Accounting, IT, Engineering, Marketing and More — No Points Race, No Relocation, Keep Your Job and Get PR! Don’t Miss This Most Stable, Highest-Quota Pathway This Financial Year

This financial year, state nomination and Subclass 189 have reignited hope for applicants in the low-to-mid points range across IT, accounting, engineering, and many other common occupations. However, state nomination and Subclass 189 are both passive invitation pathways — invitation timing, cut-off scores, and round frequency are entirely controlled by the federal or state governments. The next round could bring a surprise grant, or it may remain indefinitely unknown.

For example, a question asked constantly since late last year is:“When will the next Subclass 189 round open?” — honestly, nobody knows the answer.Of course, lodging a Subclass 189 EOI and waiting is not a high-cost move

If your points aren’t particularly high, but you have a stable job and want to stay put — without uprooting your life for migration — don’t overlook employer sponsorship

Today we’re highlighting 186DE (Direct Entry — one-step PR via employer sponsorship)and the lower-threshold option, 482TSS

With sufficient work experience — go straight to PR with Subclass 186 DE

Stay where you are and keep your high-paying job
No points race! No queue! No competition!
Stable, predictable approvals

Largest quota in skilled migration — Subclass 186 allocations this financial year
Employer sponsorship — the most consistently government-supported pathway
Last year, over 26,000 Subclass 186 visas were granted — nearly 30% of all skilled visas, exceeding the original allocation by 4,000.Lodgements and grants both grew steadily year-on-year, with the approval rate remaining high.

This financial year, a fact many may have overlooked: Subclass 186 has 35,000 grant allocations — more than Subclass 189, 190, or 491, reflecting Australia’s unwavering support for employer-sponsored migration, especially in the context of post-pandemic skills shortages. Subclass 186 is one of the primary direct channels for addressing this.

Key eligibility requirements for Subclass 186
-The nominated occupation must be on the MLTSSL
-Under 45 years of age
-At least 3 years of full-time work experience in the nominated occupation (different employers permitted)
-A valid skills assessment
-English: IELTS 6 in each band, or equivalent (3-year validity)


A Subclass 186 application has two main stages: the employer nomination application, and the applicant’s visa application.


Recent Subclass 186 success stories from Newstars
feature a great mix of popular occupations!


Whether in Australia or overseas, contact us for a free employer-sponsored PR pathway assessment!
You might be wondering: what if I don’t have 3 years of relevant full-time experience?What if I’ve only been in the workforce for a year or so? Is there still a pathway?

Yes — here’s a lower-threshold option: Subclass 482 TSS
Read on below



Only about 1 year of work experience——482TSS

Although Subclass 482 is a two-step PR pathway, it offers these advantages
Approvals not subject to quota caps
Most occupations require no skills assessment
Shorter processing times
Policy is similarly stable — no points race, no passive waiting

Key eligibility requirements for Subclass 482
-The nominated occupation must be on the MLTSSL or STSOL (with some ROL occupations also eligible for a Subclass 482 visa)
-No age limit
-At least 2 years of full-time work experience in the nominated occupation area
-No skills assessment required (certain occupations excepted)
-Occupations on the MLTSSL have a PR pathway
-For MLTSSL occupations: English at IELTS 5 in each band, or equivalent (3-year validity)
-For STSOL occupations: IELTS overall no less than 5, no band below 4.5, or equivalent (3-year validity)
A Subclass 482 application has three main stages: employer sponsorship accreditation, employer nomination, and the applicant’s visa application.

Recent Subclass 482 success stories from Newstars


Sponsor Eligibility and Applicant Work Experience

The two core factors in employer-sponsored migration

Sponsoring Employer — Eligibility

This is generally assessed across the following areas:
Any adverse compliance history
A company’s compliance record is an important consideration. If a company has previously been penalised for employment-related matters, or has held sponsorship approval that was later revoked by the Department for breaching conditions, the situation becomes more complex and the risk increases.

Annual turnover
Turnover refers to a company’s gross revenue. Many sponsored occupations — most commonly accounting — require an annual turnover of at least AUD 1 million.That said, many occupations have no hard turnover threshold, and a higher figure is always better.

Whether the company is profitable
When assessing employer eligibility, the Department considers whether the employer can sustain operations and meet payroll. If a company is consistently making losses, the Department may question its viability and whether employees risk redundancy or reduced hours.

Please note: some companies may currently be at a loss due to the pandemic — this does not automatically disqualify them as sponsors. Each case needs individual assessment. Contact us for a personalised evaluation!

Ratio of local and full-time employees
The Department reviews visa status and the mix of full-time and part-time staff. Too few full-time employees, or too few local PR holders or Australian citizens, would be considered unreasonable.

Genuine business need for the position
Genuine need refers to the necessity for the company to employ someone in the nominated role — a key area the Department scrutinises. Assessors look at what the role involves, whether it is newly created or long-standing, and whether it relates to the company’s core business. Assessment is case by case, and certain roles carry additional employer requirements.

Applicant (Employee) — Work Experience

Full-time or part-time — but must be paid employment

Work experience counted for employer-sponsored visas differs in some respects from experience used to accumulate skilled migration points.

-Work must be paid — unpaid internships cannot be counted
-Full-time means at least 38 hours per week. Part-time work of at least 20 hours per week can be pro-rated

482
Work experience is assessed within the past 5 years. The 2-year requirement only needs to be met before grant. A certain skills level is still required, but the job content and role requirements are less strict than for Subclass 186. Related occupations are acceptable, and experience may be pre-qualification.

186(DE)
The 3-year work experience requirement must be met before lodgement. Work must be in the nominated occupation and must be post-qualification.
Contact us with your CV for a comprehensive migration assessment — employer sponsorship, state nomination, and Subclass 189 can all be prepared simultaneously!

 Previous articles — Click the image to read the article 


Missed the early Subclass 189 invitation rounds — what now?

NSW Subclass 190 update: more occupations, lower scores, more places!

Australian passport: visa-free access to 185 destinations! Department processes 4.3 million visas in 7 months


Migration Information Group


2023 


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