Teachers, doctors, architects, researchers… all invited! Australia’s low-cost, no-language-requirement, fast-track migration programme — opportunities across every industry!



Many high-quality applicants in mainland China want to migrate to Australia, but have long struggled to find a good programme. Previously, the mainstream Australian migration pathways were limited to skilled migration, employer sponsorship, business and investor migration, and family migration. However, many people find it hard to meet the relatively high requirements, for example:


Skilled migrationrequiresa skills assessment and enough points,and also requires an English test,and currentlyit is not opento applicants outside Australia.

Employersponsorshipalso requires a skills assessment, an English test, andwork experience relevant to the nominated occupation.

Business and investor migrationrequires being a company shareholder or investing in property, shares, etc.,with relatively high costs and longer waiting times.

Family migrationrequires having a spouse or child who is an Australian permanent resident or citizen — for example, partner migration or parent migration.


Now we have another option:

Australia’s Global Talent Independent (GTI) programme



Newstars Beijing

recentGTI

success stories


Case One: A big-data lab researcher at a major company successfully applies for Australia’s Global Talent Independent programme

Dr Z,in the digital technology field, has worked as a researcher at a major company’s big-data lab,has many achievements in the field, and holds patents with commercial value. After our writing team highlighted these standout achievements, the EOI was submitted on 28 December and an invitation was received the very same day — a very fast turnaround by current standards.


Case Two: A fintech company executive successfully applies for Australia’s Global Talent Independent programme

Mr J,in the fintech field, an executive at a major company in China,would have had essentially no chance of migrating to Australia via any other pathway. But with the GTI programme, Mr J prepared his materials with ease and received an invitation — he now holds a Subclass 858 visa, Australia’s permanent residency. (Mr J had previously obtained the US EB-1 extraordinary ability visa, so applicants who qualify for the US programme can equally apply for Australia’s Global Talent programme, which has a shorter processing time and lower cost than the US equivalent.)


Case Three: A bridge engineer successfully applies for Australia’s Global Talent Independent programme

Dr D,in the infrastructure field, a bridge engineer,has published papers, holds patents, and has project experience, working in a modern construction technique involving off-site prefabrication and modular construction. Importantly, one round of additional evidence was proactively submitted midway through the process. After layer-by-layer analysis by the Newstars Beijing writing team, a tailored GTI submission strategy was built for the applicant, winning the case officer’s favour — and the invitation has now been received.


Case Four: A Chinese doctor successfully applies for Australia’s Global Talent Independent (GTI) programme

Mr B isa chief physician at a hospital in Beijing,our Beijingteam spent many days carefully uncovering favourable evidence for the client, including his research achievements, and helped him secure a highly regarded referee in Australia. The application was lodged in early January 2021.

(As it happened, on 14 January 2021 the Department of Home Affairs updated the GTI targeted sectors to ten priority sectors,expanding the original Med Tech sector directly into the broader Health industries sector,and this change gave us some added reassurance. On 3 March, Mr B received his GTI invitation.)


Case Five: An art teacher successfully applies for Australia’s Global Talent Independent (GTI) programme

Mr H isan art teacher at a school,repeatedly named an outstanding teacher by his school, and also recognised multiple times as an advanced teacher at the city and provincial level. His own works have won prizes in various competitions, and he has published articles on both art and education. After in-depth work refining the client’s materials, he ultimately received an invitation.


Based on the large number of applications we have handled,GTI covers every industry and a wide range of academic, professional, and income backgrounds,and this programme cannot simply be reduced to a rule of “doing X guarantees success” or “doing Y guarantees failure.”


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We’ve also reviewed some of the Department of Home Affairs’ data on GTI — here’s a summary of our takeaways ↓ read on below!




Q1

On the topic ofsalary requirements, many applicants ask us: if they don’t meet the Department’s required income of AUD 153,600, can they still receive an invitation?


AUD 153,600 is used as a high-income benchmark,but it is not an absolute reference point,and the GTO has made clear that applicants’ salary range can vary widely — different countries, fields, and positions all affect whether salary is higher or lower, so falling short of the exact figure doesn’t rule you out, and meeting it doesn’t guarantee success either.


If an applicant doesn’t currently meet the salary requirement,it’s enough to demonstrate the future ability to earn a high salary in Australia — something we’ve already confirmed through our own casework.


Here is a figure from the Department of Home Affairs:between 1 July 2020 and 24 February 2021, a total of 1,447 invitations were issued, of which 974 met the salary requirement — meaning only 67% of invitees actually met the salary requirement.


Q2

How long is theapplication waiting timefor each sector, and is it the same across the board?

Different sectors have different numbers of applicants, so processing times naturally differ too.


Looking at invitation data from 1 January 2021 to 17 February 2021,the newly added sectors currently have relatively few applicants, so processing times are relatively short. Take the Resources sector, for example — fewer than 5 people have been invited, and each application takes around 5 days to process,


which makes now a great opportunity for applicants in these new sectors.


Friendly reminder:the Department does not exclude any industry, but applications in the 10 targeted areas will receive priority processing.

 

GTI.

Key points of the Global Talent programme

Australia’s GTI Global Talent Independent programme is currently one of the hottest migration programmes around. Compared with skilled migration and investor migration, the GTI Global Talent programme is a genuinely low-threshold, low-cost, and fast programme.

 

The GTI programme’srequirements for applicants are relatively low, with no age limit(applicants over 55 need to provide additional evidence of the significant contribution they can make to Australia),no English test score or proof of assets is required, and there is no skills assessment or EOI points test — applicants only need to be in good health, of good character, and have outstanding achievements in their field(there is no specific occupation restriction).

 

The ten priority sectors:

1. Resources;(expanded from the original mining focus to all resources-related fields, covering natural gas, oil, heavy metals, and more)

2. Agri-food and AgTech;(newly addedagri-food-related fields, not limited to technology)

3. Energy;(covers all forms of energy — electricity, thermal, solar, wind, and more — retained and now a standalone branch)

4. Health industries; (expanded from medical technology tothe entire health-related industry))


5. Defence, advanced manufacturing and space;(defence is entirely new, now forming a new branch together with the previous space and advanced manufacturing sector)

6. Circular economy;(new)

7. Digitech; (previously ICT, big data, quantum information, cybersecurity, and advanced digital technologies can all be classified here)

8. Infrastructure and tourism;(new) (the infrastructure sector includesurban infrastructure, urban planning, and property technology (PropTech), among others. The newly added infrastructure sector givesapplicants with a civil engineering backgrounda legitimate route in. Infrastructure can specifically includedams, large-scale or highly complex bridges, irrigation schemes, and transport/logistics planning and maintenance)

9. Financial services and FinTech; (expanded from fintech tofinancial services,so professionals purely in the finance industry can now apply too)

10. 10. Education(new)(we see the Education sector as falling into two parts:one is traditional teachers with many achievements; the other is companies or leaders driving the development of online education)


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Accounting, ICT, and other occupations have recently been granted! Still scrambling for points for Subclass 189/190/491? Still waiting anxiously for an invitation? Switch to this Plan A instead!

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Reply in the official account withany of the numbers below, or any keyword (not a comment at the bottom of the article),to get the most timely and professional migration updates!Reply [A] to view the full index (covering every topic)!

Reply:0000 → view the 16 November policy update (491 + skilled migration points)

Reply: 000 → latest visa/citizenship processing times

Reply: 001 → latest official 189 EOI invitation round

Reply: 002 → Subclass 189 skilled independent migration

Reply: 003 → Subclass 190 state nomination by state

Reply: 004 → Subclass 489 regional state nomination

Reply: 005 → international student business and investor migration

Reply: 006 → parent migration visas

Reply: 007 → employer-sponsored visas

Reply: 008 → Subclass 485 visa

Reply: 009 → partner migration / bonus points

Reply: 010 → work experience points

Reply: 011 → PY points

Reply: 012 → NAATI/CCL points

Reply: 013 → regional area points

Reply: 014 → visitor/family visit visa

Reply: 015 → working holiday visa

Reply: 016 → studying at TAFE

Reply: 017 → Canada migration for Australian international students

Reply: 018 → Subclass 407 Training visa

Reply: 019 → Subclass 408 Temporary Activity visa

Reply: 020 → New Zealand migration

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