

Key Migration News of the Week
1. Can we still expect 189 invitations this year? Data estimates another 3-5k possible?
2. Points-test reform consultation papers released: which scoring items are unanimously agreed to be changed
3. 190 and 491 visa backlogs further reduced
4. DoHA official update: 189/190/Partner PR processing speeds up
5. Weekly roundup of grants, invitations and skills assessments
There has been plenty of 189 news over the past few days, mainly from the Department of Home Affairs’ internal communications about the second-round arrangements. We will combine this with the 189 visa backlog data obtained via FOI up to end of December, and walk through it together.
1. This financial year’s second round of invitations uses the [occupation invitation calculation method] we introduced previously
2.The third round is expected to be a smaller round, because after the second round the invitation count is close to the quota (at the time the actual likely lodgement count was not clearly known)
3.The third round won’t necessarily be in February. The Department of Home Affairs will monitor the 189 visa backlog in real time, to decide when to issue invitations, and a pre-announcement is expected first
So let’s look at the latest 189 visa application backlog figures:
End of Decemberthe backlog was 12,832 and 9,161 places remained in quota. The gap is 3,671. Based on the roughly 7,000 189 backlog the Department has been “willing” to carry at the end of the past two financial years,there are still 3,329 visa places available. Factoring in a 50-55% invitation acceptance rate, 189 will most likely see another round, and a cautiously optimistic estimate is 3,000-5,000 invitations.

1,720 grants in December,slightly up from November, and broadly processed in lodgement order.24 12 is almost cleared,25 8 remains the main battleground this round. We have seen recent grants for multiple clients who lodged in August/September,11 processing has begun.
2. Points-test reform consultation papers released: which scoring items are unanimously agreed to be changed?
At the end of January the Department of Home Affairs released more than 200 external submissions on the points-test reform, from large institutions such as universities, skills-assessing authorities, state governments, industry bodies and think tanks, as well as many individual submissions.We have reviewed the full submissions of several representative institutions, summarised as follows:
– Age points: agree to move to a tiered model; oppose an excessive push towards ever-younger migrants
– Partner points: add qualification points; Australian qualifications rewarded
– English points:raise the threshold — the current four 6s is considered too low. Higher language ability may attract more additional points
– Qualification points: refine the scoring; diploma/certificate also earn points; no extra points for STEM; multiple qualifications can earn points
– Work-experience points: reduce the years required; overseas and onshore experience moving towards parity
– Current-employment points: additional points available; do not support job-offer-based points, and oppose a purely “high-salary-is-king” model
– Skills recognition: certificates and licences should also attract points
– Occupation lists: widely criticised, with significant disagreement on how to revise
– Regional points: move to a tiered system, with more remote areas earning more points
– NAATI points: some support removing them
– PY points: skills-assessing authorities strongly support retention; other bodies ambivalent
– A proper transition and buffer period is essential
A detailed comparison of several institutions can be seen in the image below

Of course, none of the above suggestions will necessarily be adopted by the government, or adopted exactly as submitted —but from the emerging consensus we can get a sense of the direction of reform, and confirm that the points-test overhaul has entered its public-release stage.
3. 190 and 491 visa backlogs further reduced
We have also obtained the 190 and 491 visa data for the first half of the financial year
As state nominations gradually rolled out invitations in November and December,190 new lodgements rose by 788 and 491 lodgements by 167. The second half of the financial year will see faster and larger increases.
190 grants fell slightly to under 2,700,491 dropped sharply to 1,000, but grants overall still exceed lodgements.As at end of December the 190 backlog was just over 25,000 and the 491 backlog under 22,000
190 and 491 grants continue to come through every month.190Apart from 24 10 reaching 525, the others have been in the tens to just over a hundred.


4. DoHA official update: 190 and Partner PR grants accelerate
The Department of Home Affairs has finally released its first 2026 update to visa processing times, with 189, 190 and Partner PR stages all speeding up.
189 50% in 3 months, 7 months faster; 90% in 12 months, 1 month slower
190 50% in 15 months, 2 months faster; 90% in 25 months, 2 months faster
491 50% in 21 months, unchanged from the last update; 90% in 29 months, 1 month slower
482 SID nomination 50% in 81 days, 40 days slower; 90% in 7 months, unchanged
186 DE 50% in 17 months, 8 months slower; 90% in 20 months, 1 month slower
Partner 801 stage 50% in 7 months, 1 month faster; 90% in 13 months, 9 months faster
For other categories please refer back to:DoHA’s first 2026 update to visa processing times! 190 slightly faster, Partner PR stage significantly faster, employer-sponsored slightly slower!
State nomination
Canberra
Formal nomination
2026 2 08 lodged, 2026 02 09 invitedACT 190 PhD stream, Accountant (General)
2025 12 24 lodged, 2026 02 10 invitedACT 190,Accountant (General)
2025 12 24 lodged, 2026 02 13 invitedACT 190,Accountant (General)
Tasmania
Formal nomination
2026 1 13 lodgedNomination, 2026 2 13 formally invited(expedited application) Chef 60+5with relevant work experience
190 state nomination
28 May 2025 lodged onshoreACT 190, 10 Feb 2026 granted–ICT Business Analyst
491 regional state nomination
Lodged 28 June 2023, granted 6 February 2026
2024 6 6 lodged, 2026 2 11 granted Cafe or Restaurant Manager – 141111 onshore with partner
17 Jun 2024 lodged onshoreACT 491, 12 Feb 2026granted–ICT Support Engineer
Lodged on 8/7/2025, Approved on 9/2/2026. Chef 482 nomination. Submitted on 14/1/2026, approved on 12/2/2026 — 482 employer-sponsorship eligibility
Submitted on 28/11/2025, approved on 11/2/2026 — 407 employer-sponsorship eligibility
482 Submitted on 3/10/2025, Approved on 10/2/2026 — 482 employer-sponsorship eligibility
Investor visa / GTI visa
None this week
Partner migration
Submitted on 9/12/2025, granted on 11/2/2026 — 801
Submitted on 19/12/2025, granted on 11/2/2026 — 801
2025 10 10 lodged, 2026 2 11 granted — 801
2024 2 8 lodged, 2026 2 9 820 and 801 granted together
2018 9 15 lodged, 2026 1 16 additional documents lodged, 2026 2 13 granted — 143
2018 7 23 lodged, 2025 12 2 additional documents lodged, 2026 2 9 granted — 143
2018 1 5 lodged103,2025 10 24 lodged143,2025 11 3 additional documents lodged, 2026 2 9 granted — 143
2026 1 19 lodged, 2026 2 12 granted — 485 second stream
2025 11 28 lodged, 2026 2 13 granted — 485 second stream
500 Student visa
Lodged 20 January 2026, approved 13 February 2026
9/12/2025, granted on 12/2/2026
600 Visitor visa
Submitted on 10/2/2026, granted on 12/2/2026
2026 2 11 lodged, 2026 2 13 granted,offshore application PR parent
2026 2 4 lodged, 2026 2 12 granted, offshore applicationPR parent
2026 2 6 lodged, 2026 2 10 granted, offshore applicationPR parent
2026 2 6 lodged, 2026 2 11 granted, offshore applicationPR parent
Child visa
Lodged 11 September 2024, granted 7 February 2026
Skills assessments
ACS skills assessment
Lodged on 23/1/2026, approved on 10/2/2026. 262113, 263212, 313113
AITSL
2026 2 5 lodged, 2026 2 13 completed
EA
Lodged 31 December 2025, approved 9 February 2026 — EA assessment, Mechanical Engineer
Lodged 23 December 2025, approved 12 February 2026 — EA assessment, Engineering Technologist
2026 1 20 lodged, 2026 2 10 completed(CDR expedited)
VET
2026 1 23 lodged, 2026 2 12 completed(expedited)
(photographed in 2021)
New 189 invitation round imminent — popular-occupation EOI backlog update at end of January, invitation score forecasts!
Processing accelerates immediately after reform legislation passes! Student-visa ART appeals lodged in the second half of 2025 have received requests for additional documents!
Skilled-migration points-test reform submissions released! What is unanimously agreed to change, and how?
Migration information sharing group
2025
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