the certificate; and may only state any previous name or sex of the person if the applicant has requested the previous name or sex to be stated on the certificate; and must state the person’s date and place of birth; and may, if the registrar considers it appropriate, include any other information about the person’s birth requested in the application to be included; and must include a statement to the effect that details about the person included in the certificate, except the person’s sex, are not certified by the registrar.\n- (a) the recognised details certificate would state a prohibited sex descriptor; or\n- (b) the registrar reasonably suspects that the recognised details certificate is sought for a fraudulent or other improper purpose; or\n- (c) within the 12 months immediately preceding the day the application is made, a recognised details certificate has been issued for the person under this division.\n- (a) must state the name and sex of the person as stated in the application for the certificate; and\n- (b) may only state any previous name or sex of the person if the applicant has requested the previous name or sex to be stated on the certificate; and\n- (c) must state the person’s date and place of birth; and\n- (d) may, if the registrar considers it appropriate, include any other information about the person’s birth requested in the application to be included; and\n- (e) must include a statement to the effect that details about the person included in the certificate, except the person’s sex, are not certified by the registrar.","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"sec.55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to Childrens Court by parent or other person","content":"### sec.55 Application to Childrens Court by parent or other person\n\nThis section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\nThe Childrens Court may, on application by an eligible person for the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application for a recognised details certificate for the child.\nThe application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\nThe Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\nIn deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following—\nthe assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ;\nthe views of the child, however expressed;\nwhether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\nIf an eligible person for the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the person may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\nSubsection&#160;(6) does not apply if the child was born in another State.\nThe Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n(sec.55-ssec.1) This section applies if the person is a child under 16 years.\n(sec.55-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may, on application by an eligible person for the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application for a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.55-ssec.3) The application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.55-ssec.4) The Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\n(sec.55-ssec.5) In deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following— the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ; the views of the child, however expressed; whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.55-ssec.6) If an eligible person for the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the person may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\n(sec.55-ssec.7) Subsection&#160;(6) does not apply if the child was born in another State.\n(sec.55-ssec.8) The Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if— the name is not a prohibited name; and the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) ;\n- (b) the views of the child, however expressed;\n- (c) whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"sec.56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application to Childrens Court by child","content":"### sec.56 Application to Childrens Court by child\n\nThis section applies if—\nthe person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and\neach parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\nThe Childrens Court may, on application by the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application for a recognised details certificate for the child.\nThe application must include the following statements by the child—\nthat the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;57 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents;\nthat the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;57 (5) .\nThe application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\nThe following persons are respondents to the application—\neach parent of the child;\neach person with parental responsibility for the child.\nThe Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\nIn deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following—\nthe assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ;\nthe views of the child, however expressed;\nwhether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\nIf the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the child may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\nSubsection&#160;(8) does not apply if the child was born in another State.\nThe Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if—\nthe name is not a prohibited name; and\nthe court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n(sec.56-ssec.1) This section applies if— the person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and each parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may, on application by the child, make an order directing the registrar to accept an application for a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.3) The application must include the following statements by the child— that the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;57 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents; that the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;57 (5) .\n(sec.56-ssec.4) The application must be accompanied by an assessment of the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.5) The following persons are respondents to the application— each parent of the child; each person with parental responsibility for the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.6) The Childrens Court must make the order if the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\n(sec.56-ssec.7) In deciding whether making the order is in the child’s best interests, the matters to which the Childrens Court may have regard include the following— the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ; the views of the child, however expressed; whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.8) If the child makes an application to the Childrens Court under this section the child may apply to the court at the same time for approval of a proposed change of first name for the child.\n(sec.56-ssec.9) Subsection&#160;(8) does not apply if the child was born in another State.\n(sec.56-ssec.10) The Childrens Court may make an order approving the proposed change of first name for the child if— the name is not a prohibited name; and the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.\n- (a) the person is a child of at least 12 years but less than 16 years; and\n- (b) each parent of the child or person with parental responsibility for the child does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n- (a) that the child is aware that, unless the Childrens Court decides otherwise under section&#160;57 (2) , a copy of the application must be served on the respondents;\n- (b) that the child is aware the child may make submissions to the Childrens Court under section&#160;57 (5) .\n- (a) each parent of the child;\n- (b) each person with parental responsibility for the child.\n- (a) the assessment mentioned in subsection&#160;(4) ;\n- (b) the views of the child, however expressed;\n- (c) whether the child is sufficiently mature to understand the meaning and legal implications of the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child.\n- (a) the name is not a prohibited name; and\n- (b) the court is satisfied that the change is in the child’s best interests.","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"sec.57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dispensing with service of application","content":"### sec.57 Dispensing with service of application\n\nThis section applies if a child makes an application under section&#160;56 .\nThe child may also apply to the Childrens Court for an order dispensing with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on 1 or more of the respondents (the requirement ).\nThe Childrens Court must not make an order under subsection&#160;(2) unless the court is satisfied that the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\nFor subsection&#160;(3) , a child is not adversely affected only because—\n1 or more of the respondents does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and\nthat lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\nThe child may make submissions to the Childrens Court about whether the court should make an order under subsection&#160;(2) .\nIf the child makes submissions under subsection&#160;(5) , the Childrens Court must, after considering the submissions, decide whether the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\nIf the Childrens Court decides that the child could not reasonably be expected to be adversely affected by the requirement, the court must give the child a written notice stating—\nthe reasons for the court’s decision; and\nthat the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and\nthat the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.\n(sec.57-ssec.1) This section applies if a child makes an application under section&#160;56 .\n(sec.57-ssec.2) The child may also apply to the Childrens Court for an order dispensing with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on 1 or more of the respondents (the requirement ).\n(sec.57-ssec.3) The Childrens Court must not make an order under subsection&#160;(2) unless the court is satisfied that the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\n(sec.57-ssec.4) For subsection&#160;(3) , a child is not adversely affected only because— 1 or more of the respondents does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and that lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\n(sec.57-ssec.5) The child may make submissions to the Childrens Court about whether the court should make an order under subsection&#160;(2) .\n(sec.57-ssec.6) If the child makes submissions under subsection&#160;(5) , the Childrens Court must, after considering the submissions, decide whether the requirement could reasonably be expected to adversely affect the child.\n(sec.57-ssec.7) If the Childrens Court decides that the child could not reasonably be expected to be adversely affected by the requirement, the court must give the child a written notice stating— the reasons for the court’s decision; and that the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and that the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.\n- (a) 1 or more of the respondents does not support the issue of a recognised details certificate for the child; and\n- (b) that lack of support causes discomfort to the child.\n- (a) the reasons for the court’s decision; and\n- (b) that the child may, in writing, withdraw the application before the end of a stated period of at least 28 days after the day the notice is given; and\n- (c) that the child may appeal against the court’s decision under section&#160;78 (2) within 28 days after the decision is made.","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"sec.58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of recognised details certificate","content":"### sec.58 Effect of recognised details certificate\n\nIf a recognised details certificate is issued for a person under this division, the person is a person of the sex stated in the certificate for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\nIf more than 1 recognised details certificate has been issued for a person, the person is a person of the sex stated in the most recently issued certificate.\nSubsection&#160;(4) applies to a person who has an entitlement—\nunder a will; or\nunder a trust; or\notherwise by operation of law.\nThe person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because a recognised details certificate has been issued for the person.\n(sec.58-ssec.1) If a recognised details certificate is issued for a person under this division, the person is a person of the sex stated in the certificate for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\n(sec.58-ssec.2) If more than 1 recognised details certificate has been issued for a person, the person is a person of the sex stated in the most recently issued certificate.\n(sec.58-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(4) applies to a person who has an entitlement— under a will; or under a trust; or otherwise by operation of law.\n(sec.58-ssec.4) The person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because a recognised details certificate has been issued for the person.\n- (a) under a will; or\n- (b) under a trust; or\n- (c) otherwise by operation of law.","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"sec.59","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of recognised details certificate","content":"### sec.59 Cancellation of recognised details certificate\n\nThe registrar must cancel a recognised details certificate issued for a person if the registrar receives an application from the chief executive (corrective services) under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA (6) or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA (6) about the certificate.","sortOrder":74},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Dispensation orders","content":"## Dispensation orders","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"sec.60","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of division","content":"### sec.60 Application of division\n\nThis division applies if—\na parent (a relevant person ) of a child under 16 years is not able to make an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child because the other parent (the stated party ) of the child does not consent to, or have the capacity to consent to, the application being made; or\na person (also a relevant person ) who is 1 of a group of 2 or more persons mentioned in column 2 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 with parental responsibility for a child under 16 years is not able to make an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child because 1 or more of the other persons (each also a stated party ) in the group does not consent to, or have the capacity to consent to, the application being made.\n- (a) a parent (a relevant person ) of a child under 16 years is not able to make an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child because the other parent (the stated party ) of the child does not consent to, or have the capacity to consent to, the application being made; or\n- (b) a person (also a relevant person ) who is 1 of a group of 2 or more persons mentioned in column 2 of the table in schedule&#160;1 , part&#160;2 with parental responsibility for a child under 16 years is not able to make an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child because 1 or more of the other persons (each also a stated party ) in the group does not consent to, or have the capacity to consent to, the application being made.","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"sec.61","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions for division","content":"### sec.61 Definitions for division\n\nIn this division—\nacknowledgement of sex application , for a child, means—\nan application under section&#160;40 to alter the record of sex of the child; or\nan application under section&#160;51 for a recognised details certificate for the child.\ncombined application , for a child, means—\nan application under section&#160;40 to alter the record of sex of the child and an application under section&#160;42 to register a change of the child’s first name; or\nan application under section&#160;51 for a recognised details certificate for the child and an application under section&#160;53 to register a change of the child’s first name.\ndispensation order see section&#160;62 (1) .\nrelevant person see section&#160;60 (a) and (b) .\nstated party see section&#160;60 (a) and (b) .\n- (a) an application under section&#160;40 to alter the record of sex of the child; or\n- (b) an application under section&#160;51 for a recognised details certificate for the child.\n- (a) an application under section&#160;40 to alter the record of sex of the child and an application under section&#160;42 to register a change of the child’s first name; or\n- (b) an application under section&#160;51 for a recognised details certificate for the child and an application under section&#160;53 to register a change of the child’s first name.","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"sec.62","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application for dispensation order","content":"### sec.62 Application for dispensation order\n\nA relevant person may apply to the Childrens Court for an order (a dispensation order ) dispensing with the need for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application to be made with the consent of a stated party.\nThe application must state the grounds on which it is made.\n(sec.62-ssec.1) A relevant person may apply to the Childrens Court for an order (a dispensation order ) dispensing with the need for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application to be made with the consent of a stated party.\n(sec.62-ssec.2) The application must state the grounds on which it is made.","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"sec.63","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notice of application","content":"### sec.63 Notice of application\n\nAs soon as practicable after filing an application for a dispensation order, the relevant person must serve a copy of the application on the stated party.\nA copy served on the stated party must state—\nwhere and when the application is to be heard; and\nthat the application may be heard and decided even though the party does not appear in court.\nThe Childrens Court may dispense with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on the stated party if the court is satisfied of any of the following matters—\nthe relevant person can not locate the party after making all reasonable enquiries;\nthe conception of the child was a result of an offence committed by the party;\nit is in the child’s best interests to dispense with service.\n(sec.63-ssec.1) As soon as practicable after filing an application for a dispensation order, the relevant person must serve a copy of the application on the stated party.\n(sec.63-ssec.2) A copy served on the stated party must state— where and when the application is to be heard; and that the application may be heard and decided even though the party does not appear in court.\n(sec.63-ssec.3) The Childrens Court may dispense with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on the stated party if the court is satisfied of any of the following matters— the relevant person can not locate the party after making all reasonable enquiries; the conception of the child was a result of an offence committed by the party; it is in the child’s best interests to dispense with service.\n- (a) where and when the application is to be heard; and\n- (b) that the application may be heard and decided even though the party does not appear in court.\n- (a) the relevant person can not locate the party after making all reasonable enquiries;\n- (b) the conception of the child was a result of an offence committed by the party;\n- (c) it is in the child’s best interests to dispense with service.","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"sec.64","sectionType":"section","heading":"Respondent","content":"### sec.64 Respondent\n\nIf a stated party is served with a copy of an application for a dispensation order, the party is a respondent in the proceeding.","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"sec.65","sectionType":"section","heading":"Hearing of application in absence of stated party","content":"### sec.65 Hearing of application in absence of stated party\n\nThe Childrens Court may hear and decide an application for a dispensation order in the absence of the stated party only if—\nthe party has been given reasonable notice of the hearing and failed to attend or continue to attend the hearing; or\nthe court dispenses with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on the party under section&#160;63 (3) .\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not limit the Childrens Court’s jurisdiction to exclude a person from a proceeding.\n(sec.65-ssec.1) The Childrens Court may hear and decide an application for a dispensation order in the absence of the stated party only if— the party has been given reasonable notice of the hearing and failed to attend or continue to attend the hearing; or the court dispenses with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on the party under section&#160;63 (3) .\n(sec.65-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not limit the Childrens Court’s jurisdiction to exclude a person from a proceeding.\n- (a) the party has been given reasonable notice of the hearing and failed to attend or continue to attend the hearing; or\n- (b) the court dispenses with the requirement to serve a copy of the application on the party under section&#160;63 (3) .","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"sec.66","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court may make dispensation order","content":"### sec.66 Court may make dispensation order\n\nThe Childrens Court may make a dispensation order if—\nthe court is satisfied of a matter stated in section&#160;63 (3) (a) or (b) ; or\nQCAT has made a declaration that the stated party does not have capacity to give consent for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child; or\na tribunal of another jurisdiction, a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court has made an order or other direction, however called, that the stated party does not have capacity to give consent for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child; or\nthe court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.\n- (a) the court is satisfied of a matter stated in section&#160;63 (3) (a) or (b) ; or\n- (b) QCAT has made a declaration that the stated party does not have capacity to give consent for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child; or\n- (c) a tribunal of another jurisdiction, a Queensland court or a non-Queensland court has made an order or other direction, however called, that the stated party does not have capacity to give consent for an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application for the child; or\n- (d) the court is satisfied it is in the child’s best interests to make the order.","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"sec.67","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of dispensation order","content":"### sec.67 Effect of dispensation order\n\nThis section applies if the registrar is given a copy of a dispensation order with an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application.\nThe registrar must consider and decide the application without the need for the application to be made with the consent of the stated party.\n(sec.67-ssec.1) This section applies if the registrar is given a copy of a dispensation order with an acknowledgement of sex application or a combined application.\n(sec.67-ssec.2) The registrar must consider and decide the application without the need for the application to be made with the consent of the stated party.","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"pt.5-div.5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Court proceedings","content":"## Court proceedings","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"sec.68","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of subdivision","content":"### sec.68 Application of subdivision\n\nThis subdivision applies to a proceeding in the Childrens Court commenced by an application made under—\ndivision&#160;2 , subdivision&#160;3 ; or\ndivision&#160;3 , subdivision&#160;3 ; or\ndivision&#160;4 .\n- (a) division&#160;2 , subdivision&#160;3 ; or\n- (b) division&#160;3 , subdivision&#160;3 ; or\n- (c) division&#160;4 .","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"sec.69","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court’s jurisdiction and constitution","content":"### sec.69 Court’s jurisdiction and constitution\n\nThe proceeding must be heard by the Childrens Court constituted by a Childrens Court magistrate or, if a Childrens Court magistrate is not available, a magistrate.\nIn this section—\navailable means available having regard to the orderly and expeditious exercise of the jurisdiction of the Childrens Court.\n(sec.69-ssec.1) The proceeding must be heard by the Childrens Court constituted by a Childrens Court magistrate or, if a Childrens Court magistrate is not available, a magistrate.\n(sec.69-ssec.2) In this section— available means available having regard to the orderly and expeditious exercise of the jurisdiction of the Childrens Court.","sortOrder":86},{"sectionNumber":"sec.70","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court’s paramount consideration","content":"### sec.70 Court’s paramount consideration\n\nIn exercising its jurisdiction or powers in the proceeding, the Childrens Court must regard the wellbeing and best interests of the child as paramount.","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"sec.71","sectionType":"section","heading":"Parties to proceedings","content":"### sec.71 Parties to proceedings\n\nThe parties to a proceeding commenced by an application made under section&#160;44 , 55 or 62 are—\nthe person making the application; and\nthe child the subject of the application; and\nthe respondent or respondents, if any.\nThe parties to a proceeding commenced by an application made under section&#160;45 or 56 are—\nthe child making the application; and\nthe respondent or respondents, if any.\n(sec.71-ssec.1) The parties to a proceeding commenced by an application made under section&#160;44 , 55 or 62 are— the person making the application; and the child the subject of the application; and the respondent or respondents, if any.\n(sec.71-ssec.2) The parties to a proceeding commenced by an application made under section&#160;45 or 56 are— the child making the application; and the respondent or respondents, if any.\n- (a) the person making the application; and\n- (b) the child the subject of the application; and\n- (c) the respondent or respondents, if any.\n- (a) the child making the application; and\n- (b) the respondent or respondents, if any.","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"sec.72","sectionType":"section","heading":"Representation","content":"### sec.72 Representation\n\nIn the proceeding a party may appear without representation or may be represented by a lawyer.","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"sec.73","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court to ensure parties understand proceeding","content":"### sec.73 Court to ensure parties understand proceeding\n\nThe Childrens Court must, as far as practicable, ensure the parties to the proceeding understand—\nthe nature, purpose and legal implications of the proceeding; and\nany order or ruling made by the court.\n- (a) the nature, purpose and legal implications of the proceeding; and\n- (b) any order or ruling made by the court.","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"sec.74","sectionType":"section","heading":"Evidence","content":"### sec.74 Evidence\n\nIn the proceeding, the Childrens Court is not bound by the rules of evidence, but may inform itself in any way it thinks appropriate.\nIf, on an application for an order, the Childrens Court is to be satisfied of a matter, the court need only be satisfied of the matter on the balance of probabilities.\n(sec.74-ssec.1) In the proceeding, the Childrens Court is not bound by the rules of evidence, but may inform itself in any way it thinks appropriate.\n(sec.74-ssec.2) If, on an application for an order, the Childrens Court is to be satisfied of a matter, the court need only be satisfied of the matter on the balance of probabilities.","sortOrder":91},{"sectionNumber":"sec.75","sectionType":"section","heading":"Child cannot be compelled to give evidence","content":"### sec.75 Child cannot be compelled to give evidence\n\nA child may only be called to give evidence in the proceeding with the leave of the Childrens Court.\nThe Childrens Court may grant leave only if the child—\nis at least 12 years; and\nagrees to give evidence.\nIf the child gives evidence, the child may be cross-examined only with the leave of the Childrens Court.\n(sec.75-ssec.1) A child may only be called to give evidence in the proceeding with the leave of the Childrens Court.\n(sec.75-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may grant leave only if the child— is at least 12 years; and agrees to give evidence.\n(sec.75-ssec.3) If the child gives evidence, the child may be cross-examined only with the leave of the Childrens Court.\n- (a) is at least 12 years; and\n- (b) agrees to give evidence.","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"sec.76","sectionType":"section","heading":"Way child is to be heard in proceeding","content":"### sec.76 Way child is to be heard in proceeding\n\nThis section applies if the Childrens Court is to hear from a child who is the subject of the proceeding or a party to the proceeding, other than when the child gives evidence.\nThe Childrens Court may hear from the child in the way the court considers appropriate, including, for example, by—\nhearing from the child orally in court or another place or with the use of technology, including an audio visual link or audio link; or\nhearing from the child without the other participants being present; or\nreceiving a document from the child; or\nreceiving submissions by, or on behalf of, the child.\n(sec.76-ssec.1) This section applies if the Childrens Court is to hear from a child who is the subject of the proceeding or a party to the proceeding, other than when the child gives evidence.\n(sec.76-ssec.2) The Childrens Court may hear from the child in the way the court considers appropriate, including, for example, by— hearing from the child orally in court or another place or with the use of technology, including an audio visual link or audio link; or hearing from the child without the other participants being present; or receiving a document from the child; or receiving submissions by, or on behalf of, the child.\n- (a) hearing from the child orally in court or another place or with the use of technology, including an audio visual link or audio link; or\n- (b) hearing from the child without the other participants being present; or\n- (c) receiving a document from the child; or\n- (d) receiving submissions by, or on behalf of, the child.","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"sec.77","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definition for subdivision","content":"### sec.77 Definition for subdivision\n\nIn this subdivision—\nappellate court means the Childrens Court constituted by a Childrens Court judge.","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"sec.78","sectionType":"section","heading":"Who may appeal","content":"### sec.78 Who may appeal\n\nA party to the proceeding for an application for any of the following orders may appeal to the appellate court against a decision on the application—\nan order under section&#160;44 , 45 , 55 or 56 ;\na dispensation order.\nA child who is given a notice by the Childrens Court under section&#160;46 (7) or 57 (7) may appeal to the appellate court against the decision stated in the notice.\n(sec.78-ssec.1) A party to the proceeding for an application for any of the following orders may appeal to the appellate court against a decision on the application— an order under section&#160;44 , 45 , 55 or 56 ; a dispensation order.\n(sec.78-ssec.2) A child who is given a notice by the Childrens Court under section&#160;46 (7) or 57 (7) may appeal to the appellate court against the decision stated in the notice.\n- (a) an order under section&#160;44 , 45 , 55 or 56 ;\n- (b) a dispensation order.","sortOrder":95},{"sectionNumber":"sec.79","sectionType":"section","heading":"How to start appeal","content":"### sec.79 How to start appeal\n\nAn appeal is started by filing a written notice of appeal with the registrar of the appellate court.\nIn the case of an appeal under section&#160;78 (1) , the appellant must serve a copy of the notice on the party or parties to the proceeding mentioned in section&#160;78 (1) .\nThe notice of appeal must be filed within 28 days after the decision is made.\nThe appellate court may at any time extend the period for filing the notice of appeal.\nThe notice of appeal must state fully the grounds of the appeal and the facts relied on.\n(sec.79-ssec.1) An appeal is started by filing a written notice of appeal with the registrar of the appellate court.\n(sec.79-ssec.2) In the case of an appeal under section&#160;78 (1) , the appellant must serve a copy of the notice on the party or parties to the proceeding mentioned in section&#160;78 (1) .\n(sec.79-ssec.3) The notice of appeal must be filed within 28 days after the decision is made.\n(sec.79-ssec.4) The appellate court may at any time extend the period for filing the notice of appeal.\n(sec.79-ssec.5) The notice of appeal must state fully the grounds of the appeal and the facts relied on.","sortOrder":96},{"sectionNumber":"sec.80","sectionType":"section","heading":"Stay of operation of decisions","content":"### sec.80 Stay of operation of decisions\n\nA decision the subject of an appeal under this division is stayed until the appellate court decides the appeal.","sortOrder":97},{"sectionNumber":"sec.81","sectionType":"section","heading":"Hearing procedures","content":"### sec.81 Hearing procedures\n\nAn appeal must be decided on the evidence and proceedings before the Childrens Court.\nHowever, the appellate court may order that the appeal be heard afresh, in whole or part.\n(sec.81-ssec.1) An appeal must be decided on the evidence and proceedings before the Childrens Court.\n(sec.81-ssec.2) However, the appellate court may order that the appeal be heard afresh, in whole or part.","sortOrder":98},{"sectionNumber":"sec.82","sectionType":"section","heading":"Powers of appellate court","content":"### sec.82 Powers of appellate court\n\nIn deciding an appeal, the appellate court may—\nconfirm the decision appealed against; or\nvary the decision appealed against; or\nset aside the decision and substitute another decision; or\nset aside the decision appealed against and remit the matter to the Childrens Court magistrate or magistrate who made the decision.\n- (a) confirm the decision appealed against; or\n- (b) vary the decision appealed against; or\n- (c) set aside the decision and substitute another decision; or\n- (d) set aside the decision appealed against and remit the matter to the Childrens Court magistrate or magistrate who made the decision.","sortOrder":99},{"sectionNumber":"sec.83","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court hearings not public","content":"### sec.83 Court hearings not public\n\nThis section applies to the hearing in the Childrens Court under subdivision&#160;1 or the appellate court under subdivision&#160;2 of a proceeding under this Act.\nThe hearing is not open to the public.\nDespite the Childrens Court Act 1992 , section&#160;20 , a court must exclude from the room in which the court is sitting a person who is not—\na child to whom the proceeding relates; or\na parent of, or person with parental responsibility for, a child to whom the proceeding relates; or\na lawyer of a party to the proceeding; or\na witness giving evidence.\nHowever, the court may permit a person who is not mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) to be present during the hearing if the court is satisfied it is in the interests of justice to do so.\n(sec.83-ssec.1) This section applies to the hearing in the Childrens Court under subdivision&#160;1 or the appellate court under subdivision&#160;2 of a proceeding under this Act.\n(sec.83-ssec.2) The hearing is not open to the public.\n(sec.83-ssec.3) Despite the Childrens Court Act 1992 , section&#160;20 , a court must exclude from the room in which the court is sitting a person who is not— a child to whom the proceeding relates; or a parent of, or person with parental responsibility for, a child to whom the proceeding relates; or a lawyer of a party to the proceeding; or a witness giving evidence.\n(sec.83-ssec.4) However, the court may permit a person who is not mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) to be present during the hearing if the court is satisfied it is in the interests of justice to do so.\n- (a) a child to whom the proceeding relates; or\n- (b) a parent of, or person with parental responsibility for, a child to whom the proceeding relates; or\n- (c) a lawyer of a party to the proceeding; or\n- (d) a witness giving evidence.","sortOrder":100},{"sectionNumber":"pt.6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Marriages","content":"# Marriages","sortOrder":101},{"sectionNumber":"sec.84","sectionType":"section","heading":"Marriages that are registrable","content":"### sec.84 Marriages that are registrable\n\nA marriage solemnised in Queensland must be registered under this Act.\nA person may have a marriage registered by giving the registrar, in an approved way—\nthe marriage certificate; or\nif the marriage was solemnised before the commencement of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cwlth) —evidence of the marriage required by the registrar.\nA marriage is taken to be solemnised in Queensland if—\nit is solemnised on a vessel; and\nthe vessel goes to the place where the marriage is solemnised from a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland; and\nafter the marriage is solemnised, the vessel returns to a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland.\n(sec.84-ssec.1) A marriage solemnised in Queensland must be registered under this Act.\n(sec.84-ssec.2) A person may have a marriage registered by giving the registrar, in an approved way— the marriage certificate; or if the marriage was solemnised before the commencement of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cwlth) —evidence of the marriage required by the registrar.\n(sec.84-ssec.3) A marriage is taken to be solemnised in Queensland if— it is solemnised on a vessel; and the vessel goes to the place where the marriage is solemnised from a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland; and after the marriage is solemnised, the vessel returns to a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland.\n- (a) the marriage certificate; or\n- (b) if the marriage was solemnised before the commencement of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cwlth) —evidence of the marriage required by the registrar.\n- (a) it is solemnised on a vessel; and\n- (b) the vessel goes to the place where the marriage is solemnised from a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland; and\n- (c) after the marriage is solemnised, the vessel returns to a port in Queensland, without stopping at a port that is not in Queensland.","sortOrder":102},{"sectionNumber":"sec.85","sectionType":"section","heading":"How marriages are registered","content":"### sec.85 How marriages are registered\n\nThe registrar registers a marriage by—\nentering in the marriage register the particulars prescribed by regulation; or\nincluding the marriage certificate or evidence mentioned in section&#160;84 (2) (b) as part of the marriage register.\nThe registrar may also enter in the marriage register any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter in relation to the marriage.\n(sec.85-ssec.1) The registrar registers a marriage by— entering in the marriage register the particulars prescribed by regulation; or including the marriage certificate or evidence mentioned in section&#160;84 (2) (b) as part of the marriage register.\n(sec.85-ssec.2) The registrar may also enter in the marriage register any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter in relation to the marriage.\n- (a) entering in the marriage register the particulars prescribed by regulation; or\n- (b) including the marriage certificate or evidence mentioned in section&#160;84 (2) (b) as part of the marriage register.","sortOrder":103},{"sectionNumber":"pt.7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Civil partnerships","content":"# Civil partnerships","sortOrder":104},{"sectionNumber":"sec.86","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registration of civil partnership","content":"### sec.86 Registration of civil partnership\n\nThis section applies if the registrar is required to register a relationship as a civil partnership under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;9 or 12 .\nThe registrar must register the civil partnership by including in the register the particulars of the civil partnership prescribed by regulation.\nThe registrar may also enter in the register any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter in relation to the civil partnership.\n(sec.86-ssec.1) This section applies if the registrar is required to register a relationship as a civil partnership under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;9 or 12 .\n(sec.86-ssec.2) The registrar must register the civil partnership by including in the register the particulars of the civil partnership prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.86-ssec.3) The registrar may also enter in the register any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter in relation to the civil partnership.","sortOrder":105},{"sectionNumber":"sec.87","sectionType":"section","heading":"Declaration of civil partnership before civil partnership notary other than registrar","content":"### sec.87 Declaration of civil partnership before civil partnership notary other than registrar\n\nIf 2 persons make, under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;11 , a declaration of civil partnership before a civil partnership notary other than the registrar, the notary must give the following to the registrar not later than 14 days after the day the declaration is made—\nwritten notice of the making of the declaration;\nthe notice given to the notary under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;10 for the civil partnership.\nMaximum penalty—5 penalty units.\nIn this section—\ncivil partnership notary see the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , schedule&#160;2 .\n(sec.87-ssec.1) If 2 persons make, under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;11 , a declaration of civil partnership before a civil partnership notary other than the registrar, the notary must give the following to the registrar not later than 14 days after the day the declaration is made— written notice of the making of the declaration; the notice given to the notary under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;10 for the civil partnership. Maximum penalty—5 penalty units.\n(sec.87-ssec.2) In this section— civil partnership notary see the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , schedule&#160;2 .\n- (a) written notice of the making of the declaration;\n- (b) the notice given to the notary under the Civil Partnerships Act 2011 , section&#160;10 for the civil partnership.","sortOrder":106},{"sectionNumber":"pt.8","sectionType":"part","heading":"Deaths","content":"# Deaths","sortOrder":107},{"sectionNumber":"sec.88","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definition for part","content":"### sec.88 Definition for part\n\nIn this part—\ncoroner means a coroner under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 or the Coroners Act 2003 .","sortOrder":108},{"sectionNumber":"sec.89","sectionType":"section","heading":"Deaths that must be registered in Queensland","content":"### sec.89 Deaths that must be registered in Queensland\n\nThe death of a person must be registered under this Act if—\nthe person dies in Queensland; or\na Queensland court, other than the Coroners Court—\nfinds—\nthat the death happened in Queensland; and\nthe name of the person; and\nthe date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\nmakes an order that—\ndirects that the death be registered; and\nstates the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\na coroner finds—\nthat the death happened in Queensland; and\nthe name of the person; and\nthe date or approximate date of the person’s death.\nFor subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) (B) , the Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the death that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\nIn this section—\nCoroners Court means the Coroners Court under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 or the Coroners Act 2003 .\nperson includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n(sec.89-ssec.1) The death of a person must be registered under this Act if— the person dies in Queensland; or a Queensland court, other than the Coroners Court— finds— that the death happened in Queensland; and the name of the person; and the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and makes an order that— directs that the death be registered; and states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or a coroner finds— that the death happened in Queensland; and the name of the person; and the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n(sec.89-ssec.2) For subsection&#160;(1) (b) (ii) (B) , the Queensland court is only required to state the particulars about the death that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\n(sec.89-ssec.3) In this section— Coroners Court means the Coroners Court under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 or the Coroners Act 2003 . person includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n- (a) the person dies in Queensland; or\n- (b) a Queensland court, other than the Coroners Court— (i) finds— (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and (B) the name of the person; and (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the death be registered; and (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (i) finds— (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and (B) the name of the person; and (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (B) the name of the person; and\n- (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the death be registered; and (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (A) directs that the death be registered; and\n- (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (c) a coroner finds— (i) that the death happened in Queensland; and (ii) the name of the person; and (iii) the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n- (i) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (ii) the name of the person; and\n- (iii) the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n- (i) finds— (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and (B) the name of the person; and (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (B) the name of the person; and\n- (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (ii) makes an order that— (A) directs that the death be registered; and (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (A) directs that the death be registered; and\n- (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (A) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (B) the name of the person; and\n- (C) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (A) directs that the death be registered; and\n- (B) states the findings mentioned in paragraph&#160;(b) (i) and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation; or\n- (i) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (ii) the name of the person; and\n- (iii) the date or approximate date of the person’s death.","sortOrder":109},{"sectionNumber":"sec.90","sectionType":"section","heading":"Deaths that may be registered in Queensland","content":"### sec.90 Deaths that may be registered in Queensland\n\nThe death of a person may be registered under this Act if—\nthe person dies in an aircraft or vessel, or in waters, outside Queensland; and\nthe person’s body is not, between the time the person dies and the time the person’s body arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland.\nA person dies on a ship travelling non-stop from Sydney to Tokyo. The person’s body is taken by helicopter from the ship to a mortuary in Brisbane. The death may be registered in Queensland.\nThe death of a person outside Australia may be registered under this Act if the person—\nordinarily resided in Queensland; or\ndied, leaving real property in Queensland.\nThe death of a person may be registered under this Act if a Queensland court or a coroner finds, or has found—\nthat the death happened, but the location of the death is not known; and\nthe name of the person; and\nthe date or approximate date of the person’s death.\nThe death of a person may be registered under this Act if a non-Queensland court or a non-Queensland coroner finds—\nthat the death happened in Queensland; and\nthe name of the person; and\nthe date or approximate date of the person’s death.\nThe death of a stillborn child born in Queensland before 1 May 1989 may be registered under this Act if, at the same time, the registrar is able to register the birth of the child.\nThe registrar must not register under this section a death that has been registered in another State or country.\nIn this section—\nnon-Queensland coroner means a person who holds a position equivalent to a coroner in another State.\nplace does not include an aircraft or vessel.\n(sec.90-ssec.1) The death of a person may be registered under this Act if— the person dies in an aircraft or vessel, or in waters, outside Queensland; and the person’s body is not, between the time the person dies and the time the person’s body arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland. A person dies on a ship travelling non-stop from Sydney to Tokyo. The person’s body is taken by helicopter from the ship to a mortuary in Brisbane. The death may be registered in Queensland.\n(sec.90-ssec.2) The death of a person outside Australia may be registered under this Act if the person— ordinarily resided in Queensland; or died, leaving real property in Queensland.\n(sec.90-ssec.3) The death of a person may be registered under this Act if a Queensland court or a coroner finds, or has found— that the death happened, but the location of the death is not known; and the name of the person; and the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n(sec.90-ssec.4) The death of a person may be registered under this Act if a non-Queensland court or a non-Queensland coroner finds— that the death happened in Queensland; and the name of the person; and the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n(sec.90-ssec.5) The death of a stillborn child born in Queensland before 1 May 1989 may be registered under this Act if, at the same time, the registrar is able to register the birth of the child.\n(sec.90-ssec.6) The registrar must not register under this section a death that has been registered in another State or country.\n(sec.90-ssec.7) In this section— non-Queensland coroner means a person who holds a position equivalent to a coroner in another State. place does not include an aircraft or vessel.\n- (a) the person dies in an aircraft or vessel, or in waters, outside Queensland; and\n- (b) the person’s body is not, between the time the person dies and the time the person’s body arrives in Queensland, taken to a place outside Queensland.\n- (a) ordinarily resided in Queensland; or\n- (b) died, leaving real property in Queensland.\n- (a) that the death happened, but the location of the death is not known; and\n- (b) the name of the person; and\n- (c) the date or approximate date of the person’s death.\n- (a) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (b) the name of the person; and\n- (c) the date or approximate date of the person’s death.","sortOrder":110},{"sectionNumber":"sec.91","sectionType":"section","heading":"Responsibility to apply to have death registered","content":"### sec.91 Responsibility to apply to have death registered\n\nIf the death of a person must be registered in Queensland, a spouse or relative of the deceased person must apply to register the death, unless the spouse or relative has a reasonable excuse.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nIf the registrar does not receive an application under subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may require 1 of the following persons to apply to register the death—\nthe person in charge of the place where the person died;\nthe person finding the body;\nthe person arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body.\na hospital or nursing home\na personal representative or funeral director\nA person must comply with the registrar’s requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nA person does not commit an offence against subsection&#160;(1) if someone else has applied to register the death.\nIn this section—\nrelative includes a relative by marriage.\n(sec.91-ssec.1) If the death of a person must be registered in Queensland, a spouse or relative of the deceased person must apply to register the death, unless the spouse or relative has a reasonable excuse. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.91-ssec.2) If the registrar does not receive an application under subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may require 1 of the following persons to apply to register the death— the person in charge of the place where the person died; the person finding the body; the person arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body. a hospital or nursing home a personal representative or funeral director\n(sec.91-ssec.3) A person must comply with the registrar’s requirement, unless the person has a reasonable excuse. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.91-ssec.4) A person does not commit an offence against subsection&#160;(1) if someone else has applied to register the death.\n(sec.91-ssec.5) In this section— relative includes a relative by marriage.\n- (a) the person in charge of the place where the person died;\n- (b) the person finding the body;\n- (c) the person arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body. Example of a place mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (a) — a hospital or nursing home Example of a person mentioned in subsection&#160;(2) (c) — a personal representative or funeral director","sortOrder":111},{"sectionNumber":"sec.92","sectionType":"section","heading":"How to apply to register the death of a person","content":"### sec.92 How to apply to register the death of a person\n\nAn application to register the death of a person must be—\nin the form required by the registrar (a death registration application ); and\nmade in an approved way.\nThe application must be given to the registrar within 14 days after—\nthe death happens; or\nthe death is discovered.\nHowever, the registrar may accept an application given more than 14 days after the death happens or is discovered, if satisfied the death happened.\nAlso, the parent of a stillborn child born before 1 May 1989 may give the registrar a death registration application for the child at any time.\nAlso see section&#160;7 for the requirement to register the birth.\nIf any of the following documents is issued in relation to the death, the document must accompany the death registration application—\nthe cause of death certificate for the deceased person;\na notice under section&#160;97 (2) in relation to the deceased person;\nan autopsy notice under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (2) (a) in relation to the deceased person;\nan autopsy certificate under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (3) (a) in relation to the deceased person.\nIf the death of the person is being registered under an order of a court directing the death to be registered, the death registration application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\nThe registrar may require the applicant to give to the registrar other information the registrar believes is relevant to the death registration application.\n(sec.92-ssec.1) An application to register the death of a person must be— in the form required by the registrar (a death registration application ); and made in an approved way.\n(sec.92-ssec.2) The application must be given to the registrar within 14 days after— the death happens; or the death is discovered.\n(sec.92-ssec.3) However, the registrar may accept an application given more than 14 days after the death happens or is discovered, if satisfied the death happened.\n(sec.92-ssec.4) Also, the parent of a stillborn child born before 1 May 1989 may give the registrar a death registration application for the child at any time. Also see section&#160;7 for the requirement to register the birth.\n(sec.92-ssec.5) If any of the following documents is issued in relation to the death, the document must accompany the death registration application— the cause of death certificate for the deceased person; a notice under section&#160;97 (2) in relation to the deceased person; an autopsy notice under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (2) (a) in relation to the deceased person; an autopsy certificate under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (3) (a) in relation to the deceased person.\n(sec.92-ssec.6) If the death of the person is being registered under an order of a court directing the death to be registered, the death registration application must be accompanied by a copy of the order.\n(sec.92-ssec.7) The registrar may require the applicant to give to the registrar other information the registrar believes is relevant to the death registration application.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar (a death registration application ); and\n- (b) made in an approved way.\n- (a) the death happens; or\n- (b) the death is discovered.\n- (a) the cause of death certificate for the deceased person;\n- (b) a notice under section&#160;97 (2) in relation to the deceased person;\n- (c) an autopsy notice under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (2) (a) in relation to the deceased person;\n- (d) an autopsy certificate under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;24A (3) (a) in relation to the deceased person.","sortOrder":112},{"sectionNumber":"sec.93","sectionType":"section","heading":"How deaths are registered","content":"### sec.93 How deaths are registered\n\nThe registrar registers the death of a person by entering in the register of deaths—\nfor a registration ordered by a court—\nthe particulars about the death stated in the court’s order; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\nfor another registration—\nthe particulars prescribed by regulation; and\nany other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\nDespite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the death of a person even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the death are not available to the registrar.\nThe registrar may register the death of a person even if the death is being investigated by a coroner under the Coroners Act 2003 or the repealed Coroners Act 1958 .\n(sec.93-ssec.1) The registrar registers the death of a person by entering in the register of deaths— for a registration ordered by a court— the particulars about the death stated in the court’s order; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or for another registration— the particulars prescribed by regulation; and any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n(sec.93-ssec.2) Despite subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) , the registrar may register the death of a person even though some or all of the particulars mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) (b) (i) for the death are not available to the registrar.\n(sec.93-ssec.3) The registrar may register the death of a person even if the death is being investigated by a coroner under the Coroners Act 2003 or the repealed Coroners Act 1958 .\n- (a) for a registration ordered by a court— (i) the particulars about the death stated in the court’s order; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars about the death stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (b) for another registration— (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.\n- (i) the particulars about the death stated in the court’s order; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter; or\n- (i) the particulars prescribed by regulation; and\n- (ii) any other information the registrar considers appropriate to enter.","sortOrder":113},{"sectionNumber":"sec.94","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cause of death certificate","content":"### sec.94 Cause of death certificate\n\nThis section applies if—\na doctor—\nfor a stillborn child—\nwas present at the stillbirth; or\nexamined the stillborn child’s body; or\nfor any other deceased person—\nattended the deceased person when the person was alive; or\nexamined the deceased person’s body; or\nhas considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\nthe doctor is able to form an opinion as to the probable cause of death.\nA doctor may consider information about the deceased person’s medical history by examining the records of, or speaking to, another doctor who attended the deceased person when the person was alive.\nA doctor may be able to consider information about the circumstances of the deceased person’s death by speaking to someone who was with the deceased when the deceased person died or who discovered the deceased person’s body.\nSubject to the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 (5) , the doctor must—\ncomplete a certificate, in the form required by the registrar, ( cause of death certificate ) for the deceased person; and\ngive the original certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body or to the registrar; and\ngive a copy of the certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body.\nThe Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 (5) , provides that a doctor must not issue a cause of death certificate for a person in certain circumstances.\nFor subsection&#160;(2) , a person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body includes a school of anatomy that is holding the body.\nThe doctor must comply with subsection&#160;(2) within 2 working days of the person’s death or when the person’s body is found, whichever is the later.\nHowever, a doctor need not comply with subsection&#160;(2) if another doctor has complied with subsection&#160;(2) .\nA doctor must not charge a person for a cause of death certificate.\nIf a doctor reasonably suspects that the doctor, or the doctor’s spouse, may receive a benefit because of a person’s death, the doctor must not issue a cause of death certificate for the person.\nMaximum penalty—120 penalty units.\nIf the doctor gives the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body the original cause of death certificate, the person must give the certificate to the registrar within 14 days after the person has received the certificate.\nDespite subsection&#160;(4) or (8) , the registrar may accept a cause of death certificate given to the registrar at any time.\nIn this section—\nbenefit —\nincludes—\na payment under a life insurance policy; and\nproperty under a will; and\nproperty under an intestate distribution; but\ndoes not include fees payable for professional services.\ndoctor includes a person registered as a medical practitioner under a law of another country corresponding to the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law .\nperson includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n(sec.94-ssec.1) This section applies if— a doctor— for a stillborn child— was present at the stillbirth; or examined the stillborn child’s body; or for any other deceased person— attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or examined the deceased person’s body; or has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and the doctor is able to form an opinion as to the probable cause of death. A doctor may consider information about the deceased person’s medical history by examining the records of, or speaking to, another doctor who attended the deceased person when the person was alive. A doctor may be able to consider information about the circumstances of the deceased person’s death by speaking to someone who was with the deceased when the deceased person died or who discovered the deceased person’s body.\n(sec.94-ssec.2) Subject to the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 (5) , the doctor must— complete a certificate, in the form required by the registrar, ( cause of death certificate ) for the deceased person; and give the original certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body or to the registrar; and give a copy of the certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body. The Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 (5) , provides that a doctor must not issue a cause of death certificate for a person in certain circumstances.\n(sec.94-ssec.3) For subsection&#160;(2) , a person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body includes a school of anatomy that is holding the body.\n(sec.94-ssec.4) The doctor must comply with subsection&#160;(2) within 2 working days of the person’s death or when the person’s body is found, whichever is the later.\n(sec.94-ssec.5) However, a doctor need not comply with subsection&#160;(2) if another doctor has complied with subsection&#160;(2) .\n(sec.94-ssec.6) A doctor must not charge a person for a cause of death certificate.\n(sec.94-ssec.7) If a doctor reasonably suspects that the doctor, or the doctor’s spouse, may receive a benefit because of a person’s death, the doctor must not issue a cause of death certificate for the person. Maximum penalty—120 penalty units.\n(sec.94-ssec.8) If the doctor gives the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body the original cause of death certificate, the person must give the certificate to the registrar within 14 days after the person has received the certificate.\n(sec.94-ssec.9) Despite subsection&#160;(4) or (8) , the registrar may accept a cause of death certificate given to the registrar at any time.\n(sec.94-ssec.10) In this section— benefit — includes— a payment under a life insurance policy; and property under a will; and property under an intestate distribution; but does not include fees payable for professional services. doctor includes a person registered as a medical practitioner under a law of another country corresponding to the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law . person includes a stillborn child born after 30 April 1989.\n- (a) a doctor— (i) for a stillborn child— (A) was present at the stillbirth; or (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or (ii) for any other deceased person— (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- (i) for a stillborn child— (A) was present at the stillbirth; or (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or\n- (A) was present at the stillbirth; or\n- (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or\n- (ii) for any other deceased person— (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or\n- (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or\n- (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- (b) the doctor is able to form an opinion as to the probable cause of death.\n- (i) for a stillborn child— (A) was present at the stillbirth; or (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or\n- (A) was present at the stillbirth; or\n- (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or\n- (ii) for any other deceased person— (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or\n- (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or\n- (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- (A) was present at the stillbirth; or\n- (B) examined the stillborn child’s body; or\n- (A) attended the deceased person when the person was alive; or\n- (B) examined the deceased person’s body; or\n- (C) has considered information about the deceased person’s medical history and the circumstances of the deceased person’s death; and\n- 1 A doctor may consider information about the deceased person’s medical history by examining the records of, or speaking to, another doctor who attended the deceased person when the person was alive.\n- 2 A doctor may be able to consider information about the circumstances of the deceased person’s death by speaking to someone who was with the deceased when the deceased person died or who discovered the deceased person’s body.\n- (a) complete a certificate, in the form required by the registrar, ( cause of death certificate ) for the deceased person; and\n- (b) give the original certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body or to the registrar; and\n- (c) give a copy of the certificate, in an approved way, to the person who is arranging for the disposal of the deceased person’s body.\n- (a) includes— (i) a payment under a life insurance policy; and (ii) property under a will; and (iii) property under an intestate distribution; but\n- (i) a payment under a life insurance policy; and\n- (ii) property under a will; and\n- (iii) property under an intestate distribution; but\n- (b) does not include fees payable for professional services.\n- (i) a payment under a life insurance policy; and\n- (ii) property under a will; and\n- (iii) property under an intestate distribution; but","sortOrder":114},{"sectionNumber":"sec.95","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court order relating to registration of death","content":"### sec.95 Court order relating to registration of death\n\nThe District Court, on application by an interested person or on its own initiative, may order the registrar to—\nregister the death of a person who died in Queensland; or\ninclude or correct information about a person’s death in the register of deaths.\nHowever, a person must not apply for an order under subsection&#160;(1) if the person has, under section&#160;124 , applied to QCAT for a review of a decision of the registrar in relation to the same matter.\nAn order under subsection&#160;(1) (a) must state—\nthat the death happened in Queensland; and\nthe name of the person; and\nthe date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\nany other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation.\nFor subsection&#160;(3) (d) , the District Court is only required to state the particulars about the death that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\n(sec.95-ssec.1) The District Court, on application by an interested person or on its own initiative, may order the registrar to— register the death of a person who died in Queensland; or include or correct information about a person’s death in the register of deaths.\n(sec.95-ssec.2) However, a person must not apply for an order under subsection&#160;(1) if the person has, under section&#160;124 , applied to QCAT for a review of a decision of the registrar in relation to the same matter.\n(sec.95-ssec.3) An order under subsection&#160;(1) (a) must state— that the death happened in Queensland; and the name of the person; and the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.95-ssec.4) For subsection&#160;(3) (d) , the District Court is only required to state the particulars about the death that are available to the court at the time of making the order.\n- (a) register the death of a person who died in Queensland; or\n- (b) include or correct information about a person’s death in the register of deaths.\n- (a) that the death happened in Queensland; and\n- (b) the name of the person; and\n- (c) the date or approximate date of the person’s death; and\n- (d) any other particulars about the death prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":115},{"sectionNumber":"sec.96","sectionType":"section","heading":"School of anatomy to notify registrar","content":"### sec.96 School of anatomy to notify registrar\n\nIf a school of anatomy receives the body of a deceased person under the Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1979 , part&#160;5 , the person in charge of the school of anatomy must give the registrar written notice that the body has been received for anatomical purposes.","sortOrder":116},{"sectionNumber":"sec.97","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notifying about disposal, removal or failure to dispose of a deceased person’s body","content":"### sec.97 Notifying about disposal, removal or failure to dispose of a deceased person’s body\n\nThis section does not apply to—\na school of anatomy when disposing of a human body, or a part of the body, that was placed in its custody; or\nSee section&#160;96 .\nthe disposal of parts of a human body taken during a medical procedure or autopsy.\nEach of the following persons must give the registrar notice, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, within 7 days after the disposal of a human body—\nthe person who arranges the disposal of the body;\na funeral director\nthe person in charge of a cemetery or crematorium in which the disposal of the body happens.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nA person who arranges for the body of a deceased person to be moved outside Queensland must give the registrar notice in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way before moving the body outside Queensland.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nSubsections&#160;(2) and (3) apply even if a coroner has made—\nan order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or\nan order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or\nan order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\nSubsection&#160;(6) applies if the body of a deceased person has not been disposed of within 30 days after—\na cause of death certificate is issued; or\nthe coroner makes—\nan order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or\nan order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or\nan order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\nThe person in possession of the body must immediately give the registrar notice in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nThe registrar may accept a notice under subsection&#160;(2) , (3) or (6) at any time.\nIn this section—\nautopsy means an autopsy or post mortem under—\nthe repealed Coroners Act 1958 , the Coroners Act 2003 or the Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1979 ; or\na law of another State or country that corresponds to an Act mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) .\n(sec.97-ssec.1) This section does not apply to— a school of anatomy when disposing of a human body, or a part of the body, that was placed in its custody; or See section&#160;96 . the disposal of parts of a human body taken during a medical procedure or autopsy.\n(sec.97-ssec.2) Each of the following persons must give the registrar notice, in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way, within 7 days after the disposal of a human body— the person who arranges the disposal of the body; a funeral director the person in charge of a cemetery or crematorium in which the disposal of the body happens. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.97-ssec.3) A person who arranges for the body of a deceased person to be moved outside Queensland must give the registrar notice in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way before moving the body outside Queensland. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.97-ssec.4) Subsections&#160;(2) and (3) apply even if a coroner has made— an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n(sec.97-ssec.5) Subsection&#160;(6) applies if the body of a deceased person has not been disposed of within 30 days after— a cause of death certificate is issued; or the coroner makes— an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n(sec.97-ssec.6) The person in possession of the body must immediately give the registrar notice in the form required by the registrar and in an approved way. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.97-ssec.7) The registrar may accept a notice under subsection&#160;(2) , (3) or (6) at any time.\n(sec.97-ssec.8) In this section— autopsy means an autopsy or post mortem under— the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , the Coroners Act 2003 or the Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1979 ; or a law of another State or country that corresponds to an Act mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (a) a school of anatomy when disposing of a human body, or a part of the body, that was placed in its custody; or Note— See section&#160;96 .\n- (b) the disposal of parts of a human body taken during a medical procedure or autopsy.\n- (a) the person who arranges the disposal of the body; Example for paragraph&#160;(a) — a funeral director\n- (b) the person in charge of a cemetery or crematorium in which the disposal of the body happens.\n- (a) an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or\n- (b) an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or\n- (c) an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n- (a) a cause of death certificate is issued; or\n- (b) the coroner makes— (i) an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or (ii) an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or (iii) an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n- (i) an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or\n- (ii) an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or\n- (iii) an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n- (i) an order for removal of the body out of the State under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;20 ; or\n- (ii) an order for burial or a certificate for cremation under the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , section&#160;23 ; or\n- (iii) an order releasing the body for burial, or for release of the body to another jurisdiction, under the Coroners Act 2003 , section&#160;26 .\n- (a) the repealed Coroners Act 1958 , the Coroners Act 2003 or the Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1979 ; or\n- (b) a law of another State or country that corresponds to an Act mentioned in paragraph&#160;(a) .","sortOrder":117},{"sectionNumber":"sec.98","sectionType":"section","heading":"Stillbirths","content":"### sec.98 Stillbirths\n\nFor this Act, a stillborn child is taken to have died—\nwhen the child left the birth parent’s body; and\nat the place where the birth parent was when the child left the birth parent’s body.\n- (a) when the child left the birth parent’s body; and\n- (b) at the place where the birth parent was when the child left the birth parent’s body.","sortOrder":118},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9","sectionType":"part","heading":"Administration","content":"# Administration","sortOrder":119},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"The registrar","content":"## The registrar","sortOrder":120},{"sectionNumber":"sec.99","sectionType":"section","heading":"The registrar","content":"### sec.99 The registrar\n\nThere is to be a registrar-general (the registrar ).\nThe registrar is to be employed under the Public Sector Act 2022 .\nThe registrar’s functions are—\nto establish the registers for this Act; and\nto administer this Act—\nin an efficient, effective and economical way; and\nin a way best calculated to achieve its objects; and\nto maintain the integrity of the registers and seek to prevent fraud associated with the registers; and\nthe functions given under this or another Act.\nThe Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2024 , part&#160;3 gives the registrar functions in connection with the donor conception information register under that Act. That register is not a register for the purposes of this Act.\nThe registrar has the powers necessary to perform the registrar’s functions.\ns&#160;99 amd 2024 No.&#160;46 s&#160;159\n(sec.99-ssec.1) There is to be a registrar-general (the registrar ).\n(sec.99-ssec.2) The registrar is to be employed under the Public Sector Act 2022 .\n(sec.99-ssec.3) The registrar’s functions are— to establish the registers for this Act; and to administer this Act— in an efficient, effective and economical way; and in a way best calculated to achieve its objects; and to maintain the integrity of the registers and seek to prevent fraud associated with the registers; and the functions given under this or another Act. The Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2024 , part&#160;3 gives the registrar functions in connection with the donor conception information register under that Act. That register is not a register for the purposes of this Act.\n(sec.99-ssec.4) The registrar has the powers necessary to perform the registrar’s functions.\n- (a) to establish the registers for this Act; and\n- (b) to administer this Act— (i) in an efficient, effective and economical way; and (ii) in a way best calculated to achieve its objects; and\n- (i) in an efficient, effective and economical way; and\n- (ii) in a way best calculated to achieve its objects; and\n- (c) to maintain the integrity of the registers and seek to prevent fraud associated with the registers; and\n- (d) the functions given under this or another Act.\n- (i) in an efficient, effective and economical way; and\n- (ii) in a way best calculated to achieve its objects; and","sortOrder":121},{"sectionNumber":"sec.100","sectionType":"section","heading":"Staff","content":"### sec.100 Staff\n\nThe registrar’s staff is to consist of the staff that are necessary for the proper administration of this Act or the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2024 , part&#160;3 .\ns&#160;100 amd 2024 No.&#160;46 s&#160;160","sortOrder":122},{"sectionNumber":"sec.101","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation","content":"### sec.101 Delegation\n\nThe registrar may delegate any of the registrar’s powers under this or another Act, other than this power of delegation, to an appropriately qualified person.","sortOrder":123},{"sectionNumber":"sec.102","sectionType":"section","heading":"Executing documents","content":"### sec.102 Executing documents\n\nThe registrar is to have 1 or more seals.\nA certificate or other document issued by or for the registrar may be issued—\nunder 1 of the registrar’s seals; and\nwith the signature, or a facsimile of a signature, of the registrar or the registrar’s delegate.\nIf a document produced in evidence before a court is apparently signed and sealed by or for the registrar, the court must presume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the document was properly issued under the registrar’s authority.\nIn this section—\ncourt includes an administrative authority or official.\n(sec.102-ssec.1) The registrar is to have 1 or more seals.\n(sec.102-ssec.2) A certificate or other document issued by or for the registrar may be issued— under 1 of the registrar’s seals; and with the signature, or a facsimile of a signature, of the registrar or the registrar’s delegate.\n(sec.102-ssec.3) If a document produced in evidence before a court is apparently signed and sealed by or for the registrar, the court must presume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the document was properly issued under the registrar’s authority.\n(sec.102-ssec.4) In this section— court includes an administrative authority or official.\n- (a) under 1 of the registrar’s seals; and\n- (b) with the signature, or a facsimile of a signature, of the registrar or the registrar’s delegate.","sortOrder":124},{"sectionNumber":"sec.103","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reciprocal administrative arrangements","content":"### sec.103 Reciprocal administrative arrangements\n\nThe Minister may enter into an arrangement with the Minister responsible for the administration of a corresponding law providing for—\nthe exercise by the registrar of powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and\nthe exercise by the registering authority under the corresponding law of powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\nWhen an arrangement is in force under this section—\nthe registrar may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and\nthe registering authority under the corresponding law may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\nAn arrangement under this section may—\nestablish a database in which information is recorded for the benefit of all the participants in the arrangement; and\nprovide for access to information contained in the database; and\nprovide for payments by or to participants in the arrangement for services provided under the arrangement.\n(sec.103-ssec.1) The Minister may enter into an arrangement with the Minister responsible for the administration of a corresponding law providing for— the exercise by the registrar of powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and the exercise by the registering authority under the corresponding law of powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\n(sec.103-ssec.2) When an arrangement is in force under this section— the registrar may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and the registering authority under the corresponding law may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\n(sec.103-ssec.3) An arrangement under this section may— establish a database in which information is recorded for the benefit of all the participants in the arrangement; and provide for access to information contained in the database; and provide for payments by or to participants in the arrangement for services provided under the arrangement.\n- (a) the exercise by the registrar of powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and\n- (b) the exercise by the registering authority under the corresponding law of powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\n- (a) the registrar may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registering authority under the corresponding law; and\n- (b) the registering authority under the corresponding law may exercise, to the extent authorised by the arrangement, but subject to the conditions of the arrangement, the powers and functions of the registrar under this Act.\n- (a) establish a database in which information is recorded for the benefit of all the participants in the arrangement; and\n- (b) provide for access to information contained in the database; and\n- (c) provide for payments by or to participants in the arrangement for services provided under the arrangement.","sortOrder":125},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"The registers","content":"## The registers","sortOrder":126},{"sectionNumber":"sec.104","sectionType":"section","heading":"The registers","content":"### sec.104 The registers\n\nThe registrar must maintain a register for each type of registrable event.\nA register—\nmust contain, for each registrable event or alteration of a registrable event, the particulars required under this Act or another law to be included in the register; and\nmay contain other information the registrar considers appropriate for inclusion in the register.\nThe registrar must register a registrable event if the registrar believes the particulars of the event to be included in the register are correct.\nWhen registering a registrable event, the registrar must not enter the following into the register—\nthe word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect;\nthe word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect;\ninformation prescribed by regulation.\nThe registrar must assign to each registrable event in a register the following particulars—\nthe registrar’s first initial and surname;\nthe registration number;\nthe day and place of registration.\nThe registrar may include for each registrable event in a register details of any marginal notes or other notes or notations.\nA register may be wholly or partly—\nin the form of a computer database; or\nin documentary form; or\nin another form the registrar considers appropriate.\nThe registrar must maintain the information in a register in a way that makes the information reasonably accessible.\nIn this section—\nmarginal note means—\nfor an entry in documentary form—a note entered into the margin of, or an area set aside for notes in, the entry; or\nfor an entry in computer database form—a note made in a field designated for the purpose of entering a note in the entry.\nregistration number means the number assigned to a registrable event when the event is entered in a register.\n(sec.104-ssec.1) The registrar must maintain a register for each type of registrable event.\n(sec.104-ssec.2) A register— must contain, for each registrable event or alteration of a registrable event, the particulars required under this Act or another law to be included in the register; and may contain other information the registrar considers appropriate for inclusion in the register.\n(sec.104-ssec.3) The registrar must register a registrable event if the registrar believes the particulars of the event to be included in the register are correct.\n(sec.104-ssec.4) When registering a registrable event, the registrar must not enter the following into the register— the word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect; the word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect; information prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.104-ssec.5) The registrar must assign to each registrable event in a register the following particulars— the registrar’s first initial and surname; the registration number; the day and place of registration.\n(sec.104-ssec.6) The registrar may include for each registrable event in a register details of any marginal notes or other notes or notations.\n(sec.104-ssec.7) A register may be wholly or partly— in the form of a computer database; or in documentary form; or in another form the registrar considers appropriate.\n(sec.104-ssec.8) The registrar must maintain the information in a register in a way that makes the information reasonably accessible.\n(sec.104-ssec.9) In this section— marginal note means— for an entry in documentary form—a note entered into the margin of, or an area set aside for notes in, the entry; or for an entry in computer database form—a note made in a field designated for the purpose of entering a note in the entry. registration number means the number assigned to a registrable event when the event is entered in a register.\n- (a) must contain, for each registrable event or alteration of a registrable event, the particulars required under this Act or another law to be included in the register; and\n- (b) may contain other information the registrar considers appropriate for inclusion in the register.\n- (a) the word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect;\n- (b) the word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect;\n- (c) information prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) the registrar’s first initial and surname;\n- (b) the registration number;\n- (c) the day and place of registration.\n- (a) in the form of a computer database; or\n- (b) in documentary form; or\n- (c) in another form the registrar considers appropriate.\n- (a) for an entry in documentary form—a note entered into the margin of, or an area set aside for notes in, the entry; or\n- (b) for an entry in computer database form—a note made in a field designated for the purpose of entering a note in the entry.","sortOrder":127},{"sectionNumber":"sec.105","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar may collect and maintain other information","content":"### sec.105 Registrar may collect and maintain other information\n\nThe registrar may collect and maintain records of information, other than registrable information, relating to registrable events.\nThe registrar may include information in the records maintained under this section at the request of a person interested in the registrable event to which the information relates or on the registrar’s own initiative.\nSection&#160;116 applies to any records maintained under this section as if they were part of a register.\nThis section does not apply to information in the donor conception information register under the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2024 , part&#160;3 .\ns&#160;105 amd 2024 No.&#160;46 s&#160;161\n(sec.105-ssec.1) The registrar may collect and maintain records of information, other than registrable information, relating to registrable events.\n(sec.105-ssec.2) The registrar may include information in the records maintained under this section at the request of a person interested in the registrable event to which the information relates or on the registrar’s own initiative.\n(sec.105-ssec.3) Section&#160;116 applies to any records maintained under this section as if they were part of a register.\n(sec.105-ssec.4) This section does not apply to information in the donor conception information register under the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act 2024 , part&#160;3 .","sortOrder":128},{"sectionNumber":"sec.106","sectionType":"section","heading":"Re-registering events having regard to number of notes","content":"### sec.106 Re-registering events having regard to number of notes\n\nThe registrar may re-register a person’s relevant event if the registrar decides that, because of the number of notes on the entry for the event, it would be desirable to re-register the event.\nThe registrar re-registers a person’s relevant event by—\nduplicating the information in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded, and without indicating what information has been superseded; and\nnoting on the closed entry—\nthat the relevant event has been re-registered; and\na reference to the new entry; and\nnoting on the new entry—\nthat the new entry was made under this section; and\na reference to the closed entry.\n(sec.106-ssec.1) The registrar may re-register a person’s relevant event if the registrar decides that, because of the number of notes on the entry for the event, it would be desirable to re-register the event.\n(sec.106-ssec.2) The registrar re-registers a person’s relevant event by— duplicating the information in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded, and without indicating what information has been superseded; and noting on the closed entry— that the relevant event has been re-registered; and a reference to the new entry; and noting on the new entry— that the new entry was made under this section; and a reference to the closed entry.\n- (a) duplicating the information in the entry for the person’s relevant event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the relevant child register, other than information that has been superseded, and without indicating what information has been superseded; and\n- (b) noting on the closed entry— (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and (ii) a reference to the new entry; and\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry; and\n- (c) noting on the new entry— (i) that the new entry was made under this section; and (ii) a reference to the closed entry.\n- (i) that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the closed entry.\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry; and\n- (i) that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (ii) a reference to the closed entry.","sortOrder":129},{"sectionNumber":"sec.107","sectionType":"section","heading":"Correcting the register","content":"### sec.107 Correcting the register\n\nThe registrar must correct a register—\non the order of a Queensland court or QCAT; or\non the application of the chief executive (corrective services) under—\nthe Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 (4) or 27AA (4) ; or\nthe Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB (4) or 43ABA(4) ; or\non the application of the police commissioner under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A (5) ; or\nsubject to section&#160;104 (4) , to reflect a coroner’s findings if the findings differ from the information entered on a register.\nThe registrar may correct a register—\non application by a person—\nto reflect the order of a non-Queensland court; or\nto ensure the particulars in an entry about a registrable event conform with the most reliable information about the registrable event that is available to the registrar; or\nto reflect a finding made on inquiry under section&#160;108 ; or\non the registrar’s own initiative.\nAn application made under subsection&#160;(2) (a) must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nFor subsection&#160;(2) (a) (ii) , the most reliable information about a registrable event may differ from the information that was previously entered on the register in relation to that event, although the information previously entered was correct at the time of its entry.\nThe particulars of the birth entry about the birth of A state that A’s mother is B. Subsequent to the registration of A’s birth, the registrar alters the record of B’s sex to male under part&#160;5 . The registrar may correct the birth entry for A’s birth to state that B is A’s father.\nSubject to subsections&#160;(7) and (8) , the registrar may correct a register—\nby adding, or cancelling, an entry in the register; or\nby adding, amending or deleting particulars in an entry in the register; or\nby re-registering a person’s relevant event.\nFor subsection&#160;(5) (c) , the registrar re-registers a person’s relevant event by—\nmaking a new entry in the register that includes—\nall the information that was in the entry for the event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the register, other than information that is to be corrected; and\na note that the new entry was made under this section; and\nnoting on the closed entry—\nthat the relevant event has been re-registered; and\na reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\nAn entry in a register must not be cancelled under subsection&#160;(5) (a) if the entry was correct at the time the entry was made.\nParticulars in an entry in a register must not be deleted under subsection&#160;(5) (b) if the particulars were correct at the time the particulars were entered.\nThe registrar need not correct a register in relation to historical information.\nA certificate from an entry that contains corrected information must show the most recent information.\nHowever, the certificate may also show information that has been corrected if the registrar considers it necessary.\nThe registrar may publish, on a relevant website, a policy about how the registrar exercises the registrar’s discretion to correct an entry under this section.\nIn this section—\npolice commissioner means the commissioner of the Queensland Police Service.\nrelevant website means the department’s website or www.qld.gov.au .\n(sec.107-ssec.1) The registrar must correct a register— on the order of a Queensland court or QCAT; or on the application of the chief executive (corrective services) under— the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 (4) or 27AA (4) ; or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB (4) or 43ABA(4) ; or on the application of the police commissioner under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A (5) ; or subject to section&#160;104 (4) , to reflect a coroner’s findings if the findings differ from the information entered on a register.\n(sec.107-ssec.2) The registrar may correct a register— on application by a person— to reflect the order of a non-Queensland court; or to ensure the particulars in an entry about a registrable event conform with the most reliable information about the registrable event that is available to the registrar; or to reflect a finding made on inquiry under section&#160;108 ; or on the registrar’s own initiative.\n(sec.107-ssec.3) An application made under subsection&#160;(2) (a) must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.107-ssec.4) For subsection&#160;(2) (a) (ii) , the most reliable information about a registrable event may differ from the information that was previously entered on the register in relation to that event, although the information previously entered was correct at the time of its entry. The particulars of the birth entry about the birth of A state that A’s mother is B. Subsequent to the registration of A’s birth, the registrar alters the record of B’s sex to male under part&#160;5 . The registrar may correct the birth entry for A’s birth to state that B is A’s father.\n(sec.107-ssec.5) Subject to subsections&#160;(7) and (8) , the registrar may correct a register— by adding, or cancelling, an entry in the register; or by adding, amending or deleting particulars in an entry in the register; or by re-registering a person’s relevant event.\n(sec.107-ssec.6) For subsection&#160;(5) (c) , the registrar re-registers a person’s relevant event by— making a new entry in the register that includes— all the information that was in the entry for the event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the register, other than information that is to be corrected; and a note that the new entry was made under this section; and noting on the closed entry— that the relevant event has been re-registered; and a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n(sec.107-ssec.7) An entry in a register must not be cancelled under subsection&#160;(5) (a) if the entry was correct at the time the entry was made.\n(sec.107-ssec.8) Particulars in an entry in a register must not be deleted under subsection&#160;(5) (b) if the particulars were correct at the time the particulars were entered.\n(sec.107-ssec.9) The registrar need not correct a register in relation to historical information.\n(sec.107-ssec.10) A certificate from an entry that contains corrected information must show the most recent information.\n(sec.107-ssec.11) However, the certificate may also show information that has been corrected if the registrar considers it necessary.\n(sec.107-ssec.12) The registrar may publish, on a relevant website, a policy about how the registrar exercises the registrar’s discretion to correct an entry under this section.\n(sec.107-ssec.13) In this section— police commissioner means the commissioner of the Queensland Police Service. relevant website means the department’s website or www.qld.gov.au .\n- (a) on the order of a Queensland court or QCAT; or\n- (b) on the application of the chief executive (corrective services) under— (i) the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 (4) or 27AA (4) ; or (ii) the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB (4) or 43ABA(4) ; or\n- (i) the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 (4) or 27AA (4) ; or\n- (ii) the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB (4) or 43ABA(4) ; or\n- (c) on the application of the police commissioner under the Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) Act 2004 , section&#160;74A (5) ; or\n- (d) subject to section&#160;104 (4) , to reflect a coroner’s findings if the findings differ from the information entered on a register.\n- (i) the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 (4) or 27AA (4) ; or\n- (ii) the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB (4) or 43ABA(4) ; or\n- (a) on application by a person— (i) to reflect the order of a non-Queensland court; or (ii) to ensure the particulars in an entry about a registrable event conform with the most reliable information about the registrable event that is available to the registrar; or\n- (i) to reflect the order of a non-Queensland court; or\n- (ii) to ensure the particulars in an entry about a registrable event conform with the most reliable information about the registrable event that is available to the registrar; or\n- (b) to reflect a finding made on inquiry under section&#160;108 ; or\n- (c) on the registrar’s own initiative.\n- (i) to reflect the order of a non-Queensland court; or\n- (ii) to ensure the particulars in an entry about a registrable event conform with the most reliable information about the registrable event that is available to the registrar; or\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) by adding, or cancelling, an entry in the register; or\n- (b) by adding, amending or deleting particulars in an entry in the register; or\n- (c) by re-registering a person’s relevant event.\n- (a) making a new entry in the register that includes— (i) all the information that was in the entry for the event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the register, other than information that is to be corrected; and (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the register, other than information that is to be corrected; and\n- (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (b) noting on the closed entry— (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .\n- (i) all the information that was in the entry for the event (the closed entry ) in a new entry in the register, other than information that is to be corrected; and\n- (ii) a note that the new entry was made under this section; and\n- (i) that the relevant event has been re-registered; and\n- (ii) a reference to the new entry made under paragraph&#160;(a) .","sortOrder":130},{"sectionNumber":"sec.108","sectionType":"section","heading":"Inquiry to ensure register correct","content":"### sec.108 Inquiry to ensure register correct\n\nThe registrar may conduct an inquiry to find out—\nwhether a registrable event has happened; or\nparticulars of a registrable event; or\nwhether particulars of a particular registrable event have been correctly recorded in a register; or\nwhether a person is seeking to use, or has used, the registration system for a fraudulent or other improper purpose.\nThe registrar may, by notice given to a person who may be able to provide information relevant to an inquiry under this section, require the person to answer specified questions or to provide other information within a time and in a way stated in the notice.\nThe person must comply with the notice unless the person has a reasonable excuse.\nMaximum penalty—20 penalty units.\nIn this section—\nregistrable event includes any event—\nthat the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to record or note in a register; and\nin relation to which the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to alter the register.\n(sec.108-ssec.1) The registrar may conduct an inquiry to find out— whether a registrable event has happened; or particulars of a registrable event; or whether particulars of a particular registrable event have been correctly recorded in a register; or whether a person is seeking to use, or has used, the registration system for a fraudulent or other improper purpose.\n(sec.108-ssec.2) The registrar may, by notice given to a person who may be able to provide information relevant to an inquiry under this section, require the person to answer specified questions or to provide other information within a time and in a way stated in the notice.\n(sec.108-ssec.3) The person must comply with the notice unless the person has a reasonable excuse. Maximum penalty—20 penalty units.\n(sec.108-ssec.4) In this section— registrable event includes any event— that the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to record or note in a register; and in relation to which the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to alter the register.\n- (a) whether a registrable event has happened; or\n- (b) particulars of a registrable event; or\n- (c) whether particulars of a particular registrable event have been correctly recorded in a register; or\n- (d) whether a person is seeking to use, or has used, the registration system for a fraudulent or other improper purpose.\n- (a) that the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to record or note in a register; and\n- (b) in relation to which the registrar may be required, under this Act or another Act, to alter the register.","sortOrder":131},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Obtaining information and certificates from registrar","content":"## Obtaining information and certificates from registrar","sortOrder":132},{"sectionNumber":"sec.109","sectionType":"section","heading":"Adequate reason","content":"### sec.109 Adequate reason\n\nIn deciding whether an applicant has an adequate reason for obtaining requested information under section&#160;110 (4) or a certificate under section&#160;112 (3) , the registrar must have regard to—\nthe relationship, if any, between the applicant and the person to whom the information or certificate relates; and\nthe reason the applicant wants the information or certificate; and\nthe use to be made of the information or certificate; and\nthe age of the entry from which the information is to be obtained or the certificate is to be issued; and\nthe contents of the entry or source document from which the information is to be obtained or the certificate is to be issued; and\nthe sensitivity of the information or certificate; and\na person’s sex\nthe provision of an Act, if any, that permits the applicant to obtain the information or certificate; and\nany other relevant factors.\n- (a) the relationship, if any, between the applicant and the person to whom the information or certificate relates; and\n- (b) the reason the applicant wants the information or certificate; and\n- (c) the use to be made of the information or certificate; and\n- (d) the age of the entry from which the information is to be obtained or the certificate is to be issued; and\n- (e) the contents of the entry or source document from which the information is to be obtained or the certificate is to be issued; and\n- (f) the sensitivity of the information or certificate; and Example of sensitive information— a person’s sex\n- (g) the provision of an Act, if any, that permits the applicant to obtain the information or certificate; and\n- (h) any other relevant factors.","sortOrder":133},{"sectionNumber":"sec.110","sectionType":"section","heading":"Obtaining requested information from registrar","content":"### sec.110 Obtaining requested information from registrar\n\nAn entity may apply to the registrar for any of the following (the requested information )—\nregistrable information; or\na copy of a source document; or\ninformation collected and maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\nAn application under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nAn applicant for requested information, other than historical information, must satisfy the registrar of the applicant’s identity.\nUnless the application relates to historical information, the registrar may refuse the application if the applicant does not have an adequate reason for obtaining the requested information.\nThe registrar may give requested information in the form the registrar considers appropriate.\nIf an applicant for a source document is not the person who created the document, the registrar may give the applicant a copy of the document with information redacted.\n(sec.110-ssec.1) An entity may apply to the registrar for any of the following (the requested information )— registrable information; or a copy of a source document; or information collected and maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n(sec.110-ssec.2) An application under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.110-ssec.3) An applicant for requested information, other than historical information, must satisfy the registrar of the applicant’s identity.\n(sec.110-ssec.4) Unless the application relates to historical information, the registrar may refuse the application if the applicant does not have an adequate reason for obtaining the requested information.\n(sec.110-ssec.5) The registrar may give requested information in the form the registrar considers appropriate.\n(sec.110-ssec.6) If an applicant for a source document is not the person who created the document, the registrar may give the applicant a copy of the document with information redacted.\n- (a) registrable information; or\n- (b) a copy of a source document; or\n- (c) information collected and maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":134},{"sectionNumber":"sec.111","sectionType":"section","heading":"Restrictions on access to requested information about particular life events","content":"### sec.111 Restrictions on access to requested information about particular life events\n\nThe registrar may not give requested information relating to an adopted person’s birth entry except to the extent allowed under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;290 .\nThe registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry about a person closed under section&#160;43 to any of the following persons—\nthe person;\na child of the person;\nif the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information—\na parent of the person; or\na person with parental responsibility for the person;\nif the person is a child under 16 years—\na parent of the child; or\na person with parental responsibility for the child;\na person prescribed by regulation.\nThe registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a parentage order to any of the following persons—\na birth parent for the parentage order;\nan intended parent for the parentage order;\nif the child for the parentage order is at least 18 years—the child;\na guardian appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 for any of the persons mentioned in paragraphs&#160;(a) to (c) ;\nif an administrator has been appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 , section&#160;14 for the child—the administrator;\nif a personal representative has been appointed for the child—the personal representative;\nan officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body;\nthe Attorney-General.\nWhen applying for information from a closed entry, a person mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) (d) , (e) or (f) must—\nproduce to the registrar the person’s instrument of appointment; and\nshow that the information is required to discharge a function under the person’s appointment.\nDespite subsection&#160;(3) , the registrar may give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a parentage order to a child who is under 18 years if the birth parents and the intended parent, or intended parents, for the parentage order consent to the child’s application for the information.\nFor subsection&#160;(5) , a person’s consent is not required if—\nthe person has died; or\nthe child can not locate the person after making all reasonable enquiries.\nThe registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a cultural recognition order to—\na person who has been authorised under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;64 ; or\nan officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body.\nWhen applying for information from a closed entry, a person mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) (g) or (7) (b) must show that the information is required to discharge—\na function of the law enforcement body; or\nthe person’s duty as an officer of the law enforcement body.\nIn this section—\nbirth parent means—\nfor a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —a birth parent under that Act; or\nfor another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to a birth parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 .\nintended parent means—\nfor a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —an intended parent under that Act; or\nfor another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to an intended parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 .\n(sec.111-ssec.1) The registrar may not give requested information relating to an adopted person’s birth entry except to the extent allowed under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;290 .\n(sec.111-ssec.2) The registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry about a person closed under section&#160;43 to any of the following persons— the person; a child of the person; if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information— a parent of the person; or a person with parental responsibility for the person; if the person is a child under 16 years— a parent of the child; or a person with parental responsibility for the child; a person prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.111-ssec.3) The registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a parentage order to any of the following persons— a birth parent for the parentage order; an intended parent for the parentage order; if the child for the parentage order is at least 18 years—the child; a guardian appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 for any of the persons mentioned in paragraphs&#160;(a) to (c) ; if an administrator has been appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 , section&#160;14 for the child—the administrator; if a personal representative has been appointed for the child—the personal representative; an officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body; the Attorney-General.\n(sec.111-ssec.4) When applying for information from a closed entry, a person mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) (d) , (e) or (f) must— produce to the registrar the person’s instrument of appointment; and show that the information is required to discharge a function under the person’s appointment.\n(sec.111-ssec.5) Despite subsection&#160;(3) , the registrar may give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a parentage order to a child who is under 18 years if the birth parents and the intended parent, or intended parents, for the parentage order consent to the child’s application for the information.\n(sec.111-ssec.6) For subsection&#160;(5) , a person’s consent is not required if— the person has died; or the child can not locate the person after making all reasonable enquiries.\n(sec.111-ssec.7) The registrar may only give requested information relating to an entry closed under section&#160;19 or 21 that relates to a cultural recognition order to— a person who has been authorised under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;64 ; or an officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body.\n(sec.111-ssec.8) When applying for information from a closed entry, a person mentioned in subsection&#160;(3) (g) or (7) (b) must show that the information is required to discharge— a function of the law enforcement body; or the person’s duty as an officer of the law enforcement body.\n(sec.111-ssec.9) In this section— birth parent means— for a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —a birth parent under that Act; or for another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to a birth parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 . intended parent means— for a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —an intended parent under that Act; or for another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to an intended parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 .\n- (a) the person;\n- (b) a child of the person;\n- (c) if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information— (i) a parent of the person; or (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the person;\n- (i) a parent of the person; or\n- (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the person;\n- (d) if the person is a child under 16 years— (i) a parent of the child; or (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the child;\n- (i) a parent of the child; or\n- (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the child;\n- (e) a person prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) a parent of the person; or\n- (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the person;\n- (i) a parent of the child; or\n- (ii) a person with parental responsibility for the child;\n- (a) a birth parent for the parentage order;\n- (b) an intended parent for the parentage order;\n- (c) if the child for the parentage order is at least 18 years—the child;\n- (d) a guardian appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 for any of the persons mentioned in paragraphs&#160;(a) to (c) ;\n- (e) if an administrator has been appointed under the Guardianship and Administration Act 2000 , section&#160;14 for the child—the administrator;\n- (f) if a personal representative has been appointed for the child—the personal representative;\n- (g) an officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body;\n- (h) the Attorney-General.\n- (a) produce to the registrar the person’s instrument of appointment; and\n- (b) show that the information is required to discharge a function under the person’s appointment.\n- (a) the person has died; or\n- (b) the child can not locate the person after making all reasonable enquiries.\n- (a) a person who has been authorised under the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa (Torres Strait Islander Traditional Child Rearing Practice) Act 2020 , section&#160;64 ; or\n- (b) an officer of, or person acting for, a law enforcement body.\n- (a) a function of the law enforcement body; or\n- (b) the person’s duty as an officer of the law enforcement body.\n- (a) for a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —a birth parent under that Act; or\n- (b) for another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to a birth parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 .\n- (a) for a parentage order under the Surrogacy Act 2010 —an intended parent under that Act; or\n- (b) for another parentage order—a person corresponding, under the law of another Australian jurisdiction where the order was made, to an intended parent under the Surrogacy Act 2010 .","sortOrder":135},{"sectionNumber":"sec.112","sectionType":"section","heading":"Obtaining certificates from registrar","content":"### sec.112 Obtaining certificates from registrar\n\nAn entity may apply to the registrar for a certificate about an event that is, or may be, in a register kept by the registrar.\nAn application under this section must be—\nin the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\naccompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\nUnless the application relates to historical information, the registrar may refuse the application if the applicant does not have an adequate reason for obtaining the certificate.\nThe registrar may issue a certificate by certifying—\nsome or all of the particulars that are in the most recent entry in the register for a stated registrable event; or\nthat no entry was located in the register about the stated registrable event.\nA certificate must not state a person’s residential address if the person has satisfied the registrar that, because of exceptional circumstances, the person’s residential address should not be disclosed on the certificate.\nThe person is protected by a domestic violence order made under the Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 2012 or an interstate order or registered New Zealand order under part&#160;6 of that Act.\nThe registrar is satisfied that the person’s residential address should not be disclosed for the purpose of protecting the person or a person associated with the person.\nA certificate, other than a certificate containing historical information, must not contain—\nthe word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect; or\nthe word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect; or\ninformation prescribed by regulation.\nThe registrar may issue a certificate electronically.\nA certificate is admissible in proceedings as evidence of its contents.\n(sec.112-ssec.1) An entity may apply to the registrar for a certificate about an event that is, or may be, in a register kept by the registrar.\n(sec.112-ssec.2) An application under this section must be— in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.112-ssec.3) Unless the application relates to historical information, the registrar may refuse the application if the applicant does not have an adequate reason for obtaining the certificate.\n(sec.112-ssec.4) The registrar may issue a certificate by certifying— some or all of the particulars that are in the most recent entry in the register for a stated registrable event; or that no entry was located in the register about the stated registrable event.\n(sec.112-ssec.5) A certificate must not state a person’s residential address if the person has satisfied the registrar that, because of exceptional circumstances, the person’s residential address should not be disclosed on the certificate. The person is protected by a domestic violence order made under the Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 2012 or an interstate order or registered New Zealand order under part&#160;6 of that Act. The registrar is satisfied that the person’s residential address should not be disclosed for the purpose of protecting the person or a person associated with the person.\n(sec.112-ssec.6) A certificate, other than a certificate containing historical information, must not contain— the word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect; or the word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect; or information prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.112-ssec.7) The registrar may issue a certificate electronically.\n(sec.112-ssec.8) A certificate is admissible in proceedings as evidence of its contents.\n- (a) in the form required by the registrar and made in an approved way; and\n- (b) accompanied by the fee prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) some or all of the particulars that are in the most recent entry in the register for a stated registrable event; or\n- (b) that no entry was located in the register about the stated registrable event.\n- 1 The person is protected by a domestic violence order made under the Domestic and Family Violence Protection Act 2012 or an interstate order or registered New Zealand order under part&#160;6 of that Act.\n- 2 The registrar is satisfied that the person’s residential address should not be disclosed for the purpose of protecting the person or a person associated with the person.\n- (a) the word ‘illegitimate’ or words to that effect; or\n- (b) the word ‘suicide’ or words to that effect; or\n- (c) information prescribed by regulation.","sortOrder":136},{"sectionNumber":"sec.113","sectionType":"section","heading":"Obtaining information about sex of person from registrar","content":"### sec.113 Obtaining information about sex of person from registrar\n\nThis section applies if—\nan entry for an event in a relevant child register states the sex of a person (the subject person ); and\nthe subject person or another person applies to the registrar—\nunder section&#160;110 for requested information, other than historical information, about the event; or\nunder section&#160;112 for a certificate containing information, other than historical information, about the event.\nThe registrar may only give the requested information or certificate containing a reference to the sex of the subject person if the applicant requests that the registrar include that information.\nAlso, the registrar may only give the requested information or certificate containing a notation of any previous sex stated in the relevant child register for the subject person if—\nthe applicant requests that the registrar include that information; and\nthe applicant is—\nthe subject person; or\na child of the subject person; or\nif the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information or certificate—\na parent of the person; or\na person with parental responsibility for the person; or\nif the subject person is a child under 16 years—\na parent of the child; or\na person with parental responsibility for the child; or\na person prescribed by regulation.\n(sec.113-ssec.1) This section applies if— an entry for an event in a relevant child register states the sex of a person (the subject person ); and the subject person or another person applies to the registrar— under section&#160;110 for requested information, other than historical information, about the event; or under section&#160;112 for a certificate containing information, other than historical information, about the event.\n(sec.113-ssec.2) The registrar may only give the requested information or certificate containing a reference to the sex of the subject person if the applicant requests that the registrar include that information.\n(sec.113-ssec.3) Also, the registrar may only give the requested information or certificate containing a notation of any previous sex stated in the relevant child register for the subject person if— the applicant requests that the registrar include that information; and the applicant is— the subject person; or a child of the subject person; or if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information or certificate— a parent of the person; or a person with parental responsibility for the person; or if the subject person is a child under 16 years— a parent of the child; or a person with parental responsibility for the child; or a person prescribed by regulation.\n- (a) an entry for an event in a relevant child register states the sex of a person (the subject person ); and\n- (b) the subject person or another person applies to the registrar— (i) under section&#160;110 for requested information, other than historical information, about the event; or (ii) under section&#160;112 for a certificate containing information, other than historical information, about the event.\n- (i) under section&#160;110 for requested information, other than historical information, about the event; or\n- (ii) under section&#160;112 for a certificate containing information, other than historical information, about the event.\n- (i) under section&#160;110 for requested information, other than historical information, about the event; or\n- (ii) under section&#160;112 for a certificate containing information, other than historical information, about the event.\n- (a) the applicant requests that the registrar include that information; and\n- (b) the applicant is— (i) the subject person; or (ii) a child of the subject person; or (iii) if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information or certificate— (A) a parent of the person; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or (iv) if the subject person is a child under 16 years— (A) a parent of the child; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or (v) a person prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) the subject person; or\n- (ii) a child of the subject person; or\n- (iii) if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information or certificate— (A) a parent of the person; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or\n- (A) a parent of the person; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or\n- (iv) if the subject person is a child under 16 years— (A) a parent of the child; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (A) a parent of the child; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (v) a person prescribed by regulation.\n- (i) the subject person; or\n- (ii) a child of the subject person; or\n- (iii) if the person is aged 16 or 17 years and gives consent to the release of the information or certificate— (A) a parent of the person; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or\n- (A) a parent of the person; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or\n- (iv) if the subject person is a child under 16 years— (A) a parent of the child; or (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (A) a parent of the child; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or\n- (v) a person prescribed by regulation.\n- (A) a parent of the person; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the person; or\n- (A) a parent of the child; or\n- (B) a person with parental responsibility for the child; or","sortOrder":137},{"sectionNumber":"sec.114","sectionType":"section","heading":"Additional services","content":"### sec.114 Additional services\n\nSubject to section&#160;116 , the registrar may provide services relating to the information in a register or maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 that are additional to the services otherwise provided by the registrar under this Act.\nThe services the registrar may provide under subsection&#160;(1) include the issue of a commemorative certificate containing some or all of the particulars contained in an entry from the relevant register.\nA commemorative certificate has no legal effect.\nIf the registrar provides a service under subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may charge a fee for the service.\nIn this section—\ncommemorative certificate means a certificate that is more decorative than another certificate.\n(sec.114-ssec.1) Subject to section&#160;116 , the registrar may provide services relating to the information in a register or maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 that are additional to the services otherwise provided by the registrar under this Act.\n(sec.114-ssec.2) The services the registrar may provide under subsection&#160;(1) include the issue of a commemorative certificate containing some or all of the particulars contained in an entry from the relevant register.\n(sec.114-ssec.3) A commemorative certificate has no legal effect.\n(sec.114-ssec.4) If the registrar provides a service under subsection&#160;(1) , the registrar may charge a fee for the service.\n(sec.114-ssec.5) In this section— commemorative certificate means a certificate that is more decorative than another certificate.","sortOrder":138},{"sectionNumber":"sec.115","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information policies","content":"### sec.115 Information policies\n\nThe registrar may allow an entity to obtain information contained in a register other than under section&#160;110 or 112 .\nThe registrar must maintain a written statement of the policies relating to who may obtain—\ninformation under subsection&#160;(1) ; or\ninformation under section&#160;110 or a certificate under section&#160;112 .\nThe registrar must give a copy of the statement to any person who asks for it.\nHowever, subsection&#160;(3) does not apply to a statement if the registrar believes withholding the statement is necessary—\nto protect the persons for whom the registrar keeps information from unjustified intrusion on their privacy; or\nto prevent information mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) being obtained fraudulently or improperly.\n(sec.115-ssec.1) The registrar may allow an entity to obtain information contained in a register other than under section&#160;110 or 112 .\n(sec.115-ssec.2) The registrar must maintain a written statement of the policies relating to who may obtain— information under subsection&#160;(1) ; or information under section&#160;110 or a certificate under section&#160;112 .\n(sec.115-ssec.3) The registrar must give a copy of the statement to any person who asks for it.\n(sec.115-ssec.4) However, subsection&#160;(3) does not apply to a statement if the registrar believes withholding the statement is necessary— to protect the persons for whom the registrar keeps information from unjustified intrusion on their privacy; or to prevent information mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) being obtained fraudulently or improperly.\n- (a) information under subsection&#160;(1) ; or\n- (b) information under section&#160;110 or a certificate under section&#160;112 .\n- (a) to protect the persons for whom the registrar keeps information from unjustified intrusion on their privacy; or\n- (b) to prevent information mentioned in subsection&#160;(1) being obtained fraudulently or improperly.","sortOrder":139},{"sectionNumber":"sec.116","sectionType":"section","heading":"Protection of privacy","content":"### sec.116 Protection of privacy\n\nThis section applies if the registrar gives an entity, or allows an entity to obtain, information contained in a register.\nThe registrar must, as far as practicable, protect the persons to whom the information relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\nFor this purpose, the registrar may impose conditions when giving an entity information, or access to information, contained in a register.\n(sec.116-ssec.1) This section applies if the registrar gives an entity, or allows an entity to obtain, information contained in a register.\n(sec.116-ssec.2) The registrar must, as far as practicable, protect the persons to whom the information relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\n(sec.116-ssec.3) For this purpose, the registrar may impose conditions when giving an entity information, or access to information, contained in a register.","sortOrder":140},{"sectionNumber":"pt.9-div.4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Other provisions","content":"## Other provisions","sortOrder":141},{"sectionNumber":"sec.117","sectionType":"section","heading":"Control of records","content":"### sec.117 Control of records\n\nDespite the Public Records Act 2023 , the registrar is to retain control over access to any information or records maintained under this Act.\ns&#160;117 amd 2023 No.&#160;33 s&#160;107 sch&#160;4","sortOrder":142},{"sectionNumber":"sec.118","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar may enter into arrangement","content":"### sec.118 Registrar may enter into arrangement\n\nThis section applies in relation to information ( relevant information )—\nin a register, including information in bulk or historical or genealogical information; or\nmaintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\nSubject to section&#160;116 , the registrar may enter into an arrangement with an entity for the provision of relevant information to the entity if the registrar is satisfied that the provision of that information is in the public interest.\nWithout limiting subsection&#160;(2) , an arrangement that may be entered into by the registrar under this section includes—\nan arrangement between the registrar and a law enforcement body about providing relevant information to the body for the purpose of supporting the performance of the body’s activities related to the enforcement of laws; and\nan arrangement between the registrar and a government agency about providing relevant information to the agency for the purpose of—\ninforming the agency’s policy making or program delivery; or\nsupporting the efficient delivery of the agency’s services; or\nassisting in the implementation and assessment of the agency’s services; or\nsupporting research and development by the agency that the agency demonstrates to the registrar has clear and direct public benefits; and\nan arrangement between the registrar and a foreign corresponding authority about providing change of name records and death records about persons whose births are registered by the authority, to the authority for the purpose of supporting up-to-date demographic and identity records in the authority’s jurisdiction; and\nan arrangement between the registrar and a non-government organisation, private sector agency or government agency about providing relevant information to the organisation or agency for the purpose of removing the names of deceased persons from a database of the organisation or agency.\nIf the registrar enters into an arrangement with an entity under this section the registrar may—\nprovide relevant information to the entity under the arrangement; and\ncharge the entity a fee for providing relevant information to the entity under the arrangement.\nIn this section—\nforeign corresponding authority means an authority of a foreign country that registers births, deaths and marriages.\n(sec.118-ssec.1) This section applies in relation to information ( relevant information )— in a register, including information in bulk or historical or genealogical information; or maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n(sec.118-ssec.2) Subject to section&#160;116 , the registrar may enter into an arrangement with an entity for the provision of relevant information to the entity if the registrar is satisfied that the provision of that information is in the public interest.\n(sec.118-ssec.3) Without limiting subsection&#160;(2) , an arrangement that may be entered into by the registrar under this section includes— an arrangement between the registrar and a law enforcement body about providing relevant information to the body for the purpose of supporting the performance of the body’s activities related to the enforcement of laws; and an arrangement between the registrar and a government agency about providing relevant information to the agency for the purpose of— informing the agency’s policy making or program delivery; or supporting the efficient delivery of the agency’s services; or assisting in the implementation and assessment of the agency’s services; or supporting research and development by the agency that the agency demonstrates to the registrar has clear and direct public benefits; and an arrangement between the registrar and a foreign corresponding authority about providing change of name records and death records about persons whose births are registered by the authority, to the authority for the purpose of supporting up-to-date demographic and identity records in the authority’s jurisdiction; and an arrangement between the registrar and a non-government organisation, private sector agency or government agency about providing relevant information to the organisation or agency for the purpose of removing the names of deceased persons from a database of the organisation or agency.\n(sec.118-ssec.4) If the registrar enters into an arrangement with an entity under this section the registrar may— provide relevant information to the entity under the arrangement; and charge the entity a fee for providing relevant information to the entity under the arrangement.\n(sec.118-ssec.5) In this section— foreign corresponding authority means an authority of a foreign country that registers births, deaths and marriages.\n- (a) in a register, including information in bulk or historical or genealogical information; or\n- (b) maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n- (a) an arrangement between the registrar and a law enforcement body about providing relevant information to the body for the purpose of supporting the performance of the body’s activities related to the enforcement of laws; and\n- (b) an arrangement between the registrar and a government agency about providing relevant information to the agency for the purpose of— (i) informing the agency’s policy making or program delivery; or (ii) supporting the efficient delivery of the agency’s services; or (iii) assisting in the implementation and assessment of the agency’s services; or (iv) supporting research and development by the agency that the agency demonstrates to the registrar has clear and direct public benefits; and\n- (i) informing the agency’s policy making or program delivery; or\n- (ii) supporting the efficient delivery of the agency’s services; or\n- (iii) assisting in the implementation and assessment of the agency’s services; or\n- (iv) supporting research and development by the agency that the agency demonstrates to the registrar has clear and direct public benefits; and\n- (c) an arrangement between the registrar and a foreign corresponding authority about providing change of name records and death records about persons whose births are registered by the authority, to the authority for the purpose of supporting up-to-date demographic and identity records in the authority’s jurisdiction; and\n- (d) an arrangement between the registrar and a non-government organisation, private sector agency or government agency about providing relevant information to the organisation or agency for the purpose of removing the names of deceased persons from a database of the organisation or agency.\n- (i) informing the agency’s policy making or program delivery; or\n- (ii) supporting the efficient delivery of the agency’s services; or\n- (iii) assisting in the implementation and assessment of the agency’s services; or\n- (iv) supporting research and development by the agency that the agency demonstrates to the registrar has clear and direct public benefits; and\n- (a) provide relevant information to the entity under the arrangement; and\n- (b) charge the entity a fee for providing relevant information to the entity under the arrangement.","sortOrder":143},{"sectionNumber":"sec.119","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar to give notice of registration of child’s death to family and child commissioner","content":"### sec.119 Registrar to give notice of registration of child’s death to family and child commissioner\n\nThis section applies if the registrar registers the death of a child, other than a stillborn child.\nThe registrar must give notice of the registration to—\nthe family and child commissioner; and\nthe chief executive (child safety).\nThe notice must include the following information, to the extent it is known to the registrar—\nfor the notice to the family and child commissioner—\nthe registration number for the registration; and\nthe child’s name; and\nthe child’s date and place of birth; and\nthe child’s usual place of residence; and\nthe child’s sex; and\nthe child’s occupation, if any; and\nthe duration of the last illness, if any, had by the child; and\nthe date and place of death; and\nthe cause of death;\nfor the notice to the chief executive (child safety)—\nthe child’s name; and\nthe child’s date and place of birth; and\nthe child’s usual place of residence; and\nthe date and place of death; and\nthe cause of death.\nTo the extent that it is practicable to do so, the registrar must give the notice within 30 days after registering the death.\nIn this section—\nchief executive (child safety) means the chief executive of the department in which the Child Protection Act 1999 is administered.\n(sec.119-ssec.1) This section applies if the registrar registers the death of a child, other than a stillborn child.\n(sec.119-ssec.2) The registrar must give notice of the registration to— the family and child commissioner; and the chief executive (child safety).\n(sec.119-ssec.3) The notice must include the following information, to the extent it is known to the registrar— for the notice to the family and child commissioner— the registration number for the registration; and the child’s name; and the child’s date and place of birth; and the child’s usual place of residence; and the child’s sex; and the child’s occupation, if any; and the duration of the last illness, if any, had by the child; and the date and place of death; and the cause of death; for the notice to the chief executive (child safety)— the child’s name; and the child’s date and place of birth; and the child’s usual place of residence; and the date and place of death; and the cause of death.\n(sec.119-ssec.4) To the extent that it is practicable to do so, the registrar must give the notice within 30 days after registering the death.\n(sec.119-ssec.5) In this section— chief executive (child safety) means the chief executive of the department in which the Child Protection Act 1999 is administered.\n- (a) the family and child commissioner; and\n- (b) the chief executive (child safety).\n- (a) for the notice to the family and child commissioner— (i) the registration number for the registration; and (ii) the child’s name; and (iii) the child’s date and place of birth; and (iv) the child’s usual place of residence; and (v) the child’s sex; and (vi) the child’s occupation, if any; and (vii) the duration of the last illness, if any, had by the child; and (viii) the date and place of death; and (ix) the cause of death;\n- (i) the registration number for the registration; and\n- (ii) the child’s name; and\n- (iii) the child’s date and place of birth; and\n- (iv) the child’s usual place of residence; and\n- (v) the child’s sex; and\n- (vi) the child’s occupation, if any; and\n- (vii) the duration of the last illness, if any, had by the child; and\n- (viii) the date and place of death; and\n- (ix) the cause of death;\n- (b) for the notice to the chief executive (child safety)— (i) the child’s name; and (ii) the child’s date and place of birth; and (iii) the child’s usual place of residence; and (iv) the date and place of death; and (v) the cause of death.\n- (i) the child’s name; and\n- (ii) the child’s date and place of birth; and\n- (iii) the child’s usual place of residence; and\n- (iv) the date and place of death; and\n- (v) the cause of death.\n- (i) the registration number for the registration; and\n- (ii) the child’s name; and\n- (iii) the child’s date and place of birth; and\n- (iv) the child’s usual place of residence; and\n- (v) the child’s sex; and\n- (vi) the child’s occupation, if any; and\n- (vii) the duration of the last illness, if any, had by the child; and\n- (viii) the date and place of death; and\n- (ix) the cause of death;\n- (i) the child’s name; and\n- (ii) the child’s date and place of birth; and\n- (iii) the child’s usual place of residence; and\n- (iv) the date and place of death; and\n- (v) the cause of death.","sortOrder":144},{"sectionNumber":"sec.120","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar may enter into arrangement with family and child commissioner","content":"### sec.120 Registrar may enter into arrangement with family and child commissioner\n\nThe registrar may enter into an arrangement with the family and child commissioner about providing to the commissioner information from a register or a source document, or providing to the commissioner a copy of a source document, about—\nthe births of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally; or\nthe deaths of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally.\nThe registrar may provide information or a copy of a source document to the family and child commissioner under the arrangement.\nThe registrar and the family and child commissioner must, as far as practicable having regard to the commissioner’s child death research functions, protect the persons to whom the information or source document relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\nIf the registrar enters into an arrangement with the family and child commissioner, the registrar may charge a fee for the service that is not more than the actual cost of providing the service.\nThis section applies despite sections&#160;23 , 110 to 112 , 114 to 116 and 118 .\nIn this section—\nchild death research functions , for the family and child commissioner, means the commissioner’s functions under the Family and Child Commission Act 2014 , part&#160;3 .\n(sec.120-ssec.1) The registrar may enter into an arrangement with the family and child commissioner about providing to the commissioner information from a register or a source document, or providing to the commissioner a copy of a source document, about— the births of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally; or the deaths of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally.\n(sec.120-ssec.2) The registrar may provide information or a copy of a source document to the family and child commissioner under the arrangement.\n(sec.120-ssec.3) The registrar and the family and child commissioner must, as far as practicable having regard to the commissioner’s child death research functions, protect the persons to whom the information or source document relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\n(sec.120-ssec.4) If the registrar enters into an arrangement with the family and child commissioner, the registrar may charge a fee for the service that is not more than the actual cost of providing the service.\n(sec.120-ssec.5) This section applies despite sections&#160;23 , 110 to 112 , 114 to 116 and 118 .\n(sec.120-ssec.6) In this section— child death research functions , for the family and child commissioner, means the commissioner’s functions under the Family and Child Commission Act 2014 , part&#160;3 .\n- (a) the births of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally; or\n- (b) the deaths of children, whether particular children, children of a class or children generally.","sortOrder":145},{"sectionNumber":"sec.121","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar may enter into arrangement with health ombudsman","content":"### sec.121 Registrar may enter into arrangement with health ombudsman\n\nThe registrar may enter into an arrangement with the health ombudsman about providing to the health ombudsman information from a register or a source document, or providing to the health ombudsman a copy of a source document, about the death of a person to which an investigation under the Health Ombudsman Act 2013 may be relevant.\nThe registrar may provide information or a copy of a source document to the health ombudsman under the arrangement.\nThe registrar and the health ombudsman must, as far as practicable, protect the persons to whom the information or source document relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\nIf the registrar enters into an arrangement with the health ombudsman, the registrar may charge a fee for the service that is not more than the actual cost of providing the service.\nThis section applies despite sections&#160;23 , 110 to 112 , 114 to 116 and 118 .\nIn this section—\nhealth ombudsman means the health ombudsman under the Health Ombudsman Act 2013 .\n(sec.121-ssec.1) The registrar may enter into an arrangement with the health ombudsman about providing to the health ombudsman information from a register or a source document, or providing to the health ombudsman a copy of a source document, about the death of a person to which an investigation under the Health Ombudsman Act 2013 may be relevant.\n(sec.121-ssec.2) The registrar may provide information or a copy of a source document to the health ombudsman under the arrangement.\n(sec.121-ssec.3) The registrar and the health ombudsman must, as far as practicable, protect the persons to whom the information or source document relates from unjustified intrusion on their privacy.\n(sec.121-ssec.4) If the registrar enters into an arrangement with the health ombudsman, the registrar may charge a fee for the service that is not more than the actual cost of providing the service.\n(sec.121-ssec.5) This section applies despite sections&#160;23 , 110 to 112 , 114 to 116 and 118 .\n(sec.121-ssec.6) In this section— health ombudsman means the health ombudsman under the Health Ombudsman Act 2013 .","sortOrder":146},{"sectionNumber":"sec.122","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangement for giving information about persons for particular purposes under Adoption Act 2009","content":"### sec.122 Arrangement for giving information about persons for particular purposes under Adoption Act 2009\n\nThe chief executive (adoptions) may give information to the registrar about the identity of a person if—\nthe person has given a contact statement to the chief executive (adoptions); or\nthe public trustee has given a notice about the person to the chief executive (adoptions) under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;217 (3) .\nThe registrar may give information to the chief executive (adoptions) about whether the person has died and, if the person has died, the date of the death.\nThe registrar and the chief executive (adoptions) may enter into an arrangement for giving information under this section.\nIn this section—\nchief executive (adoptions) means the chief executive of the department in which the Adoption Act 2009 is administered.\ncontact statement means a contact statement under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;269 (1) .\n(sec.122-ssec.1) The chief executive (adoptions) may give information to the registrar about the identity of a person if— the person has given a contact statement to the chief executive (adoptions); or the public trustee has given a notice about the person to the chief executive (adoptions) under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;217 (3) .\n(sec.122-ssec.2) The registrar may give information to the chief executive (adoptions) about whether the person has died and, if the person has died, the date of the death.\n(sec.122-ssec.3) The registrar and the chief executive (adoptions) may enter into an arrangement for giving information under this section.\n(sec.122-ssec.4) In this section— chief executive (adoptions) means the chief executive of the department in which the Adoption Act 2009 is administered. contact statement means a contact statement under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;269 (1) .\n- (a) the person has given a contact statement to the chief executive (adoptions); or\n- (b) the public trustee has given a notice about the person to the chief executive (adoptions) under the Adoption Act 2009 , section&#160;217 (3) .","sortOrder":147},{"sectionNumber":"sec.123","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar to inform chief executive (corrective services) of particular applications","content":"### sec.123 Registrar to inform chief executive (corrective services) of particular applications\n\nSubsection&#160;(2) applies if either—\nall of the following apply—\nthe registrar receives an application under section&#160;26 ;\nthe registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB ;\nwritten permission was not given to the registrar with the application; or\nall of the following apply—\nthe registrar receives an application under section&#160;39 or 50 ;\nthe registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA ;\nwritten permission was not given to the registrar with the application.\nThe registrar must inform the chief executive (corrective services) of the application.\n(sec.123-ssec.1) Subsection&#160;(2) applies if either— all of the following apply— the registrar receives an application under section&#160;26 ; the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB ; written permission was not given to the registrar with the application; or all of the following apply— the registrar receives an application under section&#160;39 or 50 ; the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA ; written permission was not given to the registrar with the application.\n(sec.123-ssec.2) The registrar must inform the chief executive (corrective services) of the application.\n- (a) all of the following apply— (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;26 ; (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB ; (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application; or\n- (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;26 ;\n- (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB ;\n- (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application; or\n- (b) all of the following apply— (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;39 or 50 ; (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA ; (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application.\n- (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;39 or 50 ;\n- (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA ;\n- (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application.\n- (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;26 ;\n- (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27 or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43AB ;\n- (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application; or\n- (i) the registrar receives an application under section&#160;39 or 50 ;\n- (ii) the registrar is aware that the application may only be made with written permission under the Corrective Services Act 2006 , section&#160;27AA or the Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003 , section&#160;43ABA ;\n- (iii) written permission was not given to the registrar with the application.","sortOrder":148},{"sectionNumber":"pt.10","sectionType":"part","heading":"General","content":"# General","sortOrder":149},{"sectionNumber":"sec.124","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reviewing registrar’s decisions","content":"### sec.124 Reviewing registrar’s decisions\n\nA person who is dissatisfied with a decision of the registrar may, as provided under the QCAT Act , apply to QCAT for a review of the decision.\nDespite the QCAT Act , section&#160;157 , the registrar is required to give a person a written notice complying with that section for a decision only if the decision—\nis made on the application of the person; and\nis not the decision sought by the person.\nThe QCAT Act , sections&#160;158 and 159 provide for a person dissatisfied with a decision of the registrar obtaining a written statement of reasons for the decision.\n(sec.124-ssec.1) A person who is dissatisfied with a decision of the registrar may, as provided under the QCAT Act , apply to QCAT for a review of the decision.\n(sec.124-ssec.2) Despite the QCAT Act , section&#160;157 , the registrar is required to give a person a written notice complying with that section for a decision only if the decision— is made on the application of the person; and is not the decision sought by the person. The QCAT Act , sections&#160;158 and 159 provide for a person dissatisfied with a decision of the registrar obtaining a written statement of reasons for the decision.\n- (a) is made on the application of the person; and\n- (b) is not the decision sought by the person.","sortOrder":150},{"sectionNumber":"sec.125","sectionType":"section","heading":"False or misleading representation","content":"### sec.125 False or misleading representation\n\nA person must not give information to a person under this Act that the person knows is false or misleading in a material particular.\nMaximum penalty—80 penalty units.\nSubsection&#160;(1) does not apply to information given in a document, if the person when giving the document—\ninforms the person being given the document, to the best of the person’s ability, how the information is false or misleading; and\nhas, or can reasonably obtain, the correct information—gives the correct information.\n(sec.125-ssec.1) A person must not give information to a person under this Act that the person knows is false or misleading in a material particular. Maximum penalty—80 penalty units.\n(sec.125-ssec.2) Subsection&#160;(1) does not apply to information given in a document, if the person when giving the document— informs the person being given the document, to the best of the person’s ability, how the information is false or misleading; and has, or can reasonably obtain, the correct information—gives the correct information.\n- (a) informs the person being given the document, to the best of the person’s ability, how the information is false or misleading; and\n- (b) has, or can reasonably obtain, the correct information—gives the correct information.","sortOrder":151},{"sectionNumber":"sec.126","sectionType":"section","heading":"Unauthorised access to or interference with register","content":"### sec.126 Unauthorised access to or interference with register\n\nA person must not, without lawful authority—\naccess a register or information in a register; or\nmake, alter or delete an entry in a register; or\ninterfere with a register in any other way.\nMaximum penalty—100 penalty units.\nWithout limiting subsection&#160;(1) , a person has lawful authority to do something mentioned in that subsection if—\nthe person is doing the thing to carry out a function under this or another Act; or\nthe registrar has authorised the person to do the thing.\nIn this section, a reference to a register includes a reference to a record collected and maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n(sec.126-ssec.1) A person must not, without lawful authority— access a register or information in a register; or make, alter or delete an entry in a register; or interfere with a register in any other way. Maximum penalty—100 penalty units.\n(sec.126-ssec.2) Without limiting subsection&#160;(1) , a person has lawful authority to do something mentioned in that subsection if— the person is doing the thing to carry out a function under this or another Act; or the registrar has authorised the person to do the thing.\n(sec.126-ssec.3) In this section, a reference to a register includes a reference to a record collected and maintained by the registrar under section&#160;105 .\n- (a) access a register or information in a register; or\n- (b) make, alter or delete an entry in a register; or\n- (c) interfere with a register in any other way.\n- (a) the person is doing the thing to carry out a function under this or another Act; or\n- (b) the registrar has authorised the person to do the thing.","sortOrder":152},{"sectionNumber":"sec.127","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registered overseas child orders","content":"### sec.127 Registered overseas child orders\n\nFor part&#160;4 , a reference to a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name includes a reference to a registered overseas child order.\nFor part&#160;5 , a reference to a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child includes a reference to a registered overseas child order.\nAn application made under part&#160;4 or 5 that is based on a registered overseas child order must be accompanied by the relevant documents for the registered overseas child order.\nIn this section—\noverseas child order see the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , section&#160;4 .\nregistered overseas child order means an overseas child order that—\nhas been registered under the Family Law Regulations 1984 (Cwlth) , regulation 23; and\ncorresponds to—\nfor an application made under part&#160;4 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name; or\nfor an application made under part&#160;5 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child.\nrelevant documents , for a registered overseas child order, means—\na copy of the order; and\na copy of the certificate for the order mentioned in the Family Law Regulations 1984 , regulation 23(1)(a)(ii).\n(sec.127-ssec.1) For part&#160;4 , a reference to a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name includes a reference to a registered overseas child order.\n(sec.127-ssec.2) For part&#160;5 , a reference to a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child includes a reference to a registered overseas child order.\n(sec.127-ssec.3) An application made under part&#160;4 or 5 that is based on a registered overseas child order must be accompanied by the relevant documents for the registered overseas child order.\n(sec.127-ssec.4) In this section— overseas child order see the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , section&#160;4 . registered overseas child order means an overseas child order that— has been registered under the Family Law Regulations 1984 (Cwlth) , regulation 23; and corresponds to— for an application made under part&#160;4 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name; or for an application made under part&#160;5 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child. relevant documents , for a registered overseas child order, means— a copy of the order; and a copy of the certificate for the order mentioned in the Family Law Regulations 1984 , regulation 23(1)(a)(ii).\n- (a) has been registered under the Family Law Regulations 1984 (Cwlth) , regulation 23; and\n- (b) corresponds to— (i) for an application made under part&#160;4 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name; or (ii) for an application made under part&#160;5 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child.\n- (i) for an application made under part&#160;4 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name; or\n- (ii) for an application made under part&#160;5 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child.\n- (i) for an application made under part&#160;4 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child or a child’s name; or\n- (ii) for an application made under part&#160;5 —a parenting order made under the Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth) , part VII, stating who may make decisions about major long-term issues for a child.\n- (a) a copy of the order; and\n- (b) a copy of the certificate for the order mentioned in the Family Law Regulations 1984 , regulation 23(1)(a)(ii).","sortOrder":153},{"sectionNumber":"sec.128","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of interstate recognition certificate stating sex or gender of person","content":"### sec.128 Effect of interstate recognition certificate stating sex or gender of person\n\nIf an interstate recognition certificate stating a sex is issued for a person, the person is a person of the sex stated in the certificate, for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\nIf an interstate recognition certificate stating a gender is issued for a person, the stated gender of the person is taken to be the sex of the person and the person is a person of that sex, for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\nIf more than 1 interstate recognition certificate has been issued for a person this section applies to the most recently issued certificate.\nSubsection&#160;(5) applies to a person who has an entitlement—\nunder a will; or\nunder a trust; or\notherwise by operation of law.\nThe person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because an interstate recognition certificate has been issued for the person.\nIn this section—\ninterstate recognition certificate means a certificate issued under the law of another State that identifies the person who is the subject of the certificate as being the sex or gender stated in the certificate.\n(sec.128-ssec.1) If an interstate recognition certificate stating a sex is issued for a person, the person is a person of the sex stated in the certificate, for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\n(sec.128-ssec.2) If an interstate recognition certificate stating a gender is issued for a person, the stated gender of the person is taken to be the sex of the person and the person is a person of that sex, for the purposes of, but subject to, a law of the State.\n(sec.128-ssec.3) If more than 1 interstate recognition certificate has been issued for a person this section applies to the most recently issued certificate.\n(sec.128-ssec.4) Subsection&#160;(5) applies to a person who has an entitlement— under a will; or under a trust; or otherwise by operation of law.\n(sec.128-ssec.5) The person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because an interstate recognition certificate has been issued for the person.\n(sec.128-ssec.6) In this section— interstate recognition certificate means a certificate issued under the law of another State that identifies the person who is the subject of the certificate as being the sex or gender stated in the certificate.\n- (a) under a will; or\n- (b) under a trust; or\n- (c) otherwise by operation of law.","sortOrder":154},{"sectionNumber":"sec.129","sectionType":"section","heading":"Proceedings for offences","content":"### sec.129 Proceedings for offences\n\nA proceeding for an offence against this Act is a summary proceeding under the Justices Act 1886 .\nThe proceeding must start—\nwithin 1 year after the offence was committed; or\nwithin 6 months after the offence came to the complainant’s knowledge, but within 2 years after the offence was committed.\n(sec.129-ssec.1) A proceeding for an offence against this Act is a summary proceeding under the Justices Act 1886 .\n(sec.129-ssec.2) The proceeding must start— within 1 year after the offence was committed; or within 6 months after the offence came to the complainant’s knowledge, but within 2 years after the offence was committed.\n- (a) within 1 year after the offence was committed; or\n- (b) within 6 months after the offence came to the complainant’s knowledge, but within 2 years after the offence was committed.","sortOrder":155},{"sectionNumber":"sec.130","sectionType":"section","heading":"False certificates","content":"### sec.130 False certificates\n\nThe registrar may confiscate—\na document that the registrar reasonably believes bears a forged facsimile of the registrar’s signature or seal; or\na certificate or other document purporting to be a certificate or other document under this Act that the registrar reasonably believes has been forged; or\na certificate under this Act about a registrable event if the entry in a register about the event has been amended or cancelled since the certificate was issued.\n- (a) a document that the registrar reasonably believes bears a forged facsimile of the registrar’s signature or seal; or\n- (b) a certificate or other document purporting to be a certificate or other document under this Act that the registrar reasonably believes has been forged; or\n- (c) a certificate under this Act about a registrable event if the entry in a register about the event has been amended or cancelled since the certificate was issued.","sortOrder":156},{"sectionNumber":"sec.131","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulation-making power","content":"### sec.131 Regulation-making power\n\nThe Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act.\nA regulation may—\nimpose a penalty of not more than 20 penalty units for a contravention of a provision of a regulation; and\nprescribe information to be contained in a particular register; and\nprescribe information that a court may consider when deciding or changing a child’s name; and\nprescribe fees for this Act ; and\nprovide for the registrar to waive payment of a fee; and\nprovide for the registrar to refund a fee paid.\n(sec.131-ssec.1) The Governor in Council may make regulations under this Act.\n(sec.131-ssec.2) A regulation may— impose a penalty of not more than 20 penalty units for a contravention of a provision of a regulation; and prescribe information to be contained in a particular register; and prescribe information that a court may consider when deciding or changing a child’s name; and prescribe fees for this Act ; and provide for the registrar to waive payment of a fee; and provide for the registrar to refund a fee paid.\n- (a) impose a penalty of not more than 20 penalty units for a contravention of a provision of a regulation; and\n- (b) prescribe information to be contained in a particular register; and\n- (c) prescribe information that a court may consider when deciding or changing a child’s name; and\n- (d) prescribe fees for this Act ; and\n- (e) provide for the registrar to waive payment of a fee; and\n- (f) provide for the registrar to refund a fee paid.","sortOrder":157},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11","sectionType":"part","heading":"Repeal and transitional provisions","content":"# Repeal and transitional provisions","sortOrder":158},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Repeal","content":"## Repeal","sortOrder":159},{"sectionNumber":"sec.132","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act repealed","content":"### sec.132 Act repealed\n\nThe Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 2003 , No. 31 is repealed.","sortOrder":160},{"sectionNumber":"pt.11-div.2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Transitional provisions","content":"## Transitional provisions","sortOrder":161},{"sectionNumber":"sec.133","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions for division","content":"### sec.133 Definitions for division\n\nIn this division—\n2003 Act means the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 2003 as in force from time to time before the commencement.\nformer , for a provision, means the provision of that number of the 2003 Act.","sortOrder":162},{"sectionNumber":"sec.134","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certificates and other documents","content":"### sec.134 Certificates and other documents\n\nA certificate or other document issued under the 2003 Act is taken to have been issued under this Act.","sortOrder":163},{"sectionNumber":"sec.135","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registers","content":"### sec.135 Registers\n\nThe registers kept under the 2003 Act form part of the registers under this Act.","sortOrder":164},{"sectionNumber":"sec.136","sectionType":"section","heading":"Registrar","content":"### sec.136 Registrar\n\nThe person holding office as registrar immediately before the commencement continues as the registrar under this Act.","sortOrder":165},{"sectionNumber":"sec.137","sectionType":"section","heading":"Continued application of 2003 Act","content":"### sec.137 Continued application of 2003 Act\n\nSubject to sections&#160;138 and 139, the 2003 Act, as in force immediately before the commencement, continues to apply to—\nan application made but not decided before the commencement; and\na document lodged but not dealt with before the commencement; and\na notation or registration started but not completed before the commencement.\n- (a) an application made but not decided before the commencement; and\n- (b) a document lodged but not dealt with before the commencement; and\n- (c) a notation or registration started but not completed before the commencement.","sortOrder":166},{"sectionNumber":"sec.138","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of s&#160;9 to births before commencement","content":"### sec.138 Application of s&#160;9 to births before commencement\n\nSection&#160;9(2)(a) applies to the registration of the birth of a child if—\nthe child was born before the commencement; and\nthe child’s birth was not registered before the commencement; and\nvariations of sex characteristics have been identified.\n- (a) the child was born before the commencement; and\n- (b) the child’s birth was not registered before the commencement; and\n- (c) variations of sex characteristics have been identified.","sortOrder":167},{"sectionNumber":"sec.139","sectionType":"section","heading":"Existing applications under former s&#160;17","content":"### sec.139 Existing applications under former s&#160;17\n\nThis section applies to an application made under former section&#160;17, but not decided, before the commencement.\nThe application is to be decided under this Act.\n(sec.139-ssec.1) This section applies to an application made under former section&#160;17, but not decided, before the commencement.\n(sec.139-ssec.2) The application is to be decided under this Act.","sortOrder":168},{"sectionNumber":"sec.140","sectionType":"section","heading":"Entries closed under 2003 Act","content":"### sec.140 Entries closed under 2003 Act\n\nThis section applies if an entry in a register was closed by the registrar under a former provision mentioned in column 1.\nThe entry is taken to be an entry that is closed under the provision of this Act mentioned in column 2.\nProvision of 2003 Act\nProvision of this Act\nformer section&#160;14(2)\nsection&#160;43\nformer section&#160;14(3)\nsection&#160;106\nformer section&#160;41A(4)\nsection&#160;19(3)\nformer section&#160;41B(4)\nsection&#160;21(3)\nformer section&#160;41D(3)\nsection&#160;19(3)\nformer section&#160;41E(2)\nsection&#160;21(3)\nformer section&#160;41DA(3)\nsection&#160;19(3)\nformer section&#160;41DB(4)\nsection&#160;21(3)\n(sec.140-ssec.1) This section applies if an entry in a register was closed by the registrar under a former provision mentioned in column 1.\n(sec.140-ssec.2) The entry is taken to be an entry that is closed under the provision of this Act mentioned in column 2. Provision of 2003 Act Provision of this Act former section&#160;14(2) section&#160;43 former section&#160;14(3) section&#160;106 former section&#160;41A(4) section&#160;19(3) former section&#160;41B(4) section&#160;21(3) former section&#160;41D(3) section&#160;19(3) former section&#160;41E(2) section&#160;21(3) former section&#160;41DA(3) section&#160;19(3) former section&#160;41DB(4) section&#160;21(3)","sortOrder":169},{"sectionNumber":"sec.141","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of s&#160;27","content":"### sec.141 Application of s&#160;27\n\nFor the purpose of counting the previous registrations of changes of an adult person’s name under section&#160;27(1), a change of name by the person before the commencement is not to be counted.","sortOrder":170},{"sectionNumber":"sec.142","sectionType":"section","heading":"Reassignment of sex noted under former s&#160;22","content":"### sec.142 Reassignment of sex noted under former s&#160;22\n\nThis section applies if, before the commencement, a person’s sex was noted in the person’s entry in the register of births or adopted children register under former section&#160;22.\nThe person is a person of the sex as reassigned.\nSubsection&#160;(4) applies to a person who has an entitlement—\nunder a will; or\nunder a trust; or\notherwise by operation of law.\nThe person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because the reassignment of the person’s sex has been noted.\n(sec.142-ssec.1) This section applies if, before the commencement, a person’s sex was noted in the person’s entry in the register of births or adopted children register under former section&#160;22.\n(sec.142-ssec.2) The person is a person of the sex as reassigned.\n(sec.142-ssec.3) Subsection&#160;(4) applies to a person who has an entitlement— under a will; or under a trust; or otherwise by operation of law.\n(sec.142-ssec.4) The person does not, except as otherwise provided under the will, the trust or by the law conferring the entitlement, lose the entitlement only because the reassignment of the person’s sex has been noted.\n- (a) under a will; or\n- (b) under a trust; or\n- (c) otherwise by operation of law.","sortOrder":171},{"sectionNumber":"sch.1-pt.1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Person who may apply","content":"# Person who may apply","sortOrder":172},{"sectionNumber":"sch.1-pt.2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Two or more persons who may apply","content":"# Two or more persons who may apply","sortOrder":173}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"Compared to a standard births, deaths and marriages registration framework, this Act has meaningfully expanded in scope. It goes beyond simple record-keeping to include: recognition of Torres Strait Islander traditional child-rearing practices (cultural recognition orders) as a form of legal parentage transfer; specific accommodation of intersex/variations of sex characteristics with extended registration timeframes; explicit domestic violence safety exemptions across name change and registration provisions; gender-neutral 'parent' designation options alongside 'mother' and 'father'; and provisions for issuing identity documents to Queensland residents born outside the state. These additions reflect contemporary social policy priorities well beyond the traditional administrative scope of such legislation."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-referencing to multiple other Queensland Acts (Adoption Act 2009, Surrogacy Act 2010, Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa Act 2020, Status of Children Act 1978, Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth), Corrective Services Act 2006, Dangerous Prisoners Act 2003, Child Protection Offender Reporting Act 2004)","Multiple layered exceptions and carve-outs within individual sections (e.g., name change limits have at least 4 separate exception categories)","Complex jurisdictional interactions — must account for births, adoptions and court orders from other Australian states, overseas countries, and non-Queensland courts","Separate registration pathways for different types of parentage (biological, adoption, surrogacy, Torres Strait Islander cultural recognition orders)","Nuanced rules around who can apply and under what circumstances, including cascading priority hierarchies (e.g., responsible person for birth notification)","Specific provisions for vulnerable groups requiring different treatment (intersex children with 180-day timeline, domestic violence survivors, prisoners on sex offender registers)","Schedule-based tables (Schedule 1) govern applicant eligibility for name changes, requiring cross-referencing outside the main text","Provisions governing the opening, closing, re-opening, and cross-notation of multiple registers (birth register, adopted children register, parentage order register, cultural recognition register, change of name register)","Details delegated to regulations (prescribed particulars, fees, prohibited names), meaning the Act alone is incomplete without accompanying regulations","Different rules for adults, children aged 12+, children under 12, married minors, stillborn children, and children with variations of sex characteristics"],"plain_english_summary":"## What is this law?\n\nThe **Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 2023** is Queensland's updated rulebook for recording the most important life events of its residents — births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, name changes, and changes to recorded sex/gender. It replaces older legislation and modernises how these records are kept and accessed.\n\n## Who does it affect?\n\nThis law affects virtually **every Queensland resident** at some point in their life. Specifically:\n\n- **New parents** — must notify and register a newborn's birth within set timeframes (usually 60 days)\n- **Hospitals and healthcare workers** — have legal obligations to notify the registrar of births\n- **Adopted people and their families** — rules govern how adoption records are kept and how people can access information about their origins\n- **Transgender and intersex people** — the Act includes specific provisions for altering recorded sex and acknowledges variations of sex characteristics (meaning bodies that don't fit typical definitions of male or female)\n- **People wanting to change their name** — strict rules apply, including limits on how often you can change your name (generally no more than 3 times in a lifetime, and not within 12 months of a previous change)\n- **Survivors of domestic violence** — can apply to change their name or access records under protective exemptions\n- **Torres Strait Islander people** — the Act recognises traditional child-rearing practices under the *Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa Act 2020*, which can transfer legal parentage\n- **Surrogacy families** — parentage transfers under the *Surrogacy Act 2010* are recorded\n- **Adoptees born overseas** — adoptions granted in other countries can be recorded in Queensland\n\n## Key things the law does\n\n- **Births must be registered** — usually within 60 days (180 days if the child has variations of sex characteristics). Both parents are generally required to apply together, but exceptions exist for domestic violence, unknown whereabouts, and other situations\n- **Only 2 people can be registered as parents** — each can be recorded as 'mother', 'father', or 'parent' (gender-neutral option)\n- **Name changes are regulated** — adults can change their name, but there are limits. You generally can't change your name more than 3 times total, or more than once in 12 months. Exceptions exist for marriage, divorce, domestic violence safety, gender affirmation, and exceptional circumstances\n- **Children's names** — parents must usually agree; a child aged 12 or over must consent to a name change. A Magistrates Court can resolve disputes\n- **Sex/gender alterations** — the Act provides pathways for people to alter their registered sex, including specific processes for adults, young people, and children\n- **Documents for Queensland residents born elsewhere** — the registrar can issue documents acknowledging the name and sex of people who live in Queensland but were born in another state or country\n- **Access to records** — the law sets out who can access birth, death, marriage, and other records, and under what conditions\n- **Statistical information** — the registrar collects and shares anonymised statistics\n- **Prohibited names** — certain names cannot be registered for children (details in regulations)\n- **Prisoner restrictions** — people under certain criminal justice supervision (e.g., sex offenders, dangerous prisoners) need written permission from relevant authorities before changing their name\n\n## Why does it matter?\n\nThese records underpin your **legal identity** in Australia. Your birth certificate, name, and registered sex affect your passport, Medicare, driver's licence, Centrelink, employment, and more. Getting this right — and being able to update it — matters enormously to individuals and families."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"This Act expands and modernises the registry regime compared with the 2003 Act it repeals. New or broadened scope elements include: explicit statutory processes for altering recorded sex and issuing recognised details certificates (including age‑stratified administrative and court pathways) (parts 5, ss.37–59); formal recognition of parentage transfers under cultural recognition (Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa Act 2020) alongside surrogacy and adoption (ss.3, 17–21); stronger, express powers for the registrar to enter into bulk data‑sharing and fee‑based arrangements with law enforcement, government agencies and foreign authorities (s.118); consolidated and tightened access and privacy controls for closed entries and sex information (ss.111–116); and a statutory replacement of deed‑poll name changes with a central registration regime and limits on frequency of changes (pt.4, ss.25–36). These additions materially broaden administrative discretion, data‑sharing powers and the types of record‑alteration processes covered by the registration system compared to the prior Act."},"complexity_factors":["Length and scope: Act contains about 142 numbered sections plus schedules and repeals — broad subject matter covering births, deaths, marriages, name changes, adoptions, parentage transfers and sex‑record changes.","Multiple defined regimes and age bands: separate, detailed rules for adults (16+), children (under 16), and older minors (12–16) with different consent and court pathways (see ss.39–56 and ss.40–46).","Extensive cross‑references: numerous cross‑references to at least 10 other Acts (Adoption Act 2009, Surrogacy Act 2010, Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa Act 2020, Coroners Act 2003, Family Law Act 1975 (Cwlth), Corrective Services Act 2006, Dangerous Prisoners Act 2003, Child Protection (Offender Reporting) Act 2004, QCAT Act, Public Records Act, etc.).","Layered conditional logic: many conditional exceptions and exceptions to exceptions for who may apply, when the registrar must/ may accept or refuse, when courts must act, when notices must be given (examples in ss.8,9,15,27,31,32,41–43).","Closed‑entry and sealed information rules: special access limits and closed‑entry regimes for adoption and parentage records (ss.19,21,111) requiring identity/appointment checks and limited categories of authorised recipients.","Data sharing and commercial arrangements: powers to enter bulk information arrangements with multiple types of entities, subject to privacy protections and fee regimes (s.118), adding governance complexity.","Discretion and administrative powers: broad registrar discretion to accept, refuse, re‑register, correct and redact entries and to set policies (ss.33,34,36,43,107,115), increasing the need for operational guidance and policy statements.","Multiple review and appeal routes: judicial orders, QCAT review and Children’s Court appellate structure (ss.13,44–56,78,79,124) create multi‑tier dispute processes.","Numerous procedural requirements and penalties: strict time limits, prescribed forms and criminal/administrative penalties for non‑compliance (s.5, s.94, s.97, ss.125–126, s.131)."],"plain_english_summary":"**What this Act does (mechanics)\n\n- Establishes a modern, single legal framework for registering and maintaining official records about births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, name changes and alterations of sex, and for recording transfers of parentage (including under surrogacy and the Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa cultural-recognition scheme). (see objects, s.3; registers, s.104)\n\n- Creates a registrar-general who runs the registers, decides applications, issues certificates, controls access and can make arrangements to share information with other agencies and jurisdictions. (see registrar, ss.99–103; information arrangements, ss.118,103)\n\n- Sets out who must notify and who must apply to register births and deaths, the time limits, approved forms, and penalties for non‑compliance (doctors, hospitals, funeral directors and certain other persons carry duties and exposure to fines). (birth notification s.5; death notification and cause of death rules ss.91–94; penalties in those sections)\n\n- Describes how births, deaths and marriages are entered and corrected in the registers, and how parental details and parentage orders are handled (including re‑registration when parentage orders are made or discharged). The registrar may re‑register entries and must make linked notations when parentage/adoption events occur. (see registration and parentage ss.10, 11, 19–21, 34, 107)\n\n- Replaces deed‑poll name changes with a statutory registration system for name changes, including age‑based rules about who can apply and when courts must be involved. It imposes limits on the number and frequency of name changes and gives the registrar power to refuse fraudulent or prohibited names. (see change of name parts, ss.25–36)\n\n- Introduces a statutory process for altering the recorded sex of a person in child registers and for issuing a recognised details certificate (a document that acknowledges name and sex) for Queensland residents born outside Queensland. The Act sets separate rules for adults (16+) and children (under 16, and 12–16 where court routes exist), who may apply, what evidence is required, and when a court must be involved. (see acknowledgement of sex, ss.37–59; recognised details certificates ss.48–58)\n\n- Provides detailed family‑law and child‑safety pathways: where parents disagree or cannot consent, the Childrens Court (and in some cases the Children’s Court magistrate) decides whether the registrar should accept the application; the law sets out Court procedures, appeal routes, confidentiality of hearings and the child’s best interests as the court’s paramount concern. (see children’s court pathways and procedures ss.40–46, 68–83)\n\n- Establishes access rules and privacy controls: who may obtain information or a certificate, required identity checks, the registrar’s discretion to refuse without an adequate reason, extra protection where entries have been closed (e.g. some parentage/adoption records), and limits on disclosure of sex information so it is only released to specified people or on request. (see obtaining information and certificates ss.109–113; closed entry access s.111; privacy s.116)\n\n- Enables the registrar to enter into commercial or public‑interest arrangements to provide bulk or specialised information (law enforcement, government policy, foreign registration authorities, research or name‑removal services), subject to privacy protections, and permits charging fees for services. (see arrangements and data sharing ss.118, 103)\n\n- Repeals the 2003 Act and contains transitional provisions so existing registers, certificates and the existing registrar continue under the new Act. (see repeal and transitional parts, ss.132–142)\n\n\nWho is directly affected\n\n- Individuals: parents, birth parents, adopted persons, people changing names, people seeking to alter the recorded sex of themselves or their child, people applying for recognised details certificates (see ss.5, 8, 15, 39–56, 50–53).\n- Health and birth attendants: hospitals, doctors and midwives have notification, certificate and timing obligations, and face penalties for non‑compliance (see ss.5, 94).\n- Funeral directors, mortuaries and cemetery/crematorium operators: duties to notify and to deliver certificates or notices (see ss.92, 97).\n- Courts and tribunals: District Court, Supreme Court, Childrens Court, QCAT and Magistrates Courts have defined roles for resolving disputes and issuing orders that direct registration (see ss.13, 44–56, 95, 124).\n- Registrar and public servants: exercise broad discretion to accept/refuse, correct, re‑register and share records; may charge fees and delegate powers (see ss.99–107, 118, 131).\n- Other agencies: police, corrective services, child safety, health ombudsman, family & child commissioner and foreign registration authorities where data‑sharing arrangements are put in place (see ss.119–123, 118, 121, 120).\n\n\nWhy it matters (costs, incentives, trade‑offs and implementation risks)\n\n- Administrative burdens are concentrated on hospitals, doctors, midwives and funeral directors who must meet strict timing, form and information requirements; there are monetary penalties for breaches (see s.5, s.94, s.97). That creates compliance costs (time, forms, record transfers). (secs.5,94,97)\n\n- The registrar holds broad discretionary power to accept or refuse applications (name changes, sex record changes, certificates), to require evidence, to re‑register or correct entries, and to enter into data‑sharing arrangements. Those discretionary powers centralise decision‑making (and therefore operational risk) with the registrar’s office. The Act provides limited statutory review via QCAT (s.124) and court appeals (s.78). (ss.33,34,43,107,118,124)\n\n- The Act creates multiple alternative pathways (administrative by registrar; court orders; tribunal declarations) for difficult cases—especially for children and where consent is absent. Those redundant routes reduce single‑point failure but increase procedural complexity and create potential for inconsistent outcomes between registrar decisions and court orders. (ss.39–46, 50–57, 62–67)\n\n- Data‑sharing powers let the registrar supply bulk or targeted records to law enforcement, government agencies, foreign registration authorities and other entities (s.118). This can lower transaction costs for policy, service delivery and enforcement, and permit cost recovery by charging fees; but it increases the risk that personal data will be used beyond individuals’ expectations and raises implementation questions about redaction, audit, and data security. The Act requires the registrar to protect privacy as far as practicable (s.116) and allows conditions on access (s.116). (ss.118,116)\n\n- Access rules are tightly specified for sensitive cases (adoption, closed parentage entries, changes to recorded sex). The legal effect of an altered sex record or interstate recognition certificate is, for state laws, to treat the person as the recorded sex (with explicit protection that entitlements under wills, trusts or other laws are not lost solely by reason of the record change). That provides legal certainty but also creates potential mismatches with federal or other jurisdictions in particular contexts. (ss.47,58,128)\n\n- Fees are prescribed by regulation and the registrar may waive/refund them (s.131); applicants and third‑party recipients of bulk data may carry the financial costs. The Act permits commemorative (non‑legal) services that are fee‑based (s.114).\n\n- Fraud and integrity risks are expressly addressed by criminal penalties for false/misleading representations and unauthorised access or interference with registers (ss.125–126), and by powers to confiscate forged certificates (s.130). Operationally, those provisions require investment in identity verification, secure IT systems and audit trails.\n\n\nWho pays, who decides, and what changes in behaviour\n\n- Who pays: applicants pay prescribed fees for registration and certificates unless waived (ss.26, 34, 50, 112, 131). Entities receiving bulk data under arrangements may be charged. Compliance costs fall on service providers (hospitals, doctors, funeral directors) who must complete forms and meet time limits. (ss.5,92,97,118,131)\n- Who decides: the registrar has primary administrative decision‑making authority over registrations, corrections and access; courts (District, Supreme, Magistrates, Childrens Court) resolve disputes, authorise registrations or direct the registrar in specific cases; QCAT provides a review route for registrar decisions. (ss.99,13,44–56,95,124)\n- Behaviour changes: health and mortuary services will formalise notification and record delivery practices; parents and guardians will need to comply with form and evidence requirements and may use court pathways where consent is absent; researchers, agencies and private organisations may request data under new arrangements and pay for access, subject to registrar conditions. (ss.5,92,40–46,118)\n\n\nImplementation and compliance risks (brief)\n\n- High operational complexity for registrar office (many discretionary decisions, heavy cross‑referencing and data‑sharing arrangements). (see ss.99–107, 118)\n- Privacy vs utility trade‑offs when providing bulk or sensitive data—even with statutory protections, practice will require strong IT, redaction rules and governance. (ss.116,118)\n- Potential for inconsistent outcomes where courts and registrar exercise overlapping powers; review mechanisms exist but introduce delay. (ss.43,44–56,78,124)\n- Compliance burden on frontline health and funeral workers to meet short timeframes and statutory forms, under penalty. (ss.5,94,97)\n\n\nKey statutory references (examples): s.3 (objects); s.5 (birth notification); ss.8–15 (who may apply and name change rules for children); ss.19–21 (parentage/adoption registration and re‑registration); ss.25–36 (change of name regime); ss.37–59 (acknowledgement of sex and recognised details certificates); ss.99–106 (registrar and registers); ss.109–116 (access, adequate reason and privacy); ss.118–121 (data‑sharing arrangements); ss.125–126 (offences); ss.132–142 (repeal and transition)."},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":846},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The legislation appears consistent with its original intent as a comprehensive births, deaths and marriages registration statute. The 2023 version modernises and expands coverage (particularly around sex/gender recognition and diverse family structures) but does not appear to have grown beyond the core purpose of the original 2003 Act it replaces."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple overlapping application pathways with different requirements depending on applicant age, relationship to subject, and type of change sought","Extensive cross-referencing to other Queensland and Commonwealth laws (Adoption Act 2009, Surrogacy Act 2010, Meriba Omasker Kaziw Kazipa Act 2020, Family Law Act 1975, Corrective Services Act 2006, etc.)","Nested conditional logic throughout — e.g., section 40 has 5 different pathways for who can apply to alter a child's sex record","Multiple court jurisdictions involved (Magistrates Court, District Court, Supreme Court, Childrens Court, QCAT) with different powers","Detailed procedural requirements for applications including statutory declarations, supporting statements, professional assessments, and specific timeframes","Complex privacy and access restrictions that vary by information type, applicant relationship, and subject person's age","Transitional provisions mapping old Act provisions to new ones in a detailed table"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this law does:**\n\nThis is Queensland's main law for registering life's big events — births, deaths, marriages, civil partnerships, adoptions, name changes, and changes to sex recorded on birth certificates. It sets up a Registrar-General to maintain official registers and issue certificates.\n\n**Key things it covers:**\n\n- **Births:** Requires notification within 2 working days and registration within 60 days (or 180 days for births with variations of sex characteristics). Parents must apply jointly, though exceptions exist for domestic violence situations or unknown parentage.\n\n- **Deaths:** Requires registration within 14 days. Doctors must issue cause of death certificates. Special rules apply for stillborn children and deaths on vessels/aircraft.\n\n- **Name changes:** Adults can change their name once per year (with exceptions for marriage, divorce, or protection from domestic violence). Children under 18 need parental consent or court approval, with extra protections for children aged 12+ who must consent unless a court decides otherwise.\n\n- **Sex/gender recognition:** People 16+ can apply to alter their sex on their birth record with a supporting statement. Children under 16 need parental application plus a professional assessment, or court approval. Queensland residents born elsewhere can get a \"recognised details certificate\" acknowledging their name and sex.\n\n- **Adoptions and parentage:** Creates special registers for adoptions, surrogacy parentage orders, and Torres Strait Islander traditional child rearing (cultural recognition orders). These entries can be \"closed\" and reopened if orders are discharged.\n\n- **Access to information:** Strict privacy protections limit who can see register information. Historical information is more accessible. Special rules protect information about adopted people, surrogacy arrangements, and sex/gender history.\n\n- **Court oversight:** Magistrates Courts can decide children's names if parents disagree. Children's Court handles applications for sex recognition for children under 16 when parents don't consent or when dispensing with parental consent is needed.\n\n**Who it affects:**\nEveryone born, dying, marrying, or changing their name in Queensland; parents registering children; adopted people and their families; transgender and gender diverse people seeking identity documents; and anyone needing official certificates for legal purposes.\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis law creates the official record of identity that underpins almost every other legal right — citizenship, inheritance, marriage, working with children checks, and accessing government services. The 2023 updates modernised the law to better recognise diverse families (surrogacy, same-sex parents, Torres Strait Islander kinship) and made it easier for trans and gender diverse people to update their identity documents."},"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"A positive credit balance is required for all requests, including BYOK, so fallback providers remain available. Add credits at https://vercel.com/d?to=%2F%5Bteam%5D%2F%7E%2Fai%3Fmodal%3Dtop-up to continue.","source":"analysis-cron"}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023","history":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023/history","analysis":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/births-deaths-and-marriages-registration-act-2023/documents"}}