Australia Migration Weekly No. 414 | Subclass 143 wait stretches to 15 years! Victoria issues invitations? State-nomination places still ample!


Key migration news of the week








1. Parent visa places still available this financial year — Subclass 143 now a 15-year wait

2. State allocations still lagging behind schedule — some states have more than 80% remaining

3. Partner visa backlog severe; child visa waiting periods extended

4. Victoria issues a round? Tasmania invites every week

5. Summary of this week’s grants, invitations and skills assessments


I. Parent visa places still available this financial year — Subclass 143 now a 15-year wait

We have recently received this financial year’s parent-visa grant figures, so we are also taking the opportunity to summarise the overall position for the first half of 2025–26.


As at the end of December 2025

Subclasses 143 & 864 have 2,917 places remaining; Subclasses 103 & 804 have 585 places remaining. If we take the average and include January as well,For the remainder of the financial year (February–June), approximately 2,270 places remain for Subclasses 143 & 864 — slightly better than last financial year — and 399 places remain for Subclasses 103 & 804.


Looking more closely at the monthly grants this year,Subclass 143 grants were relatively stable from July to September,Volumes jumped in October–November, with 780+ grants in a single month,This aligns with what we have been seeing on the ground — client grants in the past 2–3 months have clearly increased.


Subclass 143 has a backlog of 83,437 applications and Subclass 864 has a backlog of 15,008 — the contributory-category backlog alone is approaching 100,000,Assuming the annual allocation remains at 6,800 places,so the waiting time has stretched to 15 years, and the Department’s official processing time is also 15 years. The queued category sits at 33.9 years. Everyone really should lodge as early as possible.


For a more detailed analysis, see:Mid-year parent-visa grant data released | How many places are left? Contributory category waits stretch to 15 years!


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II. State-nominated invitation allocations are still ample — some states have more than 80% remaining

As at the end of January 2026, 65% of Subclass 190 and close to 70% of Subclass 491 allocations remain. After the late-December holiday period, the states have resumed normal operating speed,In addition to essentially all issuing a round of pre-invitations, they have also issued some formal nominations — 1,462 Subclass 190 formal nominations and 779 Subclass 491 nominations were issued in January.


States with 50–60% of their allocation remaining

ACT 190 and 491, NSW 190, NT 190, Tasmania 190, and Victoria 190 and 491 — only NT 190 is below 55%


States with 60–70% of their allocation remaining

South Australia 190, Northern Territory 491, Queensland 491


States with more than 70% of their allocation remaining

Queensland 190 (83.95% remaining, more than 1,550+ places), WA 190, NSW 491 (mainly awaiting processing), SA 491, Tasmania 491, and WA 190 and 491 (mainly slow processing)


However, in terms of utilisation rate,The only one that could be called tight is Victoria’s 491 — of its 700 places, 400 have been used, leaving less than 43% remaining,The first reason is that Victoria issues invitations regularly and processes them quickly; the second is that Victoria’s 491 allocation was never large to begin with this year.


For more detailed data and analysis, see:Department update: Subclass 190 has 8,400+ places remaining and Subclass 491 still has close to 70% available — some states have more than 80% untouched!


III. Partner visa backlog severe; child visa waits are lengthening too

We have also recently received partner-visa data. Combined with parent migration, the mismatch between family-stream backlog and allocation is actually more severe than for skilled migration. Skilled migration can be controlled by reducing invitations, but on humanitarian grounds the family stream is very difficult to actively restrict, which is why the backlog keeps growing.


Of these, Subclass 309 has 30,000+ and Subclass 820 has more than 69,000. The partner-category allocation is only 40,500 places per financial year (with temporary-visa applications eating into the quota). Dividing the 100,000 backlog by a 40,000 allocation gives a theoretical waiting period of 2–3 years — and if application volumes do not fall, waits will stretch even longer.For those still hesitating and shopping around, lodge your application early.


Looking at the first half of the financial year,Partner visa grant processing speed has been relatively steady,3Subclass 309 has about 9,000 grants and Subclass 820 has close to 12,000 — roughly 20,000+ combined. Subclass 309 sits steadily at around 1,500 per month; Subclass 820 ranges 1,500–3,000, with clear acceleration in the second quarter. The total allocation is 40,500, with about half the financial-year quota left, so the second-half pace should mirror the first half.


Subclasses 100 and 801 combined have a backlog of nearly 50,000, with 801 averaging 3,000+ grants every month this financial year,It does feel as though permanent-residency grants have sped up recently — processing is now roughly up to permanent-stage applications lodged in the middle of last year.


Child migrationvisas whose backlogs have ballooned ridiculously in recent years; child migration visas are not particularly complex, and the reason the Department processes them so slowly is simply that the allocation is too small.the backlog had already climbed to nearly 8,000 by the end of last year, yet only 3,000 places are allocated annually, so the waiting period will be 2–3 years.Intuitively, the grant data does track the allocation evenly — roughly 200 grants per month.


IV. Victoria issues a round? Tasmania on schedule
Victoriaissued a round of invitations on 18 February,Issuance volumes are very low; we have only collected the data shown below, and it is all for 491

As noted above, Victoria still had 57% of its allocation at the end of January — even counting every January ROI invitation, they cannot possibly be out of places.It is unclear whether Victoria has simply accumulated too many pending ROIs and is pausing to clear them, or whether another round is scheduled later in February.

Tasmaniacome through every week — this week they issued 44 Subclass 190 ROIs and 25 Subclass 491 ROI invitations.The minimum score for 190 is 47 points and for 491 is 34 points — scores are trending down.The current ROI invitation queue awaiting processing sits at 321 for Subclass 190 and 192 for Subclass 491, with nomination applications lodged on 8 December now being processed.


Visa grants, invitations and skills assessments this week

StateSponsored

Canberra

Formal nominations

Lodged 25 December 2025, invited to ACT 491 on 16 February 2026,   ICT Support Engineer


Tasmania

Pre-invitation

Subclass 491 — 35 points, lodged 6 February 2026, ROI pre-invitation received 19 February 2026


Visa grants
1Subclass 189 independent skilled migration

Lodged 17 November 2025, granted 16 February 2026


Subclass 190 state-sponsored

Lodged 3 February 2026, granted 19 February 2026 (no supplementary information required)

Lodged 15 November 2024, granted 17 February 2026


Subclass 491 Skilled Work Regional (State-nominated)

None this week


Subclass 191 / 887 regional permanent residency

Lodged 15 May 2025, granted 20 February 2026


Employer sponsorship
None this week

Investor visas / GTI visa

None this week


Partner migration

Lodged 3 June 2025, Subclass 801 granted 18 February 2026


Parent category visas

Lodged 5 September 2018, request for supplementary information issued on 22 January 2026, second invoice issued on 18 February 2026, Subclass 143 granted on 19 February 2026

Lodged 29 June 2018, Subclass 143 granted 17 February 2026


Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate visa

Lodged 8 October 2025, granted 16 February 2026


Subclass 500 Student visa

Lodged 22 August 2025, granted 16 February 2026

Lodged 24 August 2025, granted 20 February 2026


Subclass 600 Visitor visa

Lodged 10 February 2026, granted 20 February 2026, offshore-lodged parent PR


Subclass 155 visa

Lodged 19 January 2026, granted 19 February 2026 (2-year residence period not yet completed)  

Lodged 10 February 2026, granted 16 February 2026 (2-year residence period not yet completed)  

Lodged 15 January 2026, granted 14 February 2026 (2-year residence period not yet completed)


Skills assessments

ACECQA 

Lodged 2 December 2025, skills assessment issued 19 February 2026 (no supplementary information required)  


 AITSL 

Lodged 5 February 2026, skills assessment issued 13 February 2026 (no supplementary information required)


AIQS

Lodged 15 December 2025, skills assessment issued 19 February 2026 (no supplementary information required)  


 EA

Lodged 13 February 2026, skills assessment issued 16 February 2026 (no supplementary information required, priority)  


 VETASSESS

Lodged 2 February 2026, skills assessment issued 13 February 2026 (no supplementary information required, priority)


TRA

Lodged 11 February 2026, TRA skills assessment for painting trade workers passed on 16 February 2026


(photographed in 2021)

New Subclass 189 invitations imminent — end-of-January EOI backlog update for popular occupations, plus invitation-score predictions!


Subclass 189 may yet issue another 3,000–5,000 invitations, with grants now pushing into November! Subclass 190 and 491 grants are advancing across the board

Skilled migration points-test reform consultation paper released! What changes have broad agreement? How will they be implemented?

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Ref No.: 01– Australia’s most popular skilled migration streams: 189, 190, 491
Ref No.: 02– Work-plus-migration employer-sponsored pathways in one: 482, 186, 494
Ref No.:03– Study first, migrate later: recommended majors and courses
Ref No.:04– Secondary / Gaokao / undergraduate study-abroad pathways
Ref No.:05– Essential for student migrants: the Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate visa
Ref No.:06– Arrange as soon as your PR is granted: parent migration and visas
Ref No.:07– Master of Marriage: partner migration
Ref No.:08– Pivoting to Hong Kong: the Quality Migrant Admission Scheme and Top Talent schemes
Ref No.:09– Essential for visits from parents / relatives / friends: the Subclass 600 visa
Ref No.:10– Weekly updates on visa grants / invitations / skills assessments, plus success stories


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