Department of Home Affairs Update | Visa Processing Times Refined — Employer-Sponsored and Temporary Visas Speed Up! Processing Order Included!


Updated on the 16th, the Department of Home Affairs has updatedNovember 2021granted visaapplicants’general waiting times

In this update, they have also supplemented the data with 25% and 50% figures, that is:

25% Of Visas Processedrefers to last month’sgranted applicants in that category —25% of applicants waited within this timeframe

50% Of Visas Processedrefers to last month’sgranted applicants in that category —50% of applicants waited within this timeframe

75% Of Visas Processedrefers to last month’sgranted applicants in that category —75% of applicants waited within this timeframe

90% Of Visas Processedrefers to last month’sgranted applicants in that category —90% of applicants waited within this timeframe

“Slowing down”, “speeding up”, “holding steady”refer to comparisons against the waiting times of applicants granted the month prior.

However, November still shows no sign of improvement in grant speeds for skilled migration categories.


The Department of Home Affairs website currently sets out the following processing order

First are the special arrangements under COVID-19, which prioritise people currently eligible for travel exemptions

– Immediate family members of citizens and PR holders, including parents

– Travellers within the international Safe Travel Zone

– Temporary visa holders eligible for travel exemptions, including

* Skilled visa holders

* International students

* Humanitarian visa holders

* Working holiday visa holders and provisional family visa holders


Within skilled visa categories, the following processing priority order applies

First: employer-sponsored visas, GTI and Subclass 188 for occupations on the PMSOL list or in the agricultural sector

Second: occupations within a Critical Sector 

Then back to employer-sponsored visas for regional areas

Fifth: Subclass 491 regional state-nominated migration

Eighth: former Subclass 489 regional state-nominated migration

‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍Ninth: Subclass 190 state-nominated migration

Tenth: Subclass 189

In general, applicants who are onshore are given priority processing


Subclass 189 points-based system

25% waited within 73 days, 50% waited within 5 months, 75% waited 18 months — 2 months faster than the previous update — 90% waited 30 months or within, broadly holding steady

Subclass 189 invitations are now extremely rare,with rounds only every 3 months and just a few hundred invitations each time — the 29 October round issued only 200,so there are not many new applications for critical occupations to process; over these months it appears that older backlogs are being cleared, though in relatively small volumes.


Subclass 190 state nomination

25% waited within 4 months, 50% within 5 months, 75% within 6 months, 90% within 18 months — considerably slower again


Subclass 491 regional state nomination

State government-nominated stream,25% waited within 88 days, 50% within 5 months,75% within 5 months — 1 month slower; 90% within 9 months — faster

Family-nominated stream,25% waited73 daysor within, 50% within 4 months,75% within 10 months, 90% within 11 months — all holding steady


State nomination categories with ongoing new invitations and new lodgements don’t show as much variation as Subclass 189, though processing speeds suggest more recently lodged applications are being handled; most cases we have seen recently involve nursing or ICT, and volumes remain low.We hope visa officers return from the Christmas break promptly to clear the backlog of applications


Former Subclass 489 regional state nomination

25% waited within 18 months, 50% within 21 months,75% within 25months or within,90% within 29months or within


The latest processing data for Subclass 189/491/190/489 obtained from the Department of Home Affairs:

Waiting for a grant? | Latest 190/491/189/489 onshore and offshore grant numbers, backlog figures, new lodgements, and key occupations…


Subclass 489 to Subclass 887 transition

25% waited within 15 months, 50% within 15 months,75% within 17months or within,90% within 22months or within

Applications lodged in September 2020 remain at an unchanged pace…


Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa

The government-endorsed activities stream established specifically under COVID-19,25% waited 34 daysor within, 50% waited 56 daysor within,75% within 84 days; 90% within 5 months — processing for the Subclass 408 continues at a relatively fast pace

The Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa added a COVID-19 stream in the middle of last year in response to the pandemic,workers in critical shortage industriescan not only renew at no cost but continue to work full-time; from last week, the tourism and hospitality industry has been added to the list of critical shortage sectors!


Applicants working in key critical shortage industries (agriculture, logistics, healthcare, food processing, aged care, disability care, childcare,tourism and hospitality) are also exempt from the visa application charge,with visa duration of up to 12 months and full work rights.


The definition of tourism and hospitality industries is primarily based on the ANZSIC industry classification codes under the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), specifically theAccommodation and Food Services Division (Division of Accommodation and Food Services)


Accommodation, which mainly covers businesses that provideaccommodation servicesto guests and tourists, typically including:

1. Camping grounds

2. Caravan parks

3. Hotels

4. Motels

5. Resorts

6. Holiday apartments

7. Ski lodges

8. Student accommodation (excluding boarding schools)

9. Youth hostels


Food servicescover three sub-groups

Group 451 includes cafés, restaurants and takeaway food services 

Group 452 includes pubs and bars

Group 453 includes clubs


Group 451 includes cafés, restaurants and takeaway food services 

Cafés and restaurants should be fairly self-explanatory.

Takeaway services include familiar fast-food outlets (McDonald’s, KFC, Hungry Jack’s, etc.), food courts in shopping centres, mobile food vans, bubble tea shops, and the like.


Note, however, that common bakeries (where bread is made and sold in the same shop) are excluded, as is retail liquor.

 

Group 453 includes clubs

Clubs primarily provide services to members, including gambling, sporting activities, and other social activities.


Group 453 includes clubs

Clubs primarily provide services to members, including gambling, sporting activities, and other social activities.


If you have no other visa options and have been unable to leave Australia due to COVID-19, you may be eligible to apply for the Subclass 408.

Additionally, the latest change is thatapplicants can now apply for the Subclass 408 visa within 90 days before their current visa expires or within 28 days after it expires.


For more details, please see:Working in bubble tea shops, restaurants, or fast food? You could get this full-time “work visa” for free! Official guidance on which tourism and hospitality businesses qualify.

If you would like to assess your eligibility for the Subclass 408 visa,

get in touch with us!


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Subclass 820/801 onshore partner migration

The 25% and 50% waiting times broadly reflect actual outcomes we are seeing — in a word: fast!


Subclass 309/100 offshore partner migration

25% waited within 5 months, 50% within 10 months,75% within 22 months; 90% within 29 months


Subclass 143 Contributory Parent visa

Still no grants — no data available


4Employer-sponsored visa categories — Subclass 482

Subclass 482 nomination:25% waited within 21 days, 50% within 28 days,75% waited 40 daysor within;90% waited 54 days

Subclass 482 Short-Term stream visa: 25% waited within 37 days, 50% within 4 months,75% waited 8 monthsor within;90% waited 11 months

Subclass 482 Medium-Term stream visa: 25% waited within 22 days, 50% within 56 days,75% waited 5 monthsor within;90% waited within 8 months

In the 2021–22 financial year, employer-sponsored nomination and visa processing for occupations on the PMSOL list is very fast — including the highly sought-after accountant!If you are struggling on the Subclass 189 or state nomination pathway, do not let your work experience go to waste — contact us to assess your eligibility for employer sponsorship.


In particular, newly added to the priority PMSOL list:

Accountant (General) (many nominations recently granted)

External/internal Auditor

Civil Engineer

Electrical Engineer

Multimedia Specialist 

Analyst Programmer 

Developer Programmer

Software Engineer 

Software and Applications Programmers nec

ICT Security Specialist 


and other occupations on the PMSOL listreceive priority processing, and if offshore, may also be granted a travel exemption. The new financial year budget has also confirmed thatemployer-sponsored migration remains a priority programme for this financial year.


To assess or enquire about employer sponsorship,

contact our team below


Subclass 858 Global Talent visa

The GTI stream, which most applicants pursue,25% waited within 35 days, 50% within 59 days,75% waited 4 monthsor within;90% waited within 5 months


From our extensive case history, the part of the GTI process that takes the longest is obtaining the invitation; once invited, visa processing is generally fast. There is considerable variation across fields, and as it is very much case by case, professionally uncovering supporting evidence and presenting your strengths is critical. For recent policy changes, please see:No English requirement + PR for the whole family + fast-track citizenship — a priority migration pathway! Exclusive analysis: how to “get invited more easily” and “stand out” in recent rounds!


Subclass 407 Training visa
25% waited within 40 days, 50% within 87 days,75% waited 12 monthsor within;90% waited within 16 months






These Department of Home Affairs figures are indeed for reference only — the exact number of months may not be precise, but they do reflect the relative speed of visa grants.


If you would like a more “ground-level” picture of grant outcomes —

the latest weeklyvisa grant updatesare published: follow the migration weekly bulletin, released every Sunday,


and the latest edition is attached here:[Australia Migration Weekly Bulletin — Issue 214] Treasurer signals increase in migration quota!? Victoria snaps up IT talent, NSW issues new Subclass 190 invitations! Travel exemption processing loopholes under scrutiny!


A summary of recent grant and invitation outcomes across all categories:Press and hold to access — the webpage is continuously updated and we strongly recommend saving it


Study abroad / migration


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End-of-year Student Centre holiday schedules!

‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍

Accountant approved in 1 month, chef secures nomination in 2 months!


Confirmed: borders to open on the 15th as scheduled! Treasurer signals increase in migration quota!

Based overseas? Hundreds of occupations are now eligible — the window of opportunity is open!



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Reply in the Official Accountwith the following numbers or any keyword (not in the article comments below),to receive the most up-to-date and professional migration information!Reply [A] to view the full index (including all knowledge topics)!

Reply:0000 → View policy updates from 16 November (Subclass 491 + skilled migration points)

Reply: 000 → Latest visa/citizenship processing waiting times

Reply: 001 → Latest Subclass 189 EOI official updates

Reply: 002 → Subclass 189 Skilled Independent migration

Reply: 003 → Subclass 190 state nomination by state

Reply: 004 → Subclass 489 regional state nomination

Reply: 005 → Student entrepreneur and investor migration

Reply: 006 → Parent migration visas

Reply: 007 → Employer-sponsored visas

Reply: 008 → Subclass 485 visa

Reply: 009 → Partner migration / points boost

Reply: 010 → Work experience points

Reply: 011 → PY points

Reply: 012 → NAATI/CCL points

Reply: 013 → Regional area points

Reply: 014 → Visitor visa

Reply: 015 → Working holiday visa

Reply: 016 → TAFE study abroad

Reply: 017 → Australian international student Canada migration

Reply: 018 → Subclass 407 Training visa

Reply: 019 → Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa

Reply: 020 → New Zealand migration

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