Adelaide Translation Services

Translation Services for Adelaide, Australia
Translation Services for Adelaide, Australia

Mighty Translation provides Adelaide Translation Services for over 50 languages and for a wide range of different industries, including agriculture, mining, food, healthcare, leisure and hospitality, migration, legal and financial services.

Our translators are either NAATI accredited or professional qualified with translation tertiary degrees. Whether it’s a Word document or a designed brochure, our team of translators and typeset engineers are well experienced to deliver on-time.

Examples for documents we translate:

  • Driver license and Identification Documents
  • Payslips and employer reference letters
  • Doctor’s letters or medical reports
  • Brochures, marketing material
  • Training or instructional documents
  • Legal contracts and financial reports
  • Technical studies and reports
  • General business correspondence 

Ordering your document translation is easy.
View the list of languages we support as well as get an instant quote

Specialised Translation Services

Advertisement and MarketingAged Care and NursingAgriculture and Primary Industries
Banking and InsuranceLegal ContractsMaterials and Construction Services
Personal DocumentsFinancial TranslationManufacturing and Engineering
Tenancy Related DocumentsChemical EngineeringMining and Energy Industries
Schools and EducationSoftware and ApplicationsLeisure and Hospitality
Catering and FoodsHealthcareReal-Estate and Property

We’re servicing all major locations in Adelaide, including:

The Mighty Translation Difference

What makes Mighty Translation different to other global translation companies is the people within the company.

  • Project managers dedicated to finding the right translator for the job
  • Dedication to provide lower prices than comparable competitors
  • Innovation to ensure smooth project delivery and fast translation outcome

We understand that every client has different translation project requirements. That is why each client has a dedicated full-time project manager to oversee and ensure requirements are being met.

We’re a leading provide for document translation services. Get an instant quote for your documents, all seek free consultation by emailing [email protected].

A Bit Of Adelaide History

After the war, an assisted migration scheme brought 215,000 emigrants of many European nationalities to South Australia between 1947 and 1973. Electrical goods were manufactured in former munitions factories and Holden cars were manufactured from 1948. An earthquake did considerable damage in March 1954. The Mannum–Adelaide pipeline brought River Murray water to Adelaide in 1955 and Adelaide Airport opened at West Beach in 1955. Adelaide gained a second university in 1966 with the opening of Flinders University.

In 1968, a blueprint for the building an integrated system of freeways across Adelaide was released in the form of the Metropolitan Adelaide Transport Study (MATS). Bowing to opposition from the public, who feared freeways would create urban problems such as gridlocked traffic and ghettos, the Labor government under Don Dunstan shelved MATS but retained the land in case public opinion changed in the future. In 1980, the Liberal party won government on a platform of fiscal conservatism and the premier David Tonkin, deeming Adelaide road capacities sufficient for future needs, committed his government to selling off the land acquired for the MATS plan ensuring that even when needs or public opinion changed, the construction of most MATS proposed freeways would be impossible.

The Dunstan Government of the 1970s saw something of an Adelaide ‘cultural revival’ – establishing a wide array of social reforms and overseeing the city becoming a centre of the arts. Adelaide hosted the Australian Grand Prix between 1985 and 1996 on a street circuit in the city’s east parklands, before losing it in a controversial move to Melbourne.

In 1989, the Australian Submarine Corporation naval shipyards were opened.[

In 1991, the University of South Australia was formed from a merger of several state government education institutions.