189 or 190 – Do You Actually Know Which Australian PR Visa You Qualify For in 2026?
Most people searching for Australian permanent residency know the numbers: Subclass 189 and Subclass 190. What fewer people know is exactly which one they can actually access based on their current profile. That distinction matters enormously in 2026, and getting it wrong before spending time and money on skills assessments, English tests, and EOI submissions is a mistake worth taking seriously before it happens to you.
Both the 189 and the 190 are permanent residency visas. Both are granted on arrival. Both use the same points-based assessment framework. On the surface they look like two versions of the same thing, which is precisely why so many applicants treat the choice between them as a minor detail rather than a foundational decision. It is not a minor detail. In 2026, the gap between these two pathways in terms of accessibility, invitation thresholds, processing times, and eligibility requirements has widened to the point where choosing the wrong one to focus on is not just a planning error. It can delay a migration journey by years.
This article breaks down exactly how the two visas differ, what points you actually need in the current environment, how occupation lists determine which pathway is open to you, what the 190 state commitment genuinely involves, and how to use a strategy that most applicants do not know about to maximise your chances of receiving an invitation faster. By the end, you will have a clear framework to determine which visa your actual profile qualifies for right now.
What Is the Actual Difference Between the 189 and 190 Visa — And Why It Matters More in 2026 Than Ever Before
The Subclass 189 Skilled Independent visa is exactly what its name suggests. It is independent. No state. No territory. No employer. No sponsorship of any kind. You meet the points threshold, you receive an invitation, you lodge your application, and when your visa is granted, you can live and work anywhere in Australia with no geographic restriction and no ongoing obligation to any government body other than federal immigration law. It is the cleanest, most flexible skilled migration visa available in the Australian system.
The Subclass 190 Skilled Nominated visa works differently. To be eligible, you must first receive a formal nomination from a state or territory government. That nomination adds five points to your score and brings you into a separate invitation pool managed by the nominating state rather than the national SkillSelect pool. In exchange for that nomination, you make a two-year commitment to live and seek employment in that state. The visa itself grants full permanent residency from day one, but it comes attached to that obligation.
Both visas share a 65-point minimum for EOI submission. Both lead to the same outcome: a permanent residence visa that gives you the right to live, work, and study in Australia indefinitely, sponsor eligible relatives for migration, and apply for Australian citizenship after meeting the residency requirements. The pathway to that outcome, however, is significantly different between the two.
"In 2026, the Department of Home Affairs is issuing a far larger share of skilled migration invitations through state programs than through the independent stream. Understanding that shift is not optional for anyone planning a skilled migration journey this year."
What has changed materially in 2026 is the proportion of invitations being issued through each stream. The 189 independent pool has become increasingly competitive as applicants have accumulated higher points scores over time. Simultaneously, states have expanded their nomination programs and the allocation of invitation rounds has shifted toward the state-sponsored stream. For most occupations and most points profiles, the 190 is not just an alternative to the 189 in 2026. It is the more realistic and more accessible pathway, and in many cases the only one that will produce an invitation within a reasonable timeframe.
| Feature | Subclass 189 | Subclass 190 |
|---|---|---|
| Sponsorship required | None | State or territory nomination |
| Points bonus | None | +5 points for nomination |
| Geographic restriction | None — live anywhere in Australia | 2-year commitment to nominating state |
| Occupation list | MLTSSL only | MLTSSL and STSOL |
| PR on grant | Yes | Yes |
| Typical 2026 points threshold | 90+ for most occupations | 75 to 85 (after +5 nomination bonus) |
| Processing time (50th percentile) | 6 to 10 months | 5 to 7 months |
| Invitation volume 2026 | Significantly reduced | Majority of GSM invitations |
How Many Points Do You Actually Need in 2026 — The Minimum Versus the Reality
The 65-point minimum is real. It is the threshold you must meet to submit an Expression of Interest through SkillSelect. What it is not is a guarantee of anything at all. The minimum score does not get you into an invitation round. It gets you into a waiting pool, and whether you ever receive an invitation from that pool depends entirely on how your score compares to every other applicant in the same occupation category at the same time.
In 2026, the 189 independent stream is clearing at 90 points or above for the overwhelming majority of non-priority occupations. Accounting, software engineering, civil engineering, mechanical engineering, financial management, and most ICT roles are seeing invitation thresholds at 90 points consistently. An applicant at 80 points in one of these occupations submitting an EOI for the 189 is not waiting for the right round. They are waiting for a change in circumstance that is unlikely to arrive without deliberate action to build their score.
The 190 operates differently. Because state nomination adds five points to your score and because you are drawing from a separate state-managed invitation pool rather than the national pool, the effective threshold is lower. Most states are currently nominating applicants with pre-nomination scores of 70 to 80 points, which translates to a post-nomination score of 75 to 85. That is a meaningful difference. An applicant at 75 points who qualifies for and receives a state nomination is competitive for a 190 invitation in 2026. The same applicant competing in the 189 pool at 75 points is not.
The Points Gap Is Wider Than Most People Think
The difference between being competitive for a 189 and competitive for a 190 in 2026 is not five points. It is typically 10 to 15 points when you account for the nomination bonus and the different invitation thresholds operating in each stream. That gap can represent years of waiting for applicants who are targeting the wrong visa for their profile.
Understanding your actual points score requires working through each category carefully rather than estimating. The points test rewards specificity. Here is how the major categories break down:
Two categories consistently offer the most leverage for applicants who are below a competitive threshold. English is the first. The jump from Proficient (IELTS 7.0 in all bands) to Superior (8.0 in all bands) is worth 10 additional points. For many applicants, improving English from a 7.0 profile to an 8.0 profile is the single most efficient action available. Australian work experience is the second. Every additional year of Australian work in a nominated occupation adds to the score, which is one reason applicants who are already in Australia on temporary work visas have a structural advantage over offshore applicants with otherwise equivalent profiles.
Which Occupation List You Are On Determines Everything — MLTSSL, STSOL, and What They Mean for Your Visa Choice
Before you calculate your points, before you research state nomination requirements, before you book an English test or commission a skills assessment, there is one question that takes priority: is your occupation on the relevant list, and which list is it on? The answer to that question determines which visas are structurally available to you, and no amount of preparation will open a door that the occupation list has already closed.
There are two primary lists that govern General Skilled Migration eligibility in 2026. The Medium and Long-Term Strategic Skills List (MLTSSL) is the more comprehensive of the two. Occupations on the MLTSSL are eligible for the Subclass 189, the Subclass 190, and the Subclass 491 regional pathway. If your occupation is on the MLTSSL, all three GSM pathways are theoretically available to you, subject to points and state-specific requirements.
The Short-Term Skilled Occupation List (STSOL) covers a range of occupations that Australia recognises as skilled but does not consider to have the same long-term strategic demand as MLTSSL occupations. Occupations on the STSOL are not eligible for the Subclass 189. They can access the Subclass 190 and the Subclass 491, but only through the state nomination pathway. For a significant portion of applicants in fields such as hospitality management, certain business roles, several trades categories, and some healthcare support roles, this means the 190 is not just a better option. It is the only GSM option available.
Why the ANZSCO Code Matters More Than Your Job Title
The list your occupation sits on is determined by its specific ANZSCO code, not your job title. Two people doing functionally similar work can fall under different ANZSCO codes with different list placements. A project manager in construction, for example, falls under a different code than a project manager in IT services. Confirming the correct ANZSCO code for your specific role before submitting any EOI is not optional. It is the starting point.
There is also a third category worth understanding: occupations that do not appear on either list. If your occupation is not on the MLTSSL or the STSOL, the General Skilled Migration pathway — including both the 189 and the 190 — is not available to you through independent or state-nominated streams. The options that remain are employer-sponsored pathways such as the Skills in Demand visa (Subclass 482) or the Employer Nomination Scheme (Subclass 186), or in some cases the Subclass 491 depending on state-specific occupation requirements. Understanding where your occupation sits before investing in any part of the skilled migration process is not caution. It is the most basic form of due diligence.
| Occupation List | 189 Eligible | 190 Eligible | 491 Eligible |
|---|---|---|---|
| MLTSSL | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| STSOL | No | Yes (state nomination only) | Yes (state/regional nomination) |
| Not listed | No | No (except select state lists) | Check state-specific lists |
The 190 State Nomination Commitment — What You Are Actually Agreeing To and What Happens If You Do Not Follow Through
The five points that come with a 190 state nomination are genuinely valuable. In a competitive invitation environment, those points can mean the difference between receiving an invitation in the next round and waiting six months for the threshold to shift. But those five points come with an obligation attached, and many applicants accept that obligation without fully understanding what it means in practice.
When you accept a state nomination and are granted a Subclass 190 visa, you make a commitment to live and seek employment in the nominating state or territory for a period of two years from the date of visa grant. The specific wording matters. You are committing to genuine residence — not a registered address while you live elsewhere. You are committing to make genuine efforts to find employment in the state, which is relevant for applicants who plan to work remotely for interstate or overseas employers without establishing any real connection to the nominating state.
The commitment is a statutory declaration. It is not written into the visa as a hard condition in the same way that, for example, regional visa conditions restrict certain 491 holders. This leads some applicants to treat it as a formality they can disregard once the visa is granted and they have settled somewhere they prefer. That is a misunderstanding of both the obligation and the consequences.
The Compliance Reality
States actively share compliance data with the Department of Home Affairs. Failing to honour the two-year state commitment before the period ends can affect future visa applications, affect the assessment of your character for Australian citizenship, and in some cases be noted on your immigration record in ways that affect sponsored family members. It is not a commitment to make lightly or to discard for convenience.
The practical guidance here is straightforward. If you are genuinely considering a state nomination, research the nominating state as a real potential place of residence and employment before you submit your nomination expression of interest. Consider whether the job market in your occupation is active in that state, whether the cost of living and lifestyle suits your circumstances, and whether you are genuinely prepared to establish your life there for the two-year commitment period. If the answer is yes, the 190 nomination is a legitimate and valuable pathway. If you are nominating a state purely to access the five-point bonus with no intention of honouring the commitment, you are creating a compliance problem that will follow you through the Australian immigration system for years.
It is also worth noting that circumstances do change. People move interstate for legitimate reasons during the two-year period — serious health needs, family emergencies, genuine employment opportunities that require relocation. These situations are assessable. The important thing is that any deviation from the commitment is genuinely circumstantial rather than deliberate from the outset. Some states also have formal release processes for applicants who need to relocate before the two years are complete, and engaging that process properly is far better than simply moving without notice.
Processing Times, Costs, and the Dual-EOI Strategy Most Applicants Do Not Know About
One of the concrete advantages the 190 holds over the 189 in 2026 is processing time. Once a 190 application is lodged and is decision-ready, the Department is currently finalising the majority of applications within five to seven months at the 50th percentile. The 189 is taking six to ten months over the same measure. For priority occupations across healthcare, education, infrastructure construction, and certain engineering disciplines, 190 processing can be considerably faster still, particularly when the state nomination comes from a program that prioritises these fields and the application is complete at the point of lodgement.
The cost comparison is also relevant for applicants weighing their options. The government application fee for both the 189 and the 190 is currently in the same range, sitting above AUD 4,000 for the primary applicant with additional charges for secondary applicants. Skills assessment fees vary by assessing authority but are a shared cost regardless of which visa you are targeting. English test fees are the same. The incremental cost of pursuing the 190 over the 189 is essentially the time and effort involved in researching state nomination requirements and submitting a state-specific expression of interest.
The Dual-EOI Strategy: Triple Your Coverage at Zero Extra Cost
Most applicants do not realise that submitting EOIs for both the 189 and 190 simultaneously through SkillSelect costs nothing. You can have active EOIs for both visas at the same time, and you can add a third EOI for the Subclass 491 if your occupation qualifies. If you receive invitations for more than one, you simply choose the one that best suits your circumstances at the time. There is no obligation to proceed with an invitation you receive, and withdrawing from one EOI after accepting another is straightforward.
The dual-EOI strategy works as follows. In SkillSelect, you create a profile and submit separate expressions of interest for each visa subclass you are targeting. Each EOI references your points score, occupation, and other profile details. If the 190 invitation threshold for your occupation in your target state drops to a level your score meets, you receive a 190 invitation. If the 189 threshold happens to drop to your score before that, you receive a 189 invitation. Whichever invitation arrives first gives you 60 days to decide whether to proceed with that application or wait for a potential invitation under the other subclass.
For applicants sitting between 75 and 85 points where the 190 is likely to invite first, maintaining the 189 EOI simultaneously costs nothing and preserves optionality. For applicants at 90 points or above who are genuinely competitive in the 189 pool, the 190 EOI adds no cost and provides a fallback if the independent stream is delayed. For applicants at 65 to 70 points who are unlikely to receive invitations under either the 189 or 190 in the near term, adding the 491 to the mix opens a regional pathway that currently has lower effective thresholds in a number of states and territories.
| Points Score | Recommended EOI Strategy | Most Likely Invitation |
|---|---|---|
| 90 points or above | 189 + 190 EOIs simultaneously | 189 or 190 depending on occupation |
| 75 to 89 points | 190 primary + 189 as fallback + optional 491 | 190 via state nomination |
| 65 to 74 points | 190 + 491 simultaneously | 491 regional pathway most likely |
| Below 65 points | EOI not yet available — build score first | N/A until threshold is met |
So Which Visa Do You Actually Qualify For — A Straightforward Framework to Help You Decide
After five sections of detailed comparison, the question that matters is specific to you: which visa does your current profile actually qualify for? The answer comes from applying a straightforward framework to your real situation rather than the situation you hope to be in after a few more years of experience or another English test attempt.
Profile Type 1: 90+ points, occupation on the MLTSSL, want full geographic freedom
If you are at 90 points or above, your occupation is on the MLTSSL, and geographic freedom is important to your plans — particularly if you have employment prospects or personal circumstances tied to a specific city that is not in a regional area — the 189 is a genuine and realistic option for you. Maintain a 190 EOI in parallel as insurance, but at 90 points in most non-priority occupations you are within the realistic invitation range for the independent stream. Your focus should be on ensuring your skills assessment is current, your English score is as high as possible, and your EOI is submitted and maintained correctly.
Profile Type 2: 70 to 89 points, occupation on MLTSSL or STSOL
This is where the majority of skilled migration applicants sit in 2026, and the 190 is almost certainly your fastest and most accessible pathway. The five-point nomination bonus brings you into a competitive range for state invitation rounds that the 189 independent pool will not clear at these scores in the current environment. Your priority is researching which states are actively nominating your occupation, what their specific requirements are beyond the federal points test, and whether you are genuinely prepared to commit to two years in that state. Submit your 190 EOI, research state nomination portals actively, and maintain a 189 EOI at no additional cost for optionality.
Profile Type 3: Below 70 points, or occupation not on MLTSSL or STSOL
If your score is below 70 points or your occupation does not appear on the MLTSSL or STSOL, neither the 189 nor the 190 is a realistic near-term pathway. The 491 regional visa is the strongest available GSM option, with lower effective thresholds in a number of states and territories and a defined pathway to permanent residency through the Subclass 191 after three years. If your occupation is not on any GSM list, employer-sponsored pathways through the Skills in Demand visa or the Employer Nomination Scheme are the options to explore. In both cases, the most valuable investment you can make right now is getting a precise, professional assessment of your position before committing to any particular strategy.
The underlying principle across all three profiles is the same one that runs through every aspect of skilled migration planning. The right visa is the one your actual profile qualifies for, assessed honestly against current thresholds and occupation list placements, not the one that sounds best or that you have been targeting based on information from two years ago. Australia's migration system changes regularly. The thresholds that applied in 2024 are not the thresholds of 2026. Getting that assessment right, ideally with professional input, before spending on tests, assessments, and applications is the single most valuable step any skilled migration applicant can take this year.
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