(AUSTRALIA) Australia has named 12 major public Australian universities for faster offshore student visa processing under “Priority 1 – High” as of September 23, 2025, with the settings guided by Ministerial Direction 111 (MD111). The Department of Education updates this list every week, based on how close each university is to its 2025 international student allocation, measured by Confirmations of Enrolment (CoEs).
Universities that remain under 80% of their cap keep Priority 1 status, while those that reach the 80% threshold switch to Priority 2 – Standard, which can mean slower decisions. The department’s stated goal is to manage student numbers while keeping visa decisions moving for institutions still under their cap.

How MD111 and the weekly list work
Under MD111, Priority 1 processing applies to new offshore student visa applications linked to universities that haven’t yet reached 80% of their 2025 allocation. The list shifts as enrolments and visa lodgements change week by week.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, this rolling system helps align visa decisions with real-time enrolment data so offers can be converted without creating backlogs for already high-volume providers.
The weekly refresh means applicants and agents should pay close attention to timing. A university might hold Priority 1 status at the point of offer or CoE issue, but if it crosses the 80% cap before a visa application is lodged, the case can fall into Priority 2 – Standard instead.
Current Priority 1 universities under MD111 (as of Sept 23, 2025)
As of September 23, 2025, the following Australian universities are receiving Priority 1 treatment, with indicative allocation figures where available:
- Edith Cowan University — 3,600
- Flinders University — 3,000
- Griffith University — 3,600
- James Cook University — 2,200
- La Trobe University — 4,100
- Southern Cross University — 1,300
- Swinburne University of Technology — 4,523
- University of New England — 700
- University of Tasmania — 2,200
- University of Wollongong — 3,600
- University of Southern Queensland — 50 (a very small allocation but still listed as Priority 1)
- Federation University Australia — noted in the most recent government data as Priority 2, which means the twelfth Priority 1 spot among major public universities likely rotates between Southern Cross University and University of New England depending on the latest weekly update
What Priority 1 – High means for timing and decisions
Priority 1 is a processing priority, not an approval guarantee.
- Priority 1 places the application nearer the front of the assessment queue while the university remains under its allocation.
- If the institution crosses the 80% mark, new applications tied to that provider are handled as Priority 2, which can extend decision times.
- The weekly updates aim to keep decisions moving for universities still building intake while preventing sudden surges past planned numbers.
The indicative allocations attached to each provider are part of broader 2025 international education reforms focused on system integrity and steady growth. The numbers are not static; they act as signals in the visa and admissions cycle to ensure offers translate to visas where capacity remains.
Practical implications for students, agents and universities
Key points to consider:
- Timing matters: lodge promptly if you hold a CoE for a Priority 1 university and want faster handling.
- The moment of lodgement determines which priority applies — the provider’s status at assessment time is decisive.
- Priority status does not override standard checks: genuine student intent, financial capacity, and course suitability remain central.
- The weekly cadence matters for pathway students and transfers. A provider’s move from Priority 1 to Priority 2 can influence choices when faster visa outcomes are essential.
- Education agents commonly lodge quickly when a provider is under 80%, especially for students with tight arrival windows.
Universities may adapt their offer timing:
- Some issue earlier CoEs and encourage prompt lodgement while under 80%.
- Others pace offers to avoid tipping into Priority 2 prematurely.
- Regional universities (e.g., James Cook University, University of Tasmania) can use Priority 1 to support steady offshore recruitment while managing caseloads.
Examples and typical scenarios
- A university with an allocation around 3,600 might move from 70% to 82% within a week if multiple cohorts accept and lodge. In that case, new applicants would move to Priority 2 processing.
- Small allocations (e.g., University of Southern Queensland with 50) can still hold Priority 1 status; the impact is in how quickly that small cap fills.
Applicants and families often build timelines with a buffer to account for possible shifts from Priority 1 – High to Priority 2 – Standard.
Recommended steps for applicants
- Check the weekly “Visa Prioritisation Status” before lodging.
- Confirm a university’s current Priority status with the admissions office when making your decision.
- Lodge promptly if you want to secure Priority 1 processing and are under time pressure.
- Plan travel and arrival flexibly in case processing moves to Priority 2.
- Maintain strong supporting documentation (genuine intent, finances, course fit) — priority only affects speed, not the assessment criteria.
Where to confirm official status and further information
- The official weekly source is the Australian Department of Education “Visa Prioritisation Status” publication.
- For general student visa information and requirements, consult the Department of Home Affairs student visas page: Department of Home Affairs student visas page
Final takeaway
Timing matters. Keep watch on the weekly list, check a university’s Priority 1 – High standing before lodging, and be prepared that a provider may cross the 80% mark. That simple step can help students avoid delays, protect travel plans, and make the most of MD111’s faster pathway where it applies.
This Article in a Nutshell
Australia’s Department of Education, under Ministerial Direction 111 (MD111), listed 12 major public universities as Priority 1 – High for offshore student visa processing on September 23, 2025. Priority 1 applies while institutions remain under 80% of their 2025 international student allocation, measured by Confirmations of Enrolment (CoEs); crossing the 80% threshold moves new applications to Priority 2 – Standard, often slowing decisions. The weekly “Visa Prioritisation Status” updates reflect real-time enrolment and lodgement data, meaning applicants and agents must monitor timing closely. Priority 1 speeds processing but does not bypass standard checks on genuine intent, finances, or course suitability. Practical steps include checking the weekly list before lodging, confirming status with admissions, lodging promptly if under 80%, and keeping documentation complete to avoid delays.