The Unprecedented Drop in Student Visa Grant Rates
Australian higher education institutions are grappling with a dramatic downturn in international student visa approvals. In March 2026, the grant rate for higher education student visas plunged to a record low of 59 percent, marking the second consecutive month of sharp declines following February's 67.6 percent—the lowest in over two decades. This trend signals a seismic shift in the sector, driven by heightened scrutiny and policy measures aimed at ensuring only genuine students gain entry. The Department of Home Affairs data underscores the severity, with refusals now comprising nearly half of applications from major source countries like India, where approvals fell to just 49 percent in March.
Historically, grant rates hovered above 85 percent, but recent months reflect a rigorous application of the Genuine Student (GS) requirement, introduced in March 2024 to replace the previous Genuine Temporary Entrant criterion. This test evaluates an applicant's intent to study, financial capacity, and ties to their home country, often leading to refusals when documentation falls short. For context, offshore higher education visa lodgements from high-risk nationalities surged—Nepal up 91 percent year-on-year—while low-risk China dropped 39 percent, skewing overall rates downward.
Policy Shifts Fueling the Visa Squeeze
The Australian government's Migration Strategy, rolled out progressively since 2023, lies at the heart of these changes. Ministerial Direction No. 106 (MD106), effective from March 2024, prioritizes migration outcomes, compelling visa officers to weigh applicants' long-term economic circumstances over mere first-year funding proof. Education loans, once readily accepted, now face serviceability checks based on family income and assets, resulting in more refusals without explicit policy announcements. Countries like India and Nepal were elevated to Evidence Level 3 (EL3) in January 2026, mandating extensive documentation such as six months' bank statements and detailed GS statements.
Compounding this, the National Planning Levels (NPL) cap new commencements at 295,000 for 2026—up slightly from 270,000 in 2025—with higher education allocated around 197,000 spots. Public universities like the University of Sydney (largest allocation) and Monash bear the brunt, as allocations are performance-based. Private providers face even tighter scrutiny under the forthcoming Australian Tertiary Education Commission (ATEC).
These measures address housing pressures and net migration concerns, but critics argue they penalize genuine students amid a $53.6 billion international education export industry in 2024-25.
Hardest Hit Markets and Student Stories
India, Australia's second-largest source with 122,000 students, saw refusals climb from 40 percent in February to 51 percent in March. Similar fates befell Bangladesh (51 percent refusal), Nepal (73 percent), and Sri Lanka (38 percent). Prospective students report frustration with opaque refusals citing 'non-genuine intent,' despite strong academics and finances. One Indian master's applicant shared, "My loan was approved, but officers questioned repayment based on my parents' income—despite covering full costs."
- Nepal: Grant rate 27 percent in March (down from 35 percent February).
- Bangladesh: 49 percent grant.
- China: Remained high at ~96.5 percent, but volumes plummeted.
This shift risks eroding Australia's appeal, as students pivot to Canada or the UK despite their own caps.
Revenue Crunches and Operational Fallout for Universities
International fees constitute over 25 percent of university revenue—$22 billion in 2024—cross-subsidizing research and domestic teaching. With commencements down nine percent year-on-year to January 2026 (551,717 students), 22 universities report liquidity ratios below 1, signaling cashflow risks. Salary costs exceed two-thirds of revenue in 19 institutions, curbing capital investment.
Examples abound: Nottingham University plans 600 job cuts to save £50 million; others defer infrastructure. Universities Australia warns of 'tight liquidity' persisting into 2026, with indexation lags exacerbating shortfalls. For details on sector finances, see the Universities Australia report.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
| University | Intl Revenue Share (2024) | Response to Declines |
|---|---|---|
| Group of Eight (avg) | 30-40% | Diversify recruitment |
| Regional Unis | 15-25% | Program reviews |
| Private Providers | 50%+ | High risk downgrades |
Risk Ratings: A Vicious Cycle for Providers
High refusals trigger risk rating downgrades—50 percent weighted on fraud/refusals—elevating providers to Level 2/3. This demands more evidence from applicants (e.g., English scores, finances), slowing processing and deterring agents. Two public unis shifted ratings recently; private colleges dominate high-risk lists. The International Education Association of Australia (IEAA) urges a September 2026 risk review moratorium. For analysis, refer to the ICEF Monitor.
Institutional Adaptations and Calls for Reform
Universities are pivoting: boosting Southeast Asia/Latin America recruitment, enhancing agent compliance, and lobbying for weekly refusal dashboards. Universities Australia advocates balanced policies preserving the $51.5 billion sector. Experts like Phil Honeywood (IEAA) call for equitable risk methodologies.
- Compliance training for agents.
- Target postgraduate/research students (exempt from caps).
- Domestic enrollment boosts via fee-free incentives.
Broader Economic and Sectoral Implications
Beyond revenue, declines threaten research (intl fees subsidize 20 percent) and regional economies reliant on student spending. Enrolments fell nine percent to January 2026, with forecasts of 10-15 percent drops in July commencements. Yet, quality focus could yield long-term gains, attracting high-value students.
Looking Ahead: Caps, Reforms, and Recovery Paths
The 2026 NPL of 295,000 offers breathing room, but stricter GS enforcement persists. ATEC will oversee allocations, prioritizing low-risk providers. Recovery hinges on clarified guidelines and diversified markets. For visa insights, check the Times Higher Education coverage.
Photo by Thomas Hoang on Unsplash
Actionable Insights for Stakeholders
Prospective students: Strengthen GS statements, use low-risk unis, prove loan serviceability. Universities: Invest in recruitment tech, compliance. Policymakers: Transparent dashboards to mitigate shocks. The sector's resilience will define Australia's global standing.
