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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsInternational students arriving in Australia with dreams of building careers after graduation are facing unexpected hurdles. The Temporary Graduate Visa, a key pathway for post-study work, has undergone rapid transformations that have left many graduates reeling. Recent fee hikes and tightened eligibility criteria have sparked widespread frustration, with students describing the shifts as unfair and sudden. As Australian universities grapple with declining enrollments, the policy chaos raises questions about the future of international education Down Under.
What is the Temporary Graduate Visa?
The Temporary Graduate Visa (subclass 485) is a post-study work permit designed for international students who have completed qualifications at Australian universities or colleges. It allows holders to live, work, and study temporarily after graduation, providing a bridge to skilled migration or return home with valuable experience. Unlike student visas, it offers unrestricted work rights, making it attractive for gaining professional exposure in fields like engineering, IT, healthcare, and business.
There are three main streams:
- Post-Vocational Education Work stream: For diploma, associate degree, or trade qualifications linked to skilled occupations. Duration up to 18 months.
- Post-Higher Education Work stream: For bachelor's, master's, or doctoral degrees from CRICOS-registered courses. Typically 2-3 years, depending on qualification level.
- Second Post-Higher Education Work stream: For those with prior Temporary Graduate visas from regional studies, offering 1-2 additional years.
Eligibility requires holding a student visa within the last six months, being under 35 (with exceptions for PhDs or certain passports), meeting English proficiency (IELTS 6.5 overall), and having completed at least 16 months of study in Australia. Family members can join, enhancing its appeal for long-term planning.
Policy Evolution: Key Shifts from 2024 Onward
The visa's landscape began changing significantly in July 2024. The government realigned streams to better match study levels: the old Graduate Work stream became Post-Vocational Education Work, and Post-Study Work shifted to Post-Higher Education Work. The Replacement stream was eliminated, and age caps were set at 35, down from previous flexibilities. English requirements rose from IELTS 6.0 to 6.5, aiming to ensure graduates are job-ready.
By 2025, financial proof thresholds increased, and pandemic-era extensions started phasing out. These moves addressed 'integrity risks' like visa hopping and non-genuine students, but they narrowed pathways. For details on these foundational changes, refer to the official changes page.
The March 2026 Fee Bombshell
The tipping point came on March 1, 2026, when the application fee doubled overnight from AUD 2,300 to AUD 4,600 for main applicants in the primary streams—without transitional notice or public fanfare. Additional applicants under 18 now pay AUD 1,160, up from 580. Exemptions apply to Pacific Island and Timor-Leste citizens at reduced rates, reflecting regional ties. This was the third hike in 13 months, following rises in 2025.
Students logging into ImmiAccount found their payments rejected, scrambling for extra funds amid expiring student visas. The Department of Home Affairs justified it as aligning costs with processing demands, but critics called it exploitative.
Student Stories: Feeling 'Robbed' and Betrayed
Graduates like Katie, an Indian agriculture science honors student, were devastated. Planning to repay AUD 140,000 in debt through Australian work, she faced the hike 'overnight' with no warning. 'It makes me feel dejected... like we're just here to pay more,' she shared, her mental health suffering as she eyes unrelated jobs.
Tam from the University of Adelaide called it 'being robbed,' while Chinese student Weihong Liang labeled it 'a scam.' Engineer Jimmy felt treated like an 'ATM,' eroding trust. Vietnamese and Indian cohorts, major contributors, are hit hardest, with many delaying applications or leaving.
Read firsthand accounts in this ABC report.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
Impacts on Australian Universities and Colleges
Australian higher education relies on international students for 30-40% of revenue at many institutions. New enrollments dropped 15% in 2025 to 202,000, partly due to visa uncertainty. Universities like Curtin and Adelaide report rising queries from panicked graduates.
The National Union of Students (NUS) launched petitions deeming the hike 'exploitative,' urging reversal. The International Education Association of Australia (IEAA) warns of a 'pulled welcome mat,' with education—Australia's fourth-largest export at AUD 50 billion— at risk. Colleges fear fewer vocational enrollments as Post-Vocational streams tighten.
Institutions are ramping up advice sessions, partnering with migration agents, and highlighting regional incentives to retain talent.
Statistics Revealing the Scale
By late 2025, over 225,000 held 485 visas, up from prior years but with applications trending down. Student visa grants rose 3% in 2025 but refusals surged amid caps. International students from India, China, Nepal, and Vietnam dominate, but 2026 data shows processing backlogs and higher rejections for integrity checks.
Bi-annual reports from Home Affairs detail lodgements: June 2025 showed sustained demand pre-hike, but post-March dips anticipated. For latest figures, see study visa statistics.
| Period | Student Visa Grants | 485 Visa Holders |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 Peak | ~500k | 217k |
| End 2025 | Decline 15% | 225k |
| 2026 Proj. | Further drop | TBD |
Government Rationale Amid Criticism
The Albanese government cites migration sustainability post-pandemic surges (1.1 million students in 2024). Policies target genuine students, reduce exploitation by dodgy providers, and prioritize skills shortages. Minister Jason Clare notes unlimited work rights make it 'generous,' fostering 'friends' via education.
Yet, bodies like IEAA argue it treats students as a 'cash cow,' damaging reputation versus competitors like Canada.
Challenges: From Affordability to Job Markets
- Financial Strain: Combined with tuition (AUD 40k+/year), living costs, and debt, the hike forces choices between staying or leaving.
- Age and English Barriers: 35 cap excludes mature students; higher IELTS weeds out some.
- Job Competition: Unlimited rights don't guarantee sponsorship amid economic pressures.
- Regional Disparities: Metro unis face more scrutiny.
Practical Advice for Prospective and Current Students
Plan early: Budget for AUD 4,600+, skills assessments, and police checks. Choose CRICOS courses wisely—STEM often qualifies for longer stays. Consult university international offices for webinars. Explore regional study for Second stream extensions. Build networks via internships during studies. Monitor Home Affairs updates.
Universities offer resume clinics, career fairs tailored for 485 holders.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Balancing Integrity and Growth
With 2026-27 migration strategy emphasizing quality over quantity, expect more tweaks like occupation-linked durations. Universities push for consultation, warning revenue shortfalls could cut programs. Positive: Strong economy needs skilled grads; PR pathways via employer sponsorship remain viable.
For Australian higher ed, retaining talent bolsters research, innovation. Stakeholders urge collaborative reforms to sustain the AUD 50b sector.

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