“Husband-and-Wife” Employer Sponsorship Success Story: Husband’s Company Sponsors Wife as Accountant — Subclass 186 PR Granted in One Step
She was one of the countless accountants who graduated in Australia. With Subclass 189 Independent Skilled Migration and the Subclass 190 / 491 state-nominated pathways becoming increasingly difficult, her visa was about to expire and an invitation was nowhere in sight.
At her wits’ end, she came to us. The Newstarsec team doesn’t hand out easy yes-or-no answers — we dug deep into the company’s background and the applicant’s professional experience, and ultimately took the toughest “husband-and-wife” Subclass 186 employer-sponsored route to secure permanent residency for the whole family in one step.
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The Accountant Migration Bind: The Standard Pathways Are All But Closed
Our applicant is one of the countless accountants who graduated in Australia. In the standard skilled migration pathways — Subclass 189 Independent Skilled Migration and the state-nominated Subclass 190 or 491 — this occupation has been struggling for years. Invitations have been rare for some time, and today the accountant occupation can no longer even be lodged in many state-nominated 190 and 491 streams.
Subclass 189 Independent Skilled Migration
Invitations to accountants have been rare for years, and the points threshold keeps climbing.
Subclass 190 / 491 State Nomination
In many state-nominated streams, accountants can no longer even lodge an application today.
Visa Nearing Expiry
With invitations nowhere in sight, everything she had built in Australia over many years was on the verge of falling apart.
With Her Visa About to Expire, She Came to Us With a Question That Looked Impossible
Back then, the client came to us as her visa was about to expire. With expiry looming and an invitation nowhere in sight, was she really going to have to walk away from everything she had built in Australia? Was this how it ended in failure? At rock bottom, she came to us hoping to find out whether — outside the standard skilled migration pathways — there was any other option. As we talked it through, I learned she was working as an accountant, and then learned that she was working as the accountant at her husband’s company.
So can self-sponsorship actually work?
The client arrived with a string of the most sensitive questions in the industry:
- Can a husband’s company sponsor his wife?
- Can a brother buy a business and sponsor his sister to migrate?
- Or even — can someone’s own company sponsor themselves?
- In our industry, all of these fall under the umbrella term “self-sponsorship” — broadly, where the sponsor and the employee are related, or where the employee has invested in the company that’s providing the sponsorship.
In all our years doing employer sponsorship, we’ve been asked again and again whether self-sponsorship is workable. The answers floating around are all over the map. There are posts on Xiaohongshu from people whose self-sponsored applications were refused — their agent didn’t warn them upfront, and now they’re furious. Others say they heard from a friend that it might be possible.
Can “Self-Sponsorship” Work for Employer Sponsorship? Here’s the Bottom Line
Migration law doesn’t explicitly say self-sponsorship or husband-and-wife sponsorship is off the table. But — and this is the part you have to remember —
Theoretically Workable, But Extremely Strict
The Department applies extra scrutiny to the genuineness of the position — you have to prove very robustly that the role wasn’t created because of personal connections to help you migrate.
Successful Cases Are Rare — Most of the Industry Says No
Even though it’s theoretically possible, you’ll seldom see a successful case. Some MARA-registered migration agents and lawyers will refuse a self-sponsorship case the moment they hear the words — or simply tell you to forget about it.
The Newstarsec Team Turns the Impossible Into the Possible — Again
Coming back to this client’s situation — our migration agent and legal team didn’t rush to a yes-or-no answer. We took a professional approach and analysed the company’s background and scale, and through that we also found that the applicant herself had extensive professional accounting experience. After discussion and consultation, we recommended giving employer sponsorship a shot — even with the toughest husband-and-wife setup, it was worth a crack.
No Snap Judgements
Our migration agent and legal team didn’t simply say “yes” or “no” — they ran a proper professional assessment first.
Sponsor Background and Scale Analysis
In-depth analysis of the sponsoring company’s actual operations, scale, and the genuine business need for this position.
Mapping the Applicant’s Professional Experience
We confirmed the applicant brought extensive accounting experience and was a strong match for the role.
Choosing the Subclass 186 Employer-Sponsored Pathway
After working through the analysis together, we recommended pursuing employer sponsorship — even with the toughest husband-and-wife setup, it was worth a crack.
Going to Enormous Lengths to Establish “Position Genuineness” — PR Granted in the End
The hardest part of this case was exactly what we flagged earlier: [position genuineness]. We went to enormous lengths to set out why the applicant was genuinely needed in this role at this company, attaching dozens of supporting documents — and that’s how we got it across the line.
After the nomination was approved, the visa itself sat in the queue for a while due to quota constraints. Now the entire family has been granted permanent residency.
The takeaway: every employer-sponsored case is more nuanced than a flat yes-or-no answer. Just because someone else couldn’t make it work doesn’t mean you can’t — every application is a tailored, hand-crafted strategy. As long as you’re working in Australia, come and have a chat.
Get a free assessment of your employer-sponsored pathway →Similar Cases: How Newstarsec Turns the “Impossible” Into “Possible”
Visa refusals, employer insolvencies, long absences from Australia, serious requests for further information — below are real cases other agents turned away that Newstarsec got across the line.
From Student-Visa Refusal to Subclass 494 Regional Employer-Sponsored PR
Backed into a corner after a student-visa refusal, going from farm work to securing Subclass 494 regional employer-sponsored PR.
Subclass 155 Resident Return Visa Granted After 10+ Years Outside Australia
A long absence from Australia triggered tough scrutiny on eligibility — the Subclass 155 Resident Return Visa was granted in the end.
Offshore Partner Visa: Subclass 309 to 100, Serious S57 Request Successfully Addressed
A serious S57 natural-justice letter was answered with a tight, logical response — PR was granted without a hitch.
Student Visa Granted After Refusal — An Against-the-Odds Win
A rare one: the Department conceded its error and overturned the student-visa refusal on review — visa granted.
Sponsor Goes Insolvent Mid-Application — PR Still Granted
The sponsor went insolvent partway through the employer-sponsored application — PR was granted regardless.
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Husband-and-wife, self-sponsorship, ultra-difficult? Let’s start with your situation
Every employer-sponsored case is more nuanced than a flat yes-or-no answer — just because someone else couldn’t make it work doesn’t mean you can’t. As long as you’re working in Australia, come and have a chat.
Get a free assessment of your employer-sponsored pathway →