The Visa Overview For a worker with a Skills in Demand (subclass 482) visa, you can work for an employer for up to 6 months, and it won’t present any major hitches, initially. However, there’s a clincher. If you are applying for a Bridging Visa and it’s being...
Registration of Interest | What it’s all about The Registration of Interest (ROI) is the process of showing interest in getting nominated by a state or territory for possible employment. If looking for work that gets you recommended by the state, this would be...
Expression of Interest | What it’s all about The Expression of Interest (EOI) is a form submitted to the Australian Immigration Department indicating that you want to apply for a skilled visa for Australia. Only once you are invited, can you then look to apply...
First, before you can live and work in Australia, remember that there’s a 3-step process: Sponsorship – Nomination – Application. Every applicant goes through these steps so they can submit their requirements to Immigration. Skills in Demand Visa (Subclass...
For 2025-26, the Federal Government has kept the permanent migration cap steady at 185,000 places and allocates a number of 190 and 491 visas that can be issued by each state/territory. Yet each state and territory now decides who fits best within its own slice of...
1. Try the Training Visa (407) If you want to stay a bit longer and keep learning on the job, the Training Visa 407 is worth checking out. This visa lets you do workplace-based training in the field you’ve been studying. You just need to have studied or worked in that...