Skilled Migration

Skilled visa pathways to Australian permanent residence

Australia's General Skilled Migration program offers four pathways to permanent residence. Each has its own occupation list, points threshold, and strategic profile. We advise on the right pathway, prepare the application to a litigation-ready standard, and represent you through to grant.

The General Skilled Migration program is the points-tested pathway for skilled workers seeking Australian permanent residence without an Australian employer sponsor. Four visa subclasses sit within the program: the 189 Skilled Independent visa, the 190 Skilled Nominated visa, the 491 Skilled Work Regional (Provisional) visa, and the 191 Permanent Residence (Skilled Regional) visa.

The 2025-26 Permanent Migration Program allocates 132,200 places to the Skill stream, including 16,900 to the 189, 33,000 to State and Territory Nominated visas, and 33,000 to Regional visas. Competition is intense. Cut-off scores in priority occupations regularly exceed 90 points. The pathway you choose, the state or territory you target, and the timing of your Expression of Interest all materially affect your prospects.

We are admitted Australian solicitors. Our practice focuses on strategic skilled migration advice, decision-ready application preparation, and tribunal and judicial review representation when matters become contested.

At a glance

Feature 189 190 491
Visa typePermanentPermanent5-year provisional
SponsorshipNone requiredState or territoryState, territory, or eligible family
Bonus pointsNil515
Occupation listsMLTSSLMLTSSL, STSOLMLTSSL, STSOL, ROL
LocationAnywhere in AustraliaNominating state for 2 yearsDesignated regional area for 3 years
Pathway to PRPR from grantPR from grant191 after 3 years compliance

How we approach skilled visa work

Strategic assessment first

We do not assume the visa you ask about is the right visa for your circumstances. We map your profile against all four GSM pathways, against the SID and ENS pathways where relevant, and against the timing of state and territory invitation rounds. The strategic question is which application is most likely to succeed, not which application sounds most attractive.

Decision-ready preparation

Decision-ready applications are processed faster and refused less often. We prepare every application as if it will be reviewed by a tribunal. Documentary evidence addresses each criterion explicitly. Submissions identify and resolve weaknesses before the case officer raises them.

Representation through to grant

If a request for further information arrives, we respond. If a refusal arrives, we advise on review prospects within statutory time limits. If the matter reaches the Administrative Review Tribunal, we appear. If judicial review is warranted, we instruct counsel and run the litigation. Our retainer covers the matter from instruction through to outcome.

Speak with an immigration lawyer about your skilled visa pathway

Every consultation is handled personally by an admitted Australian solicitor. We assess your profile against the full skilled migration framework and advise on the most strategic pathway.

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Beyond the points-tested program

The points-tested skilled visas are not the only pathway to Australian permanent residence on the basis of skill. The Subclass 858 National Innovation Visa, which replaced the Global Talent Visa on 7 December 2024, is an invitation-only permanent visa for individuals with an internationally recognised record of exceptional and outstanding achievement. It does not use a points test.

Where a skilled professional has achievements that meaningfully exceed the GSM threshold, recognition at the global top of field, leadership of nationally significant research, or founding of an internationally scaled venture, the NIV may be a faster and more strategic pathway than the points-tested program.

Common questions

Which skilled visa is right for me?
It depends on your points score, your nominated occupation, where you intend to live, and the speed at which you need permanent residence. The 189 is the only skilled visa that grants permanent residence without state, territory, or family sponsorship. The 190 grants permanent residence with state or territory nomination. The 491 is a five-year provisional visa requiring state, territory, or family-sponsored regional nomination, with a pathway to permanent residence through the 191 after three years of regional compliance.
What is the minimum points score I need?
The legislative minimum is 65 points across age, English, qualifications, work experience, and other criteria. In practice, invitations under the 189 routinely require 90 to 100 points or more. State nomination through the 190 adds 5 points; family-sponsored or state-nominated 491 adds 15 points. The competitive cut-off varies by occupation, by visa, and by state.
Which occupation list applies to skilled visas?
The General Skilled Migration program (189, 190, 491) uses the Medium and Long-term Strategic Skills List (MLTSSL), the Short-term Skilled Occupation List (STSOL), and the Regional Occupation List (ROL), all under ANZSCO 2013. The 189 is restricted to MLTSSL. The 190 covers MLTSSL and STSOL. The 491 covers MLTSSL, STSOL, and ROL. The Core Skills Occupation List (CSOL) introduced in December 2024 applies to the Skills in Demand visa (subclass 482) and the Direct Entry stream of the Employer Nomination Scheme (subclass 186), not to the General Skilled Migration program.
What is the difference between a migration agent and an immigration lawyer for skilled visa work?
Both are authorised to assist with visa applications. Only an admitted lawyer can provide legal advice, invoke legal professional privilege over your communications, and represent you in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia or the Federal Court if your matter requires judicial review. Skilled visa applications become legal matters when refusals, cancellations, character issues, or judicial review questions arise. Instructing a lawyer from the outset means you have full legal protection from day one.
How long does a skilled visa application take?
Processing times vary by visa subclass, by stream, and by the completeness of the application at lodgement. The Department of Home Affairs publishes processing time estimates that are updated regularly. State and territory nomination adds time at the front end; the federal visa decision follows nomination. Decision-ready applications, prepared with all evidence at lodgement, are processed faster than applications requesting further information.
What happens if my skilled visa application is refused?
A refusal triggers merits review rights to the Administrative Review Tribunal within strict statutory time limits. Missing the deadline ends your review rights. From the Tribunal, judicial review is available to the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, again within strict time limits. We advise on the prospects of review, the time limits, and the strategic question of whether to pursue review or restructure the application under a different pathway.

Information current as at 30 April 2026. Migration program settings, occupation lists, and state and territory allocations are revised periodically. Confirm current settings with the Department of Home Affairs and the relevant state or territory government before lodging an application.

Speak with a lawyer

All enquiries are handled directly by our immigration lawyers. Complete the form and we will be in touch within one business day.

  • Admitted solicitors — not migration agents
  • Legal Professional Privilege on all communications
  • No referral or obligation required
  • Enquiries responded to within one business day

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(03) 9958 5854

enquiry@visaplan.au