

Your complete 2026 guide to the Subclass 485 visa — streams, eligibility, fees, AI-ECTA stay-back benefits, and how to plan your application.
Australia continues to be one of the most popular destinations for Indian students — and a big part of that is what comes after graduation. The Australia post-study work visa for Indian students, officially the Temporary Graduate Visa (Subclass 485), is what lets you turn an Australian degree into Australian work experience, and for many students, into permanent residency over time.
The rules around this visa have shifted in 2024, 2025, and again in March 2026. The visa fee has changed, the age cap has changed, and the English requirements are now stricter. If you came across this information even a year ago, some of it may no longer apply to you. This guide walks through everything Indian students should know about the Subclass 485 visa in 2026 — including how it connects to your wider plan to study in Australia.
The Subclass 485 visa is a temporary visa that lets international graduates of Australian institutions live, work, and study in Australia after completing their course. It comes with full work rights — you can work full-time in any occupation, with any employer. For higher-education graduates, there’s no occupation list restriction.
For most Indian students, this visa is the natural next step after the Subclass 500 student visa, and the first step toward skilled migration or employer-sponsored permanent residency.
From 1 July 2024, the Department of Home Affairs renamed and restructured the streams. There are now three. Choosing the right one is critical — applying under the wrong stream is one of the most common reasons for refusal.
Previously called the Post-Study Work stream. This is the stream most Indian students fall under — it covers graduates of Australian Bachelor’s, Master’s (coursework or research), and PhD/Doctoral degrees. No skills assessment is needed, and your field of study does not have to match a skilled occupation list.
Previously called the Graduate Work stream. This one is for graduates of associate degrees, diplomas, and trade qualifications linked to an occupation on the relevant skilled occupation list. A skills assessment is required, and your qualification needs to align with a nominated occupation.
A one-time extension for graduates who studied and lived in designated regional areas of Australia — cities like Adelaide, Perth, Hobart, Canberra, Darwin, and most areas outside Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane. It adds 1 to 2 extra years to your stay, depending on the regional category of your institution.
If you’re planning to apply in 2026, these are the updates worth knowing before you start. Several of them are major shifts from how the visa worked even a year ago:
| # | Change | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| 01 | Visa Fee Increase | From 1 March 2026, the primary applicant fee went from AUD 2,300 to AUD 4,600. Adult dependants are AUD 2,300; dependent children AUD 1,160. |
| 02 | Age Cap Reduced to 35 | Maximum age for most applicants is now 35 or under (earlier 50). Masters by Research and PhD graduates remain eligible until under 50. |
| 03 | English Requirement Raised | Minimum is now IELTS 6.5 overall with no band below 5.5 (or equivalent). Your test result must be within the last 12 months — earlier it was 3 years. |
| 04 | No More Onshore Student Visa | 485 visa holders can no longer apply for a Subclass 500 Student visa while in Australia. The 485 is now a bridge into skilled work, not back into study. |
| 05 | 2-Year COVID Extension Ended | The temporary 2-year extension for graduates in select shortage degrees is no longer available. |
| 06 | 6-Month Application Window | You must apply within 6 months of your course completion date. Missing this window means losing eligibility entirely. |
This is one area where Indian students benefit more than most other nationalities. Under the Australia-India Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (AI-ECTA), Indian graduates get an extra year on their post-study work visa compared to the standard duration. Here’s the 2026 breakdown for Indian passport holders:
🎓 Bachelor’s degree: Up to 2 years (3 years if studied in a regional area)
📘 Master’s degree (coursework or extended): Up to 3 years
🔬 Master’s by Research: Up to 3 years
👨🔬 PhD / Doctoral degree: Up to 4 years
📍 Second Post-Higher Education Work stream (regional): +1 to +2 years on top
So a PhD graduate who studied in regional Australia could potentially stay for up to 6 years when the initial and second post-study work visas are combined — a meaningful runway for building a profile toward permanent residency.
To qualify for the Australia post-study work visa as an Indian student, you’ll need to meet the following:
Having your documents in order before you lodge is one of the most important factors in how smoothly your application moves. Here’s the core checklist:
The application process is straightforward when followed in order. Most refusals come down to missing a step or rushing through documents.
💳 Primary applicant (Post-Higher Education or Post-Vocational stream): AUD 4,600
👥 Adult dependant (18+): AUD 2,300
👶 Child dependant (under 18): AUD 1,160
🔁 Second Post-Higher Education Work stream: AUD 1,810
💡 Realistic total cost (including OVHC, English test, AFP check, medical exam, translations): AUD 5,500–6,500
Based on current Department of Home Affairs guidance, processing speed depends heavily on how “decision-ready” your application is when lodged.
The Subclass 485 is temporary, but it’s also the foundation for several long-term migration options. While on the 485, Indian graduates can build the work experience, points, and employer relationships needed for:
Points-tested permanent visa with no sponsor required. Available to graduates whose occupation is on the relevant skilled list and who score enough points across age, English, work experience, and qualifications.
A permanent visa requiring nomination by an Australian state or territory. Different states prioritise different occupations, so course choice and study location matter.
A 5-year provisional visa for graduates willing to live and work in regional Australia, with a clear pathway to permanent residency through the Subclass 191 visa after 3 years.
An employer-sponsored work visa for graduates whose employer is willing to nominate them. A common stepping stone toward employer-sponsored PR.
Direct employer-sponsored permanent residency. Most often reached after working for an Australian employer on a 485 or 482 visa.
The strongest 485 applications usually come from students who plan with PR in mind from the start — choosing the right course, the right city, and the right qualification level before they even arrive in Australia.
Most refusals and delays come down to a small set of avoidable mistakes. With the application fee now at AUD 4,600, getting these right matters more than ever.
At ISEC, we work with students through every stage of the journey — from choosing the right course in Australia to preparing a complete, decision-ready 485 visa application. Get clear, step-by-step support from a team that knows the 2026 rules inside out.
© 2026 · All information is provided for guidance purposes. Visa regulations, fees, and processing times may change — always verify with the official Australian Department of Home Affairs before lodging.
Yes. Dependents can be included in your application, and your spouse will have full work rights too. Each dependant carries a separate visa fee.
Yes. The Subclass 485 allows multiple entries during its validity period.
Depending on whether your application was lodged onshore or offshore, you may be able to apply for review at the Administrative Review Tribunal. The visa fee is not refunded.
No. A job offer is not required for the initial Subclass 485 application. You can look for work once your visa is granted.
Yes. The 485 visa gives full work rights, including self-employment and starting a business in Australia.
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