Can I Change Employers on a 482 Visa? Step-by-Step Guide for 2026 | Aussie Migration Guide
Change employers on a 482 visa in Australia - step by step guide

Can I Change Employers on a 482 Visa Without Losing My Status in Australia?

If you are unhappy at work but holding back because you are worried about your visa, you are not alone - and the good news is that changing employers on a 482 is a well-established, fairly routine process. It is not a loophole, and it is not something that puts your whole migration journey at risk, provided you do it in the right order.

Quick Answer

Yes, you can change employers on a 482 visa, and you generally do not need a whole new visa to do it. What you do need is for your new employer to lodge a nomination and have it approved before you actually start working for them. The visa itself is not the problem here. The risk almost always comes from timing - specifically people starting the new job before that approval comes through.

The mistakes that cause real problems are almost always about timing, not about whether the move itself is allowed. For a full overview of how the 482 employer sponsorship process works, our dedicated guide covers the complete framework.

What Actually Changes When You Switch Employers

Your 482 visa is tied to a sponsoring employer and a nominated occupation through condition 8607. Changing employers means your new business needs to lodge what is sometimes called a nomination transfer - essentially a fresh nomination that links to your existing visa. In most cases, if you are staying in the same occupation, you do not need to apply for an entirely new 482 visa. Your current visa remains valid; the sponsor attached to it simply changes once the new nomination is approved.

The One Rule That Trips Most People Up

Here is the part that catches people out more than anything else. You cannot start working for your new employer until their nomination has been approved. A job offer, a signed contract, even a start date - none of that gives you permission to begin work. Many people assume that because the occupation is the same, the move can happen seamlessly, like a normal job change. It cannot. The approval has to come first.

This Is the Most Common Mistake

Starting work for a new employer before the nomination is approved is a breach of visa condition 8607. This is the single most common way people accidentally put their visa at risk when changing jobs. It does not matter how confident you are about the outcome - wait for the approval.

One Narrow Exception

Once your new nomination has been approved, you are generally still allowed to keep working briefly for your previous employer if you owe them a contractual notice period. This lets you wrap things up properly without breaching your conditions, but it only applies after approval - not before.

The Right Order to Do This In

  1. Find the new role first, before resigning. Where possible, line up your new employer and confirm they are an approved Standard Business Sponsor (or willing to apply for that status) before you give notice anywhere. This avoids creating an unnecessary gap in sponsored employment.
  2. Confirm the occupation matches. The new role needs to be the same nominated occupation as your current visa, or something genuinely consistent with it. If the new job is a meaningfully different occupation, the process becomes more involved and may require a new visa application rather than a simple nomination transfer.
  3. Have the new employer lodge the nomination promptly. Once you have a confirmed offer, the new employer needs to lodge their nomination as soon as possible. This includes labour market testing in most cases, which can add a few weeks on its own. Do not assume this has been submitted just because your new employer has said they will sort it out. Ask for confirmation that it has actually been lodged - not just started.
  4. Wait for approval before you start. This is the step that protects you. Even if your new employer is keen to get you started, hold off until the approval comes through. Starting early is the single most common way people accidentally breach condition 8607.
Permanent residency pathway and employer change on 482 visa
The right order matters: find the role, confirm the occupation matches, get the nomination lodged, and wait for approval before starting.

What If You Have Already Left Your Current Employer?

If your employment with your sponsor has already ended - perhaps you resigned without lining up the next move, or were let go - you move into a different but still manageable situation. You generally get up to 180 days at a time (365 days total across your visa) to find a new sponsor, and during this window you are allowed to work for other employers, including outside your original occupation, while you sort things out. For a detailed guide on what happens when sponsorship ends, read our article on what happens when your 482 employer withdraws sponsorship.

Your SituationCan You Start the New Job Yet?What to Do
Still employed by current sponsorNo - not until new nomination is approvedStay employed, wait for approval, then resign with notice
Already left current sponsorYes - you can work anywhere during the 180-day windowGet the new nomination lodged as soon as possible
New nomination lodged, window about to expireGenerally yes - work can continue while it processesConfirm nomination was lodged before the 180 days ran out

What This Means for Your PR Plans

If you are working toward permanent residency through the 186 TRT pathway, it is worth knowing that the qualifying period is based on time worked for a specific sponsoring employer. Changing employers generally means starting that two-year clock again with the new business. This is not a reason to stay somewhere unhappy, but it is worth factoring into your decision and your timeline.

For those exploring whether an independent pathway might now suit them better, our 189 vs 190 visa comparison explains the key differences. And if you are considering whether leaving your employer after getting the 186 is possible, read our guide on the rules around leaving your employer after getting a 186.

What Not to Do

  • Do not start the new job on the strength of a contract alone. Wait for the nomination approval. A signed contract is not visa permission.
  • Do not assume your new employer has lodged the nomination just because they said they would. Ask for confirmation. Many delays happen because the employer thought it was done but had not actually submitted it.
  • Do not work two jobs at once unless your occupation is on a specific exemption list. This is treated as a breach of your visa conditions.
  • Do not let more than 180 days pass without lodging a new nomination if you have already left your sponsor. After that window, you risk falling into unlawful status.

What to Have Ready Before You Get Advice

  • Your current 482 visa grant notice and nominated occupation
  • Details of the new role - including job title and duties
  • Confirmation from the new employer on their sponsorship status
  • Your current employment end date - if you have already left your sponsor

Having these on hand means a migration agent can assess your situation in a single conversation. For a broader view of employer sponsorship options, our guide on the Skills in Demand visa eligibility covers the latest requirements, and our salary rules guide explains the income thresholds your new employer must meet.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a new visa to change employers on a 482? v
Not usually, as long as you are staying in the same nominated occupation. Your existing visa generally remains valid, and your new employer lodges a nomination that links to it. A new visa is typically only needed if the occupation itself changes.
Can I start the new job as soon as I have a signed contract? v
No. You cannot start working for your new sponsor until their nomination has been approved, regardless of how confident you feel about the offer. Starting early is a breach of your visa condition 8607.
How long does the new employer have to lodge the nomination? v
If you have already ceased work with your previous sponsor, the new nomination generally needs to be lodged within 180 days of that employment ending. If it is lodged in time, you can generally keep working while it is processed, even if the 180 days pass before a decision is made.
Can I work two jobs while the new nomination is being processed? v
Generally no, unless your occupation falls under a specific exemption. You either remain with your current sponsor until the new nomination is approved, or you have already ceased that employment and are within your allowable window to work elsewhere.
Will changing employers affect my permanent residency timeline? v
It can, particularly for the 186 TRT pathway, where the qualifying period is based on time worked for one specific sponsor. A change of employer generally means that two-year clock restarts with the new business. This does not affect other PR pathways such as the 189 or 190, which are based on points rather than employer tenure.
Disclaimer: This article is general information about Australian visa conditions and is not legal or migration advice. Nomination 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 resigning from or starting employment in connection with a 482 visa.

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