(AUSTRALIA) Australia’s immigration intake is running far hotter than promised in 2025, with official data showing net permanent and long-term arrivals at 440,330 in the 12 months to April 2025 — the second-highest result on record and a key flashpoint in the election year debate over housing, costs, and services.
Between July 2024 and March 2025 alone, arrivals totaled 366,100, already surpassing federal budget expectations for the full year and prompting fresh scrutiny of how policy settings are shaping who comes, how long they stay, and where they settle.

At the same time, the government has tightened key programs. The 2024–25 permanent Migration Program is capped at 185,000 places (down from 190,000 a year earlier), with a sharper focus on employer sponsorship. Of those places, 132,200 are earmarked for skilled migrants (71%), including a jump in employer‑sponsored visas to 44,000 (from 36,825) and a steep cut to skilled independent visas at 16,900 (from 30,375). That pivot is already changing applicant behavior, as more candidates chase a job offer rather than points alone.
Monthly flows remain choppy. Short-term visitor arrivals in June 2025 reached 624,510 (up 6.3% year‑on‑year), and total arrivals hit 1,618,090 for the month (up 6.1%). Yet permanent arrivals were 9,840 in June, down 17.4% on the year, underscoring how the headline numbers can mask month-to-month volatility.
Policy changes and processing shifts
Costs and thresholds have climbed, affecting students, employers and highly skilled applicants.
- Student visa fees: rose from AUD 710 to AUD 1,600 in 2024, and then to AUD 2,000 from July 2025.
- Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold (TSMIT): increased from AUD 73,150 to AUD 76,515.
- Highly skilled benchmark: lifted from AUD 135,000 to AUD 141,210.
These settings matter, especially for small businesses weighing sponsorship and for students budgeting for long stays.
Student processing and evidence
The government overhauled student processing under Ministerial Direction 111 (2024):
- Providers now operate in a two-tier system:
- High Priority: covers 80% of an institution’s allotment.
- Standard Priority: applies to the remaining 20%.
- Applicants must meet higher financial evidence and stricter English rules.
- Combined with fee rises, this is reshaping student pipelines and increasing attention on quality providers and genuine study plans.
Onshore pathway restrictions and visa hopping
To curb “visa hopping,” onshore pathways have narrowed:
- From 1 July 2024, visitor visa (sc 600) and Temporary Graduate (sc 485) holders can no longer apply for student visas onshore.
- The aim is to limit churn between temporary visas and reinforce policy intent — study pathways should be genuine, and graduate routes should either lead to skilled roles or exit.
State nominations, Global Talent and regional measures
- State and territory governments paused new skilled migration nominations as of July 2025 while waiting for updated quotas. Most expect activity to restart between July and October 2025, but applicants relying on nomination should plan for delays.
- The Global Talent Visa was trimmed to 4,000 places and rebranded as the National Innovation Visa, signaling a tighter focus on top‑tier talent.
- Regional migration: DAMA (Designated Area Migration Agreements) pathways expanded, including:
- a higher maximum age (now 55)
- more flexible English settings to meet local labour needs.
For official requirements and application lodgment, see the Department of Home Affairs website: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au
Impact on applicants, business, and the election
Public concern has intensified. In 2025, 53% of Australians say immigration levels are “too high,” up five points from 2024. This reflects pressure on rentals, home prices, and transport, and has pushed immigration to the centre of the federal campaign.
- The Department of Home Affairs stresses a “well‑targeted, skills‑focused Migration Program” to fill shortages and support cohesion.
- The Minister for Home Affairs has pledged to end onshore “visa hopping” and tighten temporary and student streams.
Business groups broadly welcome the larger employer‑sponsored share but are worried about:
- rising fees,
- the higher salary floor (TSMIT), and
- the strain these may place on smaller firms and regional employers.
Public policy institutes note the tension between near‑record arrivals and living standards, urging steady, predictable rules. Analysis by VisaVerge.com suggests the government is trying to cool demand while protecting core economic goals, but the quick pace of change means applicants and employers must adjust plans in real time.
Effects on families, students and small employers
- Families sponsoring skilled relatives may find the independent pathway harder due to fewer points‑tested places.
- International students must show stronger English and more savings, and may face different processing tracks depending on their provider.
- Small employers (e.g., a café owner hiring a chef) may prefer sponsorship under the higher TSMIT, but must budget for higher pay and compliance.
Practical steps for applicants (what to do now)
- Check eligibility for your visa stream (skilled, employer‑sponsored, student, or regional).
- Prepare documents early: proof of funds, English scores, skills assessments, employer evidence.
- Monitor state portals if seeking nomination — windows are expected between July and October 2025.
- Students: factor in the two‑tier processing system and plan timelines around High vs Standard Priority.
- Consider regional options, especially under DAMA, if your occupation is in demand and you meet the adjusted age and language settings.
- Submit and track applications through the Home Affairs portal and stay updated on policy changes.
Context and recent momentum
- After a COVID‑19 freeze, migration surged in 2022–23 (net overseas migration peaked at 536,000) before moderating in 2024–25, yet levels remain historically high.
- The current mix of fee rises, higher salary benchmarks, and stricter onshore rules marks the sharpest tightening since the pandemic — with a clear pivot to employer sponsorship and regional routes.
Practical examples:
– A civil engineer with a firm job offer may find the employer‑sponsored route faster and more certain than waiting for a skilled independent invitation, particularly given the cut to 16,900 skilled independent places.
– A nursing graduate on a visitor visa cannot switch to a student visa onshore after 1 July 2024 and will need to apply offshore, adding time, cost, and risk.
– A regional hospital using a DAMA can fill critical roles by drawing on the higher age limit (55) and flexible English settings.
What to watch through late 2025
- Consultation on changes to the Skilled Migration Points Test, with announcements expected later in 2025. Any shift could reset the balance between employer sponsorship and independent entry.
- State and territory nomination programs are likely to reopen between July and October 2025, potentially with fresh quotas and new priority roles.
- Canberra may consider further steps to manage net overseas migration if pressure on housing and services persists, even as business calls for a stable, skills‑first intake.
The June 2025 drop in permanent arrivals to 9,840 (down 17.4% year‑on‑year) shows that policies, processing, and travel patterns can quickly swing the totals. Yet the anchor remains the headline figure: net permanent and long‑term arrivals at 440,330, which remain far above earlier promises and keep immigration at the forefront of Australia’s economic and political conversation.
This Article in a Nutshell
Australia recorded 440,330 net long‑term arrivals to April 2025, sparking policy shifts. The Migration Program limits skilled independent places, boosts employer sponsorship and tightens student and onshore pathways. Fee rises and higher salary thresholds reshape employer decisions and student pipelines, while state nominations pause, creating delays through late 2025.