Subclass 407 visa reform reversal: Home Affairs delivers rapid processing

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The 407 reform a few weeks ago, in short, requiresthe sponsorship eligibility, nomination, and visa to be lodged as three separate steps, with each subsequent step only lodgeable after the previous one is approved. This meant the Subclass 407 visa would become a poor renewal option, because each step had long processing times — from a few months to half a year — with high uncertainty, stacking up to 1–1.5 years in total. That simply is not realistic for a renewal option.

For example, someone looking to extend after a Subclass 485 visa only holds a 2-year visa (3 years in some cases). Most will put migration first, so spending a year and a half preparing a visa that does not directly lead to PR is simply not practical.


That was our initial read when we first saw the policy, but we had not factored in that processing speed is also a variable in the Department of Home Affairs’ hands.Since the reform, Subclass 407 processing appears to have come back to life. Our 407 success stories from the past two to three weeks are summarised in the image below:


First:The volume has visibly increased — we are seeing fresh approvals for nominations, sponsorship eligibility, and visas alike

Second:Processing times are dropping: typical cases include a 407 nomination lodged on the 25th and approved on the 26th, and another lodged on the 20th and approved on the 23rd


Our data cannot speak for everyone,but we are now seeing some positive signals that we wanted to share,and we will keep monitoring — hoping this is a sustained trend, and that Subclass 407 processing times can ultimately settle into a consistently short cycle.


Of course, faster processing brings another issue:documentation must be fully prepared and organised from the outset, which makes experienced professionals even more essential to compress preparation time as precisely as possible.Below are our recent successful approvals:


So at this point, the 407 reform is not as bad as it first seemed. For those with few other renewal options, if you need to apply, apply — and start preparing as soon as possible.



(Photographed in 2021)

For state nomination, Victoria still leads the way! Marketing/Advertising/Auditing/Accounting received Subclass 190 invitations, plus plenty of IT and Engineering!


New policy takes effect tomorrow — a major reform for 407 renewals! Subclass 189/190/491 visa processing is accelerating across the board

Most states have ample quotas; some are increasing state-nomination allocations or issuing frequency, while others are speeding up processing!?

Migration News Group


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No. 01– Australia’s most popular skilled migration programs: Subclass 189, 190, and 491
No. 02– Work-to-migration in one step: employer-sponsored Subclass 482, 186, and 494
No. 03– Study first, then migrate: recommended majors and courses
No. 04– Pathways for high school / Gaokao / undergraduate study abroad
No. 05– Essential for international students pursuing migration: the Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate visa
No. 06– Arrange straight after PR: Parent migration and visas
No. 07– Master of Marriage: partner migration
No. 08– Pivoting to Hong Kong: the Quality Migrant Admission Scheme and Top Talent Pass Scheme
No. 09– Essential for parents/relatives/friends visiting: the Subclass 600 Visitor visa
No. 10– Weekly updates on approvals/invitations/skills assessments: success stories


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