489 Visa to 887 Permanent Residency: Is the PR Pathway Still Open in 2026? | Aussie Migration Guide
489 visa to 887 permanent residency pathway Australia 2026

I Am on a 489 Visa - Can I Still Get Permanent Residency Through the 887 Visa?

The 489 visa stopped being issued in November 2019 when it was replaced by the 491, but that does not mean the pathway to permanent residency has closed for people who already hold one. If you are one of the remaining 489 holders who has been quietly building up your regional time and work history, the Subclass 887 is still your direct route to permanent residency, and the Department continues to process these applications.

Quick Answer

Yes, the 887 pathway is still open to 489 visa holders who have met the regional residence and work requirements, even though no new 489 visas are being granted. What you need is two years of regional residence and one year of full-time work in a regional area while holding the 489. There is no points test, no minimum income threshold, and no new skills assessment required.

What matters now is whether you have met the requirements, how close you are, and how to put your application together properly. For context on how the newer regional pathway works, see our guide on the 491 visa and its PR pathway, and for the 191 specifically, our 191 visa eligibility guide.

The 887 vs the 191: Know Which Pathway You Are On

This is the first thing worth getting clear on, because the two pathways are often confused. The Subclass 887 is for holders of the older regional provisional visas, primarily the 489, and also the 475, 487, 495, and 496. The Subclass 191 is the permanent pathway for holders of the newer 491 and 494 visas. If you are on a 489, your pathway is the 887, not the 191. Applying for the wrong one wastes time, money, and can complicate your record.

The 887 Is Actually Simpler

The two pathways have different requirements. The 887 asks for two years of regional residence and one year of full-time work. The 191 asks for three years of regional residence and three years of ATO Notices of Assessment. The 887 is the shorter and simpler of the two, which is worth knowing if you have been worried that your timeline was going to stretch.

The Three Requirements You Need to Meet

1. Two Years of Regional Residence

You must have lived in a specified regional area of Australia for at least two years while holding your 489 visa. The regional definition for the 887 is based on the older classification and excludes Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Gold Coast, and Newcastle. This is slightly different from the current 491 definition, so if you have moved around, it is worth checking which areas counted as regional during the specific periods you were there.

Overseas travel does not count toward the two-year residential period. Time spent outside Australia, even for family emergencies or work trips, does not accumulate. What the Department is looking for is genuine, physical presence in a regional area, not just a regional postal address.

2. One Year of Full-Time Work in a Regional Area

You must have worked full time, which the regulations define as at least 35 hours per week, in a specified regional area for at least 12 months during the two-year residence period. This is one of the most practically useful differences from the 191: the work does not need to be in your nominated occupation. Any lawful employment in a regional area counts, regardless of the industry or role. Self-employment and contract work can also count, provided you can demonstrate the hours.

3. No Visa Condition Breaches

You must have complied with all the conditions of your 489 visa during the period you are relying on. Standard health and character requirements also apply, including police clearances from every country you have lived in for 12 months or more in the past 10 years since turning 16.

Side-by-Side Comparison: 887 vs 191

Requirement887 (for 489 holders)191 (for 491 holders)
Qualifying visa489, 475, 487, 495, 496491, 494
Residence period2 years in specified regional area3 years in designated regional area
Work requirement1 year full time (35hrs/week), any occupation3 years ATO Notices of Assessment
Income thresholdNoneNone
Points testNoNo
New skills assessmentNoNo
Application fee (main)$475$505
Regional visa to permanent residency pathway in Australia
The 887 requires two years of regional residence and one year of full-time work in any occupation. No points test, no income threshold, no new skills assessment.

Current Processing Times and What to Expect

As of mid-2026, around 18,000 Subclass 887 applications remain pending with the Department. Processing times are currently running up to 25 months for some applications. This is a long time, but your status during that wait is protected: if your 489 visa expires after you have lodged a valid 887 application, a bridging visa is automatically granted that maintains your full work and study rights while you wait for a decision.

Travel Warning During Processing

If you are on a Bridging Visa A during 887 processing and need to travel outside Australia, you must apply for a Bridging Visa B before you depart. Leaving on a BVA without a travel facility means you will be unable to return. This is a common and easily avoidable mistake that causes real problems for people in the processing queue.

What to Start Gathering Now

The most common reason 887 applications are delayed or refused is insufficient documentary evidence for the regional residence or work period, not the applicant failing to have actually been there. Building a complete, well-organised evidence file before you lodge is the single most effective way to avoid an unnecessary request for further information that adds months to your wait.

  • Lease agreements, rental receipts, or mortgage statements for every regional address during your 489 period
  • Utility bills, bank statements, or official correspondence showing each regional address across the full two-year period
  • Employment contracts, payslips, and employer letters confirming at least 12 months of full-time hours in a regional area
  • Tax returns and ATO records covering the 489 period (useful supporting evidence even though there is no income threshold)
  • Your 489 visa grant notice confirming your exact grant date and the start of your regional period
  • Police certificates from every country you have lived in for 12 months or more since turning 16

For broader guidance on how regional PR pathways compare, see our guide on the best regional areas in Australia for PR opportunities. And if you are exploring whether your points profile might now support a 189 or 190 visa as an alternative or parallel pathway, that guide explains the key differences.

What If You Have Not Quite Hit the Two-Year Mark Yet

If your 489 visa expires before you reach two years of regional residence, a bridging visa may still be available if you have a valid application for another substantive visa in place before expiry. However, time spent on a bridging visa does not always count toward the 887 residence requirement in the same way as time on the 489 itself, which is exactly why getting advice early, rather than waiting until the visa expiry date is imminent, matters so much here.

Act Before Expiry, Not After

If you are approaching your 489 visa expiry and have not yet met the two-year regional residence requirement, speak with a migration agent now. There may be options to bridge the gap, but they need to be arranged before the 489 lapses, not after. Once unlawful status begins, the 887 pathway becomes significantly more complicated and may close entirely. If your visa has already expired, get urgent help.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I still apply for the 887 if my 489 visa has already expired? v
Possibly, depending on your circumstances. If you lodged a 887 application or another substantive visa application before your 489 expired, a bridging visa would have been granted and the 887 pathway may still be available. If your 489 lapsed with no application in place, this is a situation that needs specific, urgent advice.
Does the work I did have to be in my nominated occupation? v
No. For the 887, any lawful full-time employment in a regional area counts toward the one-year work requirement, regardless of occupation. This is different from some other visa pathways and is one of the more flexible features of the 887.
Is there a minimum income I needed to earn? v
No. There is no income threshold for the 887 visa. What matters is that you worked full time, at least 35 hours per week, for a minimum of 12 months in a specified regional area.
How long will I have to wait for a decision? v
Current processing times for the 887 are running up to 25 months for some applications, with around 18,000 applications still pending as of mid-2026. A complete, well-documented application reduces the risk of requests for further information that add to that wait.
Can I travel outside Australia while my 887 application is being processed? v
Only if you have a Bridging Visa B in place before you depart. Bridging Visa A, which you are likely on if your 489 has expired during processing, does not include travel rights. Apply for a Bridging Visa B before any overseas trip, otherwise your bridging visa ceases when you leave and you will be unable to return.
Once I get the 887, can I live anywhere in Australia? v
Yes. Once the 887 is granted, all regional conditions end. You are free to live and work anywhere in Australia permanently, with no geographical restrictions.
Disclaimer: This article is general information about Australian visa requirements and is not legal or migration advice. Visa requirements, processing times, and departmental policy can change, and your specific circumstances may affect what applies to you. Speak with a registered migration agent before lodging an 887 application or making decisions about your regional residence period.

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