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Australia Keeps Migration Program at 185,000 Places, but Skilled Visa Priorities Shift for 2026–27

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The Australian Government has maintained the overall Migration Program at 185,000 permanent places for 2026–27, keeping the Skilled stream at 132,240 places (71%) and the Family stream at 52,460 places (28%). However, the allocation between skilled visa categories has shifted dramatically: employer-sponsored places jumped to 58,040 (+14,040), skilled independent increased to 21,090, and regional allocations collapsed to 14,110 (−18,890). The program prioritises onshore applicants (129,590 places) over offshore (55,110), signalling a strategic shift toward employment-based pathways and those already in Australia.

 

On 12 May 2026, the Australian Government announced that the 2026–27 permanent Migration Program would remain at 185,000 places, maintaining an approximate 70:30 split between the Skilled and Family Programs. For many applicants, this headline figure suggests continuity. In practice, the restructuring beneath represents one of the most consequential shifts in Australia's skilled migration architecture in recent years.

According to the Department of Home Affairs, approximately 71% of the program is allocated to skilled migration, while around 28% is allocated to family visas. This proportion remains consistent with 2025–26. However, examining the distribution within the Skilled stream reveals a strategy fundamentally reoriented toward employment-backed pathways and temporary residents already embedded in the Australian workforce. 

The Skilled Stream: 132,240 Places, Redistributed

The Skill stream is allocated 132,240 places for the Skilled Migration Program, with 52,460 places for the Australian Family Program, and 300 places for Special Eligibility. The total skilled allocation has remained virtually flat year-on-year, but the granular movement within category-level allocations tells a different story entirely. 

The Department of Home Affairs' own framing emphasises that the significant increase in Employer Sponsored visa places supports employers facing ongoing skills shortages and provides clearer pathways to permanent residency for temporary skilled workers already contributing to the Australian economy. This positioning reflects a deliberate policy choice: the Government is prioritising migrant supply that is already employed and operationally embedded over abstract points-tested pathways.


Employer Sponsorship: Now the Dominant Pathway

The Largest Single Increase

Employer-Sponsored places jumped to 58,040, now the single biggest slice of the skilled program. This represents an increase of 14,040 places from the 2025–26 level of 44,000 — an increase of 31.9% in a single financial year.

The biggest increase is in the Employer Sponsored category, with this category increased from 44,000 places in 2025–26 to 58,040 places in 2026–27, meaning Employer Sponsored visas now make up about 31.37% of the total Permanent Migration Program and about 43.89% of the Skilled Migration Program.

Why This Matters Analytically

The employer-sponsored category is no longer a secondary option for applicants unable to secure sufficient points. It has become the Government's primary mechanism for permanent skilled migration. There is a clear increase in employer-sponsored migration, signaling continued strong demand from business with continued reliance on skilled overseas workers due to ongoing skill shortages.

The concentration of allocation into employer-sponsored pathways reflects several underlying policy objectives:

  1. Direct labour market alignment — Employers nominate specific workers for specific roles, creating a direct line between labour demand and migration supply.
  2. Reduced policy uncertainty — Unlike points-tested visas, which depend on occupational lists and threshold volatility, employer-backed pathways provide stable, predictable outcomes.
  3. Integration acceleration — Workers already in employment face lower transition friction when moving to permanent residency, improving retention and economic contribution metrics.
  4. Offshore competitiveness reduction — By prioritising onshore employer sponsorship, the Government reduces reliance on offshore recruitment, which has proven slower and more administratively complex.

Primary Employer Sponsored Pathways

The Permanent Employer Nomination Scheme (Subclass 186) remains the primary pathway for workers transitioning from temporary to permanent status. For many applicants, a common pathway to the subclass 186 visa is first obtaining a temporary employer sponsored visa, such as the Skills in Demand visa, subclass 482. This two-stage approach — 482 temporary visa followed by 186 permanent visa — has become the institutional norm for employer-backed migration.


Skilled Independent (Subclass 189): Modest Increase

Skilled Independent, the points-tested category that does not need a sponsor or nominator, rose to 21,090. This represents an increase from the previous 16,900 places, an addition of 4,190 places or approximately 24.8%.

Analysis of the 189 Increase

While the increase appears positive in isolation, it requires contextualisation:

  • 189 places represent only 15.9% of the Skilled stream, down from approximately 16.9% previously.
  • The 189 allocation, while growing, is dramatically outpaced by employer-sponsored growth.
  • Skilled Independent visa (Subclass 189) allocations increased from 16,900 to 21,090 places. Y-Axis

The implications for 189 applicants are mixed. Additional places nominally create more invitation opportunities. However, the total points pool competing for those places continues to rise, as applicants strengthen their profiles in response to the Government's points test reform signals and increased competition.

What This Means for Points-Tested Applicants

Applicants pursuing Skilled Independent visas face a dynamic where:

  1. Invitation invitations occur unpredictably and often with minimal notice.
  2. Competitive thresholds are opaque and subject to cohort composition.
  3. The Government's stated intention to reform the points test (discussed below) introduces strategic uncertainty.
  4. Alternative pathways (employer sponsorship, state nomination) now absorb a larger proportional allocation, reducing 189's relative weight.

Critical 189 Assessment Points

Applicants should ensure their EOI is accurate and current across:

  • Skills assessment validity and currency
  • English language test result recency (typically 3 years)
  • Work experience validation and documentary support
  • Qualification relevance to nominated occupation
  • Partner points eligibility (if applicable)
  • NAATI/community language points (if claimed)
  • Professional Year participation eligibility
  • Age-related points and residual age window

A material error in any of these dimensions can result in EOI rejection or, if discovered during the visa application stage, visa cancellation with potential character implications for future applications.


State and Territory Nomination (Subclass 190): Strategic Growth

State and territory nominated places edged up to 35,500. This represents an increase from the 2025–26 level of 32,258 places, an addition of 3,242 places or approximately 10.0%.

The Multi-Tier Assessment Requirement

State nomination pathways (Subclass 190) involve applicants navigating two separate but sequentially dependent assessment layers:

  1. National points test assessment — Applicants must meet the national minimum points requirement and be eligible under the skilled occupation list framework.
  2. State-specific criteria — Individual states and territories have independent nomination criteria, occupation priorities, and selection processes.

Each state and territory maintains its own eligibility criteria and occupation priorities. This means a points-sufficient applicant in one state's priority occupation may face rejection in another state where the same occupation is deprioritised.

State Selection Factors

Each state and territory maintains its own eligibility criteria and occupation priorities, with factors including occupation demand, current residence, work experience in the state, job offer or current employment, English level, study history, regional connection, salary level, and industry demand.

The variation across states is substantial. Some states prioritise:

  • Regional and remote area work experience
  • Study history within the state
  • Pre-existing community connections (prior residence)
  • Occupation demand signals from state-specific labour market analysis
  • Salary level alignment with state economic conditions

Others weight these factors differently or have introduced entirely separate registration schemes requiring preliminary approval before EOI lodgement.


Regional Migration (Subclass 491): Significant Contraction

The Largest Allocation Decrease

The sharpest cut landed on the Regional category, down to 14,110 from 33,000. This represents a reduction of 18,890 places or approximately 57.3% — the most dramatic reallocation in the 2026–27 program. 

Strategic Implications of Regional Reduction

The substantial reduction in regional allocation reflects a policy recalibration with multiple dimensions:

  1. Onshore Priority Over Regional Spread — By reducing regional places while maintaining overall onshore allocation at 129,590, the Government is directing applicants toward major employment centres (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane) where the bulk of skilled employment currently exists.
  2. Recognition of Regional Compliance Risk — The subclass 491 provisional visa requires two-year regional residency followed by a substantial evidence burden for the permanent subclass 191 visa. Reports of non-compliance and informal visa shopping may have influenced the decision to restrict supply.
  3. Employer-Sponsored Prevalence in Major Centres — Employer sponsorship growth (58,040 places) is predominantly concentrated in metropolitan areas where skilled employers are concentrated. Reducing regional pathways effectively pushes regional applicants toward employer-dependent migration models.

Impact on Subclass 491 Applicants

While the government continues to support regional migration, the allocation for the Skilled Work Regional (Subclass 491) visa has been reduced. For applicants already pursuing the 491 pathway: VisaEnvoy

  • Invitation thresholds are likely to rise significantly.
  • Applicants will compete against a constrained pool of available places.
  • Regional commitment evidence will be scrutinised more heavily.
  • Alternative strategies (state nomination, employer sponsorship with regional work) become more strategically valuable.

For prospective 491 applicants, the reduced allocation suggests reconsidering the pathway or identifying backup options immediately.


Onshore vs. Offshore: A Structural Pivot

Onshore Applicants Receive Priority

The government also confirmed that the 2026–27 program would continue prioritising onshore applicants already living and working in Australia. More specifically, the government confirmed that 129,590 places will prioritise onshore applicants already living in Australia, while 55,110 places are allocated to offshore applicants.

This represents a 70:30 split in favour of onshore applicants — a policy configuration that has remained consistent but requires analysis in light of the employer-sponsored growth:

  • Of the 58,040 employer-sponsored places, the vast majority flow to onshore applicants already in temporary visa status (482, 485, 487, 457 visa holders).
  • The increased 189 allocation similarly favours onshore applicants, who can lodge EOIs while in Australia and respond to invitation rounds more immediately.
  • State nomination (190) benefits both onshore and offshore applicants but shows marginal growth, indicating subordinate policy priority.

The Offshore Allocation Rationale

The government stated that the offshore allocation would focus on attracting highly skilled migrants who can support productivity growth and address Australia's long-term workforce shortages. This framing suggests that the 55,110 offshore places are explicitly reserved for applicants able to demonstrate capabilities that onshore competition cannot satisfy — typically highly specialised occupations or exceptionally strong qualification profiles. 


Points Test Reform: The Horizon Condition

The 2026–27 planning levels were announced in May 2026. However, the Department has simultaneously signalled imminent points test reform — a separate but consequential policy development that will reshape how skilled applicants are selected across multiple visa categories.

The stated reform objective is to optimise the points test to select migrants who are younger, better educated, and higher skilled, with emphasis on productivity contribution and long-term economic integration. This signals that future applicants should expect:

  • Age weighting to remain a primary differentiator, with maximum points likely clustered between 25 and 35 years.
  • English proficiency to become a more explicit threshold (possibly eliminating lower bands entirely).
  • Qualification level to distinguish between bachelor and postgraduate holders more sharply.
  • Income-based metrics (either current salary or earning potential) to become a distinct points category.
  • Employment status and job offers to receive material points allocation.

Applicants currently preparing EOIs should note that the planning levels announced in May 2026 are based on the current points test framework. Any significant points test reform will likely take effect in late 2026 or early 2027, potentially changing the competitive dynamics of all points-tested pathways retroactively.


Family Migration: Stability With Demand Persistence

The Australian Family Program holds 52,460 places for the 2026–27 period. The Family stream allocation has remained effectively unchanged from 2025–26, suggesting policy stability in family reunion pathways. 

However, processing dynamics remain problematic:

  • Partner visa processing times continue to exceed 18 months in many cases.
  • Parent visa categories remain subject to queue management and annual caps.
  • Child visa processing is generally faster but depends on individual assessments.

Planning levels do not equate to processing speed. A higher allocation does not necessarily reduce wait times if demand exceeds supply across all family visa subclasses.


What Applicants Should Do: A Strategic Framework

For Employer-Sponsored Applicants (186, 482)

  1. Prioritise securing a certified job offer or nominating employer immediately.
  2. Ensure your occupation is on the relevant skilled occupation list.
  3. Verify salary compliance with the Core Skills Income Threshold (CSIT) or Specialist Skills Income Threshold (SSIT) as indexed on 1 July 2026.
  4. Document your employment history comprehensively (payslips, employment contracts, superannuation records).
  5. Commence skills assessment if not already completed.
  6. Plan for the 482 → 186 pathway explicitly, rather than treating the pathways as independent options.

For Skilled Independent (189) Applicants

  1. Lodge your EOI immediately if you have a competitive points score (80+).
  2. Do not wait for further points test reform signals — lodge under current rules.
  3. Ensure your skills assessment is current and issued by a recognised assessing authority.
  4. Verify English language test results are recent (taken within the last 3 years).
  5. Maintain a backup state nomination (190) strategy in parallel.
  6. Monitor invitation round announcements closely and respond within specified timeframes.

For State Nomination (190) Applicants

  1. Research your target state's specific nomination criteria (not just national requirements).
  2. Verify your occupation aligns with that state's priority occupation list.
  3. Check whether the state uses a Registration of Interest (ROI) process before EOI submission.
  4. Gather evidence of state connection (prior residency, work experience, study history, family).
  5. Ensure your EOI is consistent with any ROI you have submitted.
  6. Plan for a longer timeline — state nomination typically adds 3–6 months to the process compared to 189.

For Regional (491) Applicants

  1. Critically reassess whether regional migration remains your optimal pathway, given the 57% allocation reduction.
  2. If proceeding with 491, ensure you meet the points threshold (likely to be 80+) and can demonstrate genuine regional commitment.
  3. Prepare substantial evidence that you will remain in regional Australia for the required two-year provisional period and beyond.
  4. Develop a parallel employer sponsorship strategy if feasible.
  5. Understand the 191 permanent visa requirements before lodging your 491 application.

For All Applicants

  1. Do not assume planning levels guarantee an invitation. They are targets, not guarantees.
  2. Improve your profile on controllable factors — English scores, work experience, qualifications — while planning levels remain uncertain.
  3. Consult a registered migration agent to develop a multi-pathway strategy rather than relying on a single visa option.
  4. Monitor Department of Home Affairs announcements regarding points test reform carefully.
  5. Prepare comprehensive, organised documentation now. Processing speed depends on application readiness, not planning levels.

Planning Levels Are Not Guarantees

You do not control the planning level. You do control the quality and timing of what you lodge. This distinction is critical. The 2026–27 planning levels represent the Government's target allocation, not an entitlement or automatic approval pathway. Applicants must still meet all individual visa requirements: One Planet Migration

  • Age eligibility
  • English language minimum thresholds
  • Occupation eligibility
  • Skills assessment validity
  • Work experience requirements
  • Health clearance
  • Character assessment
  • Points test requirements (for points-tested visas)
  • State/territory nomination criteria (for state-nominated visas)
  • Employer sponsorship criteria (for employer-backed visas)

A higher planning level allocation improves the opportunity landscape. It does not reduce the requirement to meet substantive visa criteria.


Analysis: What the 2026–27 Program Signals About Future Policy

Several structural observations emerge from the 2026–27 allocation:

1. Employment-First Migration Model
The Government is explicitly repositioning Australia's skilled migration system away from abstract points accumulation toward employment-based pathways. This reflects lessons from temporary visa cohorts: individuals in employment demonstrate commitment, integration potential, and economic contribution more directly than points scores alone.

2. Onshore Labour Market Integration
By allocating 70% of places to onshore applicants and growing employer-sponsored categories dramatically, the Government is effectively converting Australia's temporary visa stock into a permanent residency pipeline. This reduces reliance on offshore recruitment while supporting labour market stability.

3. Regional Recalibration
The 57% reduction in regional allocation suggests the Government has reassessed regional migration's effectiveness. Whether due to compliance concerns, recognition of regional employment concentration limits, or acknowledgement that temporary visa mechanisms achieve regional dispersal more flexibly, the contraction signals a deprioritisation of regional-specific visa pathways.

4. Points Test as Secondary Filter
The modest growth in 189 places (21,090, or 15.9% of the Skilled stream) combined with employer-sponsored dominance (58,040, or 43.89% of the Skilled stream) indicates that the points test is increasingly a secondary selection mechanism rather than the primary allocation driver. Applicants should plan accordingly.


The Bottom Line

Australia has officially announced its 2026–27 Migration Program planning levels, keeping the permanent migration intake at 185,000 places while reshaping allocations across key skilled visa categories. The headline stability masks a fundamental restructure: employer sponsorship is now the dominant skilled pathway, onshore applicants are explicitly prioritised, regional allocations have contracted sharply, and points-tested visas occupy an increasingly secondary role. raccaustralia

For applicants, this signals that employment-backed pathways are strategically superior in 2026–27. Building an employer-sponsored option in parallel with points-tested strategies is no longer optional — it is essential.

Professional Visa and Education Services recommends that skilled migrants analyse their situation across all viable pathways before committing to a single option. The planning levels provide a window into policy direction. Use that intelligence to build a multi-pathway strategy that maximises your chances of securing permanent residency.


Assess Your Migration Strategy
With the 2026–27 planning levels now confirmed and points test reform on the horizon, your visa pathway decisions matter more than ever. Speak with a registered migration agent to review all available options and build a strategy tailored to your circumstances.


Disclaimer: This article is based on publicly available Department of Home Affairs information current as of May 2026. Migration planning levels, visa criteria, and policy settings may change. This article does not constitute migration advice. For decisions specific to your circumstances, consult a registered migration agent or legal professional.

Data sources: Department of Home Affairs, Permanent Migration Program planning levels 2026–27. Government announcements, 12 May 2026.