My 491 Visa Is About to Expire and I Haven't Reached My PR Date - What Are My Options?
This is one of the most stressful spots a regional visa holder can be in. You moved to a regional area, you have been doing everything right, and now the calendar is working against you. The good news is that the Department of Home Affairs has seen this situation many times before, and there are clear pathways for people in exactly your position.
Quick Answer
If your 491 visa is running out and you are still short of the three-year mark needed for the 191 permanent visa, you are not stuck. There are several legitimate ways to stay lawfully in Australia while you finish meeting the requirement, and a few that can get you to permanent residency through a different route altogether.
What matters now is understanding which option applies to you and acting early enough to use it. For a full overview of the 491 visa and how it works as a PR pathway, our dedicated guide covers the complete picture.
Why This Happens to So Many 491 Holders
The 491 visa is granted for five years, but the permanent 191 visa only becomes available once you have held the 491 for three years and met the income and residence conditions tied to it. On paper that leaves a two-year window to apply. In practice, that window closes faster than people expect.
A change of job, a period of reduced income, a few months spent helping a sick family member overseas, or simply miscounting the start date on your visa grant letter can all eat into the time you have left. None of these are unusual, and none of them mean your migration plans are over. They do mean you need a plan for what happens if the 491 expires before the three years are technically met.
First, Confirm Exactly Where You Stand
Before deciding on a next step, get clear on two things: your actual visa expiry date, and the exact date you will reach three years of holding the 491. These are not always the dates people assume, especially if there was a bridging visa period before the 491 was granted.
- Check the grant date on your original 491 visa grant notice - not the date you submitted the application. The three-year clock starts from the grant date.
- Calculate three years forward from that grant date. That is your earliest possible eligibility date for the 191.
- Check your 491 visa's actual expiry date - most are granted for five years, but always confirm on your VEVO record.
- Work out the gap, in months, between your three-year eligibility date and your visa expiry date.
If that gap is wide, you have time and options to plan calmly. If it is a matter of weeks, you need to move quickly, and getting advice from a migration agent at this point is far more valuable than trying to navigate it alone.
Your Options - Four Pathways Forward
Option 1: Apply for a New 491 Visa
One of the most common solutions is to apply for a second 491 visa before the first one expires. This resets your visa validity for another five years, while the time you have already spent in the regional area generally continues to count toward the three-year requirement for the 191, provided you remain in a designated regional area throughout.
To do this, you will usually need a fresh state or territory nomination, and in some cases a new Expression of Interest through SkillSelect. Nomination criteria differ by state, and several states open and close their allocations at different points in the program year, so timing your application around when nominations are open matters.
Worth Knowing
Some states currently have parts of their regional nomination pathways closed for the program year, with allocations filled ahead of schedule. This is exactly why checking your state's current nomination status early, rather than assuming it works the same way it did when you first applied, is so important.
Option 2: Lodge the 191 Application With a Bridging Visa in Place
If you are very close to the three-year mark - in some cases within a matter of months - it may be possible to time a 191 application so that a valid application is on file before your 491 expires. A validly lodged application before expiry generally triggers a bridging visa, which keeps you legally in Australia with work rights while a decision is made.
This option depends entirely on your specific dates and whether you can demonstrate the income and residence requirements by the time you lodge. It is not a strategy to attempt without professional guidance, since lodging before you are actually eligible can result in a refusal rather than a bridging visa.
Option 3: Switch to the 190 or 189 Visa, If You Qualify
If your circumstances have changed since you were granted the 491 - perhaps your points score has improved, you have gained more skilled work experience, or your occupation is now in higher demand - it is worth checking whether you now qualify for a 190 (state-nominated) or 189 (skilled independent) visa. Both lead to permanent residency immediately on grant, without the three-year regional wait.
| Pathway | What It Requires | Time to PR |
|---|---|---|
| New 491 visa | Fresh state/territory nomination, remain in regional area | Continues toward existing 3-year clock |
| 191 visa (if eligible now) | 3 years held, income threshold met, regional residence proven | Immediate PR on grant |
| 190 visa | 65+ points, current state nomination, occupation match | Immediate PR on grant |
| 189 visa | 65+ points, no nomination required | Immediate PR on grant |
Option 4: A Bridging Visa While You Sort Out the Right Application
If your 491 is about to lapse and none of the above is ready to lodge yet, you may still have a short window to put in a substantive visa application before the expiry date purely to trigger a bridging visa and buy yourself time. This is not a long-term solution, but it can prevent a gap in your legal status while the right pathway is finalised. This step needs to be handled carefully and is genuinely one where a second set of eyes from a migration professional makes a real difference.
What Happens If the Visa Actually Expires
This Is the Outcome Every Option Above Is Designed to Avoid
If the 491 lapses with no bridging visa and no application in place, you move into unlawful status, which has consequences for future visa applications and can trigger a re-entry ban if you later leave Australia. This is also the reason this situation deserves attention well before the expiry date rather than in the final week. If your visa has already expired or you are unsure of your status, get urgent help now.
What to Have Ready Before You Get Advice
Having these documents on hand means a migration agent can give you a genuine answer in a single conversation rather than needing several rounds of back and forth while your deadline keeps approaching.
- Your 491 visa grant notice - showing the exact grant date
- Your current VEVO record or visa expiry date
- Recent tax returns or income evidence for the years you have held the visa
- Proof of your regional address history - lease agreements, utility bills
- Your most recent points test outcome - if you have one on file
For those who may also need to travel while on a bridging visa during this period, read our guide on Bridging Visa B and travel rules before making any travel plans. And for a broader understanding of regional PR pathways, our guide on the best regional areas for PR opportunities covers what different regions offer.
Frequently Asked Questions
491 Running Out? Get Your Options Assessed Now
Our team connects you with MARA-registered migration agents who specialise in regional visa pathways and can review your specific situation.
