The Subclass 189 Skilled Independent Visa is a points-tested pathway to permanent residency that does not require employer sponsorship or state nomination. For international graduates with relevant skills, work experience, and strong English, the 189 is an attractive route to PR — it offers complete independence from employer or government support. However, competition is fierce, and the points required to be invited vary by occupation and processing year.
What is Subclass 189?
The Subclass 189 is an Australian permanent residency visa granted on a points-based system through SkillSelect. You accumulate points based on:
- Age.
- English language proficiency.
- Educational qualification.
- Work experience (Australian and/or overseas).
- Professional qualifications and registrations.
- Other factors (partner skills, community language, professional year).
Once you accumulate a sufficient points score, you enter the SkillSelect pool and wait to be invited by the Department. When invited, you apply for the visa; if approved, you become a permanent resident.
Key features of 189:
- Permanent residency: No expiry; indefinite stay in Australia.
- No sponsor required: You apply independently.
- No state nomination required: Unlike 190 / 491.
- Points-based: Minimum 65 points required; practical invitations typically 85–95+ points depending on occupation.
- Unrestricted work: Once granted, work in any occupation, any employer.
- Competitive: Only high-scoring applicants are invited in each round.
Eligibility for 189
To be eligible for a Subclass 189 visa, you must:
- Occupation on CSOL: Your occupation must be listed on the Core Skills Occupation List.
- Skills assessment: You must have a positive skills assessment from your occupation’s assessing body.
- Points score: You must achieve a minimum of 65 points in the SkillSelect points calculator (though realistically, you need much higher to be invited).
- Age 45 or under: The age range for highest points is 25–32 (maximum 30 points). After 45, you score zero age points.
- English language: Minimum Functional English (IELTS 4.5 in each component) to Proficient or Superior (IELTS 6.5 or 8.0+). Higher English = more points.
- Health and character: Pass health checks and character requirements.
How SkillSelect and the points system work
SkillSelect overview
SkillSelect is the Australian government’s online system for managing skilled migration applications. You create an Expression of Interest (EOI) and enter a points pool. The Department regularly invites the highest-scoring applicants from the pool to apply.
- Create EOI: You fill out an online form with your personal details, occupation, and estimated points.
- Enter pool: Your EOI sits in the SkillSelect pool (validity: 12 months unless renewed).
- Wait for invitation: The Department holds invitation rounds (typically monthly or quarterly).
- Receive invitation: If your score is high enough, you are invited to apply.
- Apply for visa: You have 7 days to submit a full 189 visa application.
- Department assesses: The Department reviews your application and either grants or refuses the visa.
Points breakdown (maximum ~130 points)
| Criterion | Points range | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 0–30 | Age 25–32 = 30 points; Age 33–37 = 25 points; Age 45+ = 0 points |
| English proficiency | 0–20 | Superior (IELTS 8.0) = 20 points; Proficient (6.5) = 10 points; Competent (6.0) = 0 points |
| Qualification | 0–20 | Bachelor = 15 points; Master/PhD = 20 points |
| Australian work experience | 0–20 | 3–5 years = 5 points; 5–8 years = 10 points; 8+ years = 15 points |
| Overseas work experience | 0–15 | 1–3 years = 5 points; 3–5 years = 10 points; 5+ years = 15 points |
| Partner skills | 0–10 | Partner with positive skills assessment and required points = 10 points; or partial points if partner has some criteria |
| Australian study | 0–5 | 2 academic years at Australian institution = 5 points |
| Specialist education | 0–10 | Tertiary qualification in STEM or teaching = 10 points |
| Regional study | 0–5 | 2 academic years in regional Australia = 5 points |
| Professional Year | 0–5 | Completion of a Professional Year program = 5 points |
| Community language | 0–5 | NAATI certification in specified community languages = 5 points |
Example: Points calculation for an IT professional
Scenario: You are a 28-year-old Software Engineer who studied a Bachelor of Computer Science in Sydney (not regional), completed your degree in Australia, worked 3 years in Australia on your 485, and hold Proficient English (IELTS 6.5).
| Criterion | Points |
|---|---|
| Age 25–32 | 30 |
| Proficient English (IELTS 6.5) | 10 |
| Bachelor of Computer Science | 15 |
| Australian work experience 3–5 years | 5 |
| Australian study (2+ years) | 5 |
| Total | 65 |
With 65 points, you meet the minimum and could enter the SkillSelect pool. However, if there is high competition in IT, you might not be invited until you accumulate more points (e.g. age 33+, Superior English, or additional work experience).
Realistic points required for invitation
The minimum 65 points is the entry threshold, but realistically, you need much higher to be invited. Invitation thresholds vary significantly by occupation and change regularly based on processing demand.
Typical invitation ranges by occupation (April 2026 estimates)
| Occupation | Points for invitation | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Software Engineer (IT) | 85–95 | Highly competitive; many applicants |
| Business Analyst (IT) | 85–90 | Competitive |
| Accountant | 85–100+ | Very competitive; many applicants worldwide |
| Civil Engineer | 80–90 | Moderate competition |
| Nurse (RN) | 75–85 | Less competitive; nursing shortages |
| Electrician | 75–85 | Trade shortages assist |
| Chef | 85–95+ | Competitive; many applicants |
These are estimates and change regularly. The Department publishes actual invitation thresholds after each invitation round. Check the SkillSelect page for the latest thresholds.
Building your points: Key strategies for graduates
Strategy 1: Work experience accumulation
The most direct way to build points is accumulating Australian work experience:
- Each year of Australian work = 5–15 points (depending on total years: 3–5 years = 5 pts; 5–8 years = 10 pts; 8+ years = 15 pts).
- Timeline: After 3 years of work on your 485 (2–4 years) + potential time on a 482, you accumulate 5–10 points.
- Realistic: Most graduates need 3–5 years of work to reach competitive points (85–90) depending on occupation.
Strategy 2: Improve English proficiency
Moving from Competent (6.0) to Proficient (6.5) or Superior (8.0) adds 10–20 points:
- Competent English (IELTS 6.0 in each): 0 points.
- Proficient English (IELTS 6.5 in each): 10 points.
- Superior English (IELTS 8.0 in each): 20 points.
- Timeline: Retaking IELTS takes 1–2 months to prepare and get results.
- Realistic: Many graduates already hold Proficient or Superior English from their studies.
Strategy 3: Complete a Master’s degree
A Master’s degree adds 20 points (vs. 15 for a Bachelor):
- Option: If you graduated with a Bachelor, complete a Master’s degree (1–2 years) to gain the additional 5 points.
- Timeline: 1–2 years of further study.
- Realistic: This is a significant time and cost investment. Weigh it against accumulating work experience points instead.
Strategy 4: Obtain a specialist qualification
Tertiary qualification in STEM or teaching = 10 points:
- STEM examples: Engineering, computer science, physical sciences.
- Teaching: Teacher education qualification.
- Note: This is only useful if you don’t already have these qualifications.
Strategy 5: Professional Year program
Completing a Professional Year = 5 points:
- Duration: 1 year (full-time or part-time).
- Cost: AUD $5,000–$15,000.
- Benefit: 5 points + Australian work experience + professional networking.
- Realistic: Useful for recent graduates with low initial points; less useful if you already have 3+ years work experience.
Strategy 6: Relocate to a regional area
Regional study = 5 points; regional work contributes to SkillSelect in state-sponsored pathways:
- Regional study: 2+ academic years in regional Australia = 5 points.
- Regional work: Not directly points on 189, but valuable for 190 (state nomination) and 491 (Skilled Work Regional).
- Timeline: Ongoing, if you relocate.
Timeline from graduation to 189 invitation and grant
Realistic timeline:
- Year 0: Graduate and secure 485 visa.
- Years 1–3: Work on 485 (or transition to 482). Accumulate work experience points. Improve English if needed.
- Year 3–4: Create SkillSelect EOI. With 3 years of work experience + degree + English, you may have 75–85 points depending on occupation.
- Year 3–5: Wait in SkillSelect pool. Depending on occupation and market, invitation may come after a few months or 1–2+ years.
- Upon invitation: Apply for 189 visa (7-day deadline).
- Year 4–5: Department assesses; visa approved (typically 4–12 weeks).
- Total: 4–5 years from graduation to PR grant (though can be faster or slower depending on occupation and points accumulation).
Note: If you pursue the 485 → 482 → 186 pathway, PR comes faster (~4–5 years total). The 189 route is viable for those with competitive occupation and strong points, but typically takes 4–5+ years and is less certain than employer sponsorship.
Invitation rounds and timing
The Department holds SkillSelect invitation rounds at intervals (typically monthly or quarterly). Invitations are issued in order of:
- Highest points first.
- Within the same points level, earliest EOI lodgement date (first in, first out).
Example invitation scenario:
- 1 May 2026: You lodge an EOI with 80 points (Software Engineer).
- 15 May 2026: Department holds invitation round. Software Engineers invited at 90+ points. You are not invited.
- 15 June 2026: Another round. Software Engineers invited at 85+ points. You are still not invited.
- 15 July 2026: Another round. Software Engineers invited at 80 points. You are invited (as one of the oldest EOIs at that points level).
The exact timing of invitation depends on Department demand and the volume of applications.
Visa processing after invitation
Once invited, you have 7 days to submit your full 189 visa application. You then provide:
- Detailed personal information, employment history, qualifications.
- Evidence of skills assessment (positive).
- Police clearance certificate.
- Health examination (Department may request).
- All point-related documentation (qualifications, work letters, English test results).
Processing time: 4–12 weeks (sometimes faster; sometimes slower depending on workload).
Life as a 189 permanent resident
Once your 189 is granted, you are a permanent resident with:
- Indefinite stay in Australia.
- Unrestricted work rights (any occupation, any employer).
- Access to social security and healthcare (Medicare).
- Pathway to Australian citizenship after 4 years.
- Ability to sponsor family members.
189 vs. other PR pathways
| Visa | Route | Sponsor required? | Time to PR | Accessibility |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 189 (Skilled Independent) | Points-based, SkillSelect | No | 4–5+ years | For high-scoring occupations |
| 186 (ENS) | Employer sponsorship | Yes | 4–5 years (485 + 482 + 186) | Requires willing sponsor |
| 190 (State Nominated) | Points + state sponsorship | No (sponsor is state) | 4–5 years | Depends on state priorities; generally easier than 189 |
| 491 (Skilled Work Regional) | Points + regional work | No | 5–7 years (491 + potential 191) | Regional focus; 5-year provisional then 191 |
Key points to remember
- Points-based independent visa: No employer or state required.
- Occupation on CSOL: Must be listed.
- Minimum 65 points: Practical invitations 85–95+.
- SkillSelect EOI first: Lodge expression of interest and wait for invitation.
- Competition is high: Especially in IT, accounting, engineering.
- Work experience key: 3–5 years of Australian work gives strong points.
- Invitation rounds regular: Department invites periodically; timing unpredictable.
- 7-day response window: Upon invitation, you have 7 days to apply.
- Permanent residency upon approval: No further visa steps needed.
FAQ
Q: What is the minimum points score for 189? A: 65 points is the administrative minimum. However, to be invited, you typically need 85–95+ points depending on your occupation. Occupations with shortages (nursing, some trades) may see invitations at lower points (75–85).
Q: How long does it take to be invited after lodging an EOI? A: This varies widely. Highly competitive occupations (accountant, IT) may take 1–2+ years or longer. Less competitive occupations may see invitations after a few months. There is no guaranteed timeline.
Q: Can I improve my points after lodging an EOI? A: Yes. You can update your EOI to reflect new work experience, improved English results, or completed qualifications. Updates do not reset your EOI lodgement date (important for tie-breaking).
Q: What if I don’t accumulate enough points before my 485 expires? A: This is a real risk. If you don’t reach competitive points by the time your 485 expires, you would need to transition to another visa (e.g. 482 sponsorship, or extend your stay via another pathway). Plan your timeline carefully.
Q: Can I hold multiple EOIs in SkillSelect? A: No. You can have only one active EOI at a time. If you want to change your nominated occupation, you must delete your current EOI and create a new one (losing your original lodgement date).
Q: What happens if I am invited but am not ready to apply? A: You must apply within 7 days of the invitation, or your invitation expires. If you are not ready, you cannot extend the deadline. Plan to have all documents prepared before you expect an invitation.
Q: Can I be invited for 189 while on a 482 visa? A: Yes. Your visa status does not prevent you from being invited for 189. Upon invitation, you would apply for 189. If approved, your 482 would be replaced by the 189 (you would not hold both simultaneously).
Sources
- Subclass 189 Skilled Independent Visa
- SkillSelect
- Core Skills Occupation List (CSOL)
- Points calculator
Last reviewed: April 2026. Migration rules and occupation lists change frequently — always verify on immi.homeaffairs.gov.au and the relevant assessing body before acting.