Finishing your degree feels like the finish line. But if you're hoping to turn your time in Australia into permanent residency, it's actually the starting line for the next and arguably more important stage. And there's one step that needs to happen before almost anything else: your skills assessment.
It feels backwards, but here's how the system actually works: skilled visas like the 189, 190, and 491 use a system called SkillSelect, where you submit something called an Expression of Interest (EOI) — basically a statement saying "I'm interested in this visa, here's my profile, here's my points."
The problem is, you cannot submit that EOI at all unless you already have a positive skills assessment in hand. Not "in progress." Not "applied for." Actually completed, with a positive result.
So if your skills assessment is still being processed, your EOI simply can't go in. You're not in the running. You can't be invited. It doesn't matter how many points you'd otherwise have if the assessment box isn't ticked, you're stuck on the sidelines.
This is the part most graduates don't realise until it's almost too late.
In simple terms: it's an organisation checking whether your degree, your work experience, and your skills actually match what's expected for a specific job in Australia.
Every occupation has its own designated assessing body. For example:
You don't get to choose which body assesses you — it's determined by the occupation you nominate. And this is exactly why the first decision you make (which occupation to nominate) matters so much. Get the occupation code wrong, and you could end up with a negative result through no fault of your actual skills or experience.
Each assessing body wants to see proof, not just a list of claims. Typically that means:
Here's the part that catches people out: how well you document this stuff matters as much as the experience itself. A vague reference letter, a job title that doesn't clearly match your nominated occupation, or missing employment dates can sink an otherwise solid application. The skills might be real, but if you can't prove it cleanly on paper, the assessing body has nothing to approve.
And don't assume old work experience will automatically count. If it's too far in the past, too loosely related to your nominated job, or poorly documented, some assessing bodies simply won't accept it.
This is the bit that really should change how you plan. Processing times are not quick, and they vary a lot depending on which body is assessing you:
| Assessing Body | Typical Processing Time |
|---|---|
| VETASSESS | ~7 weeks (can be longer) |
| Engineers Australia | ~15 weeks to be assigned an assessor (fast-track: 20 business days) |
| ANMAC (Nursing) | 6–8 weeks just to start the assessment |
| TRA (Trades) | Around 120 days, sometimes longer during busy periods |
So if you're aiming to submit your EOI in three months, but your assessing body needs four months just to get to your file, you've already missed your window before you even started.
The smart move: start your skills assessment at least one full processing cycle, plus time to gather documents, before you actually want to submit your EOI. Don't count on "I'll just rush it later." Some of these timelines simply can't be sped up.
Good question — and this is a separate hurdle from the skills assessment itself. Your nominated occupation also needs to be on the right list, and which list matters a lot:
This trips people up constantly. If your job is only on the STSOL, you cannot apply for the 189 visa — doesn't matter how many points you have, how perfect your skills assessment is, or how much you want it. The door for 189 simply isn't open for that occupation. You'd need to look at 190 or 491 instead.
Having a positive skills assessment and an eligible occupation still doesn't guarantee anything on its own. You also need to hit the points threshold.
The minimum to even submit an EOI is 65 points. But — and this is the part people often miss — scoring exactly 65 doesn't mean you'll get invited. Invitations depend on:
In short: 65 points gets you in the race. It doesn't mean you'll win it.
If you're on, or planning to apply for, a Temporary Graduate visa (subclass 485), here's something worth knowing: most 482 (employer-sponsored) occupations don't need a skills assessment — but around 25 trade occupations do. And for the 186 visa (Employer Nomination Scheme), it depends on which stream you're using — Direct Entry generally requires one, but if you're transitioning from a 482 visa through a different stream, you might not need one at all.
The takeaway: even if your skills assessment isn't strictly required for your current visa, it might still be essential groundwork for whatever comes next. Think of your 485 as the time you've been given — and the skills assessment as the direction you use that time to move in.
Often, yes — if it's still valid and still matches the occupation you're nominating. This can genuinely save you time and money rather than starting from scratch.
But there's a catch: it has to be current. If your assessment is a few years old, don't just assume it'll still be accepted. Requirements get updated, and an assessment that was fine three years ago might not meet today's standards. It's worth getting it checked before you rely on it for a new application.
We see this pattern constantly: a graduate decides to wait — maybe to improve their English score first, maybe because they're not sure which occupation to pick, maybe just because their visa "still has time on it." Here's why that's a gamble that rarely pays off:
1. The assessment delay alone can knock you out of the running. As covered above, no completed assessment means no EOI, no matter how strong everything else is.
2. Your evidence gets harder to gather the longer you wait. Former employers move on, stop responding to emails, or simply forget the details needed for a solid reference letter. The longer the gap, the harder this gets.
3. The goalposts can move. Occupation lists change. State nomination priorities shift. An occupation that's eligible today might not be eligible by the time you're actually ready to apply. Starting early protects you against changes you can't predict or control.
It's tempting to hear "my friend got invited with X points" or "my cousin moved regional and got nominated" and assume the same path will work for you. It won't necessarily — and here's why: your outcome depends on your own specific mix of age, occupation, English score, work experience, partner's situation, visa status, and location. Someone else's success story tells you what worked for them. It doesn't tell you anything reliable about what will work for you.
If you've just graduated (or you're about to), here's a sensible order to tackle things:
Your skills assessment isn't paperwork you deal with later — it's the gate you have to walk through before anything else can happen. Given that some assessments take three to four months (or longer), and given that an incomplete assessment completely blocks your EOI, the smartest thing you can do right after graduating is start this process immediately.
You don't need to have everything figured out on day one. But you do need to start.
Not Sure Where to Start?
Provisa can help you figure out your nominated occupation, the right assessing body, your points position, and which visa pathway genuinely fits your situation — not someone else's. Book a consultation at provisa.setmore.com or call 02 9007 4409.
Disclaimer: This article is general information only and not migration advice. Skills assessment requirements, occupation lists, and points test settings can change, so always check current requirements before acting. For advice about your specific situation, speak with a registered migration agent.