“How Many Points Does My Occupation Need for an Invitation?” April’s Hot State-Nomination Rounds Summarised — Plus Where May’s Opportunities Lie!

Invitation

Points



When looking into state nomination, many people ask, how many points does my occupation need?And once that state nomination is answered, someone else will ask, well, how many points does State XX need?


Although not every state issues invitations purely on points, [points] are indeed widely regarded as an important benchmark for gauging your chances of being invited.


So, as April draws to a close, we’ve put together a summary for you of the latest April invitation points for the state nominations that issue invitations in rounds (invitations released together on a particular day)

***Points reflect past invitation rounds and are provided for reference only


The official websites of NSW, VIC and TASdo notpublish specific figures, so this summary is drawn from our own clients and externally gathered data. If you don’t see your occupation here, it simply means we haven’t yet seen an invitation for it in this round.


The official websites of Canberra (ACT) and Western Australiado publishthe latest figures.


Queensland, the Northern Territory and South Australia do not issue invitations in fixed rounds — applications are assessed and decided as they are reached, which makes the data harder to track. If you’d like to know more, please contact our consultants.


NSW Subclass 190

5 April

The most recent pre-invitation round took place on 5 April 2023, and these applicants have since been receiving their formal nomination invitations.


Key features of the NSW Subclass 190 round on 5 April 2023:

Finance occupations continued to be invited readily, with externally gathered data showing invitations from as low as 75+5 points. Finance has been propelled by NSW this financial year, and invitation points are now higher than at the start of the year.

Auditing held steady at 85 points (without state-nomination points), with both our onshore and offshore clients receiving invitations; Accounting moved back to 95 points unweighted.

Engineering and construction also saw a number of invitations, with points (excluding state nomination) needed in the 80–85 range.

– There were also some trades occupations, which NSW has consistently favoured for invitations.

– However, this round saw no IT occupations

NSW Subclass 491

Late March / early April

NSW Subclass 491 also issued a concentrated round in late March / early April


Key features of the NSW Subclass 491 round in late March / early April:

High volume, with a very broad range of occupations invited

– A larger share went to offshore applicants

– Many applicants claimed no work experience at all

Even for IT, engineering and other in-demand fields, there was no need to compete on EOI points — 50–60 points (excluding state nomination) was enough to be invited


Over the next 2–3 months, NSW’s focus will be on the Subclass 491 — even for highly competitive fields such as IT and engineering, as little as 50 points (excluding state nomination) can secure an invitation! This is especially worth a try for offshore applicants!

VIC Subclass 190

18 April

There was also a round in early April, but it went entirely to priority occupations such as teachers, social workers and healthcare and nursing — everyone on EOI 65 was scooped up, so we won’t summarise it here.


VIC Subclass 190’s most recent ROI invitation round was issued on 18 April.


Key features of this VIC Subclass 190 round:

– Although the volume was modest, in-demand occupations were given a chance, with many IT occupations invited

– Compared with NSW, VIC remained relatively friendly on points for in-demand occupations — IT secured the Subclass 190 at 75 points (excluding state nomination), Accounting at 85 points


WA Subclass 190 and 491

Early April

WA issues a pre-invitation round at the start of each month and promptly publishes the figures on its official website.


The early-April round issued 491 only, with pre-invitation data for General stream – sch2

Key features of this pre-invitation round:

– Around a thousand invitations were issued, for the Subclass 491 only

– Subtract 15 points from the EOI scores above and you have the points an applicant needs to reach on their own. Once you do, you’ll find that for Accounting, IT and engineering occupations, reaching 70 or 75 points on your own was enough to be invited

– For WA General stream sch2, the Subclass 491 does not require a job offer.Although offshore and interstate applicants can also lodge, the state government still insists on inviting those who will relocate to WA.Move there, and you get invited.



The early-March round issued 190 only, with pre-invitation outcomes for General stream – sch2

figures

(click to enlarge)


Key features of this Subclass 190 pre-invitation round:

– A very large volume was issued, all above a thousand

– Only the Subclass 190 was issued. Subtract 5 points from the EOI scores above and you have the points an applicant needs to reach on their own.

Once you do, you’ll find that for Accounting, IT and engineering occupations, reaching 65 points on your own was enough to be invited — likely one of the lowest requirements of any state.

– For WA General stream sch2, the Subclass 190 does not require work experience or IELTS 7 across all four bands, but it does require a job offer related to the locally nominated occupation.Although offshore and interstate applicants can also lodge, the state government has consistently insisted on inviting those who will relocate to WA.Move there, and you get invited.


Overall, with just over two months remaining, WA still has plenty of places available!

Canberra (ACT) Subclass 190 and 491

Two rounds in April; figures released for the 5 April round


Canberra (ACT) ran two rounds in April — on 5 April and last Friday, the 21st.

Note 1: On 20 April, Canberra announced lower entry requirements and added occupations (for details, see: Canberra policy changes are here! 128 occupations added! Good news for offshore applicants — the Subclass 190 no longer requires a job offer! Onshore language and work requirements lowered!),), although both rounds were still issued under the old policy.


Note 2: Canberra uses its own scoring system, called the Matrix, and issues invitations based on Matrix points.The federal EOI score only needs to reach the minimum of 65 points; a higher or lower EOI score has no bearing on a Canberra invitation.


For the 5 April round, the per-occupation invitation data published on the official website — all points below are Matrix points


Official data for last Friday’s round on 21 April has not yet been published


Under Canberra’s lowered entry requirements, the Subclass 491 now requires only 1 year of work experience, no job offer, and IELTS 6 across all four bands. The Subclass 190 requires 3 years of work experience, also no job offer, and IELTS 7 across all four bands. With just over two months remaining, Canberra still has plenty of places available.


TAS Subclass 190 and 491 

Issued every week


Key features of the Tasmania rounds:

– Tasmania now issues pre-invitations every Friday

– The vast majority of Tasmania’s invitations go to onshore (in-state) applicants

– Many highly in-demand occupations were invited, and for both the Subclass 190 and 491 the EOI points were very friendly. However, Tasmania selects based on applicant attributes such as work, residence and qualifications — not on EOI points.


EOI points are not everything

Summary

Having read this far, you’ll see that not every state nomination selects applicants by EOI points. Each state government has its own selection rules — it’s simply that applicants who meet more of a state’s conditions generally also have higher EOI scores.

NSW selects on EOI points, work experience, whether there is relevant employment, and language ability (in no particular order)

VIC does not go by EOI points; it assesses an applicant’s employment, work experience, income and other conditions through the ROI. Generally, the stronger the ROI, the higher the EOI score

Canberra (ACT) does not look at EOI points at all — it goes by Matrix points

WA prioritises onshore (in-state) applicants, then considers EOI points — but the points are not competitive

TAS does not look at EOI points; it goes by attributes


If you’ve calculated your own EOI at 65 points, that isn’t the whole picture — each state’s policy priorities differ, and even the same occupation has different chances across states. Leave the expert work to the experts — contact our consultants below to arrange a consultation!



Catch up on past articles

Major migration reform officially announced on 27 April!? These applicants can become Australian citizens directly!

Which Go8 master’s flagship majors should you study in Australia?

Offshore Finance / Marketing / Conference and Event Organisers / Program and Project Administrators / Information and Organisation — invited again and again at low points!

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