Australia’s construction sector is one of the country’s most consistent sponsors of skilled migrants, alongside healthcare, engineering, and technology. With employer-sponsored visas accounting for roughly 44,000 of the 185,000 permanent migration places in the 2025–26 program, and construction facing persistent shortages nationwide, it remains one of the more direct routes to Australian permanent residence for tradespeople without a university degree.
This guide breaks down the Skills in Demand (subclass 482) visa, the Employer Nomination Scheme (subclass 186), regional pathways, and exactly what it takes to get sponsored.
Why Construction Is a Strong Sponsorship Category in Australia
- No points test required. Unlike the points-tested subclass 189 or 190 visas, employer-sponsored routes (482, 186, 494) only require a genuine employer willing to sponsor you — not a competitive points score.
- Direct route to permanent residence. A common and well-established pathway is: start on a 482 (temporary), work for the same sponsor for two years, then transition to the 186 (permanent) via the Temporary Residence Transition stream — with no separate points test at that stage.
- Regional incentive. The subclass 494 regional visa offers a five-year pathway to permanent residence (via the subclass 191) for workers willing to live outside Sydney, Melbourne, or Brisbane, often with reduced salary thresholds through Designated Area Migration Agreements (DAMAs).
Types of Construction Jobs Open to Foreign Workers
| Job Category | Typical Visa Route | Skills Assessment Usually Required? |
|---|---|---|
| Carpenter and joiner | 482 Core Skills / 186 | Yes |
| Electrician (general) | 482 Core Skills / 186 | Yes |
| Plumber (general) | 482 Core Skills / 186 | Yes |
| Bricklayer | 482 Core Skills / 494 | Yes |
| Welder (first class) | 482 Core Skills | Yes |
| Civil engineer | 482 Core Skills / 186 | Yes (Engineers Australia) |
| Construction project manager | 482 Core Skills or Specialist Skills / 186 | Sometimes |
| Structural steel/welding trades worker | 482 Core Skills | Yes |
Most professional white-collar construction roles (e.g., project managers, engineers) don’t require a skills assessment for the temporary 482 visa but typically do for the permanent 186 visa. Trade occupations almost always require a skills assessment through the relevant trade assessing authority (e.g., Trades Recognition Australia or VETASSESS) regardless of visa stage.
Salary Ranges and Visa Salary Thresholds (2026)
| Role | Typical Market Salary (AUD) | Minimum Visa Salary Threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Construction labourer/trades assistant | $55,000 – $70,000 | Must still meet CSIT if sponsored |
| Carpenter | $70,000 – $95,000 | CSIT: $79,499 (from 1 July 2026) |
| Electrician | $75,000 – $110,000 | CSIT: $79,499 |
| Plumber | $75,000 – $110,000 | CSIT: $79,499 |
| Civil engineer | $85,000 – $130,000 | CSIT: $79,499 (or Specialist Skills threshold if higher-paid) |
| Construction project manager | $110,000 – $160,000+ | Often qualifies for Specialist Skills stream (~$146,717 from 1 July 2026) |
The Core Skills Income Threshold (CSIT) — the legal minimum an employer can pay to sponsor a subclass 482 or 186 worker — is confirmed to rise from AUD $76,515 to AUD $79,499 on 1 July 2026. Employers must pay whichever is higher: the CSIT or the genuine market salary rate (Annual Market Salary Rate) for the role. The Specialist Skills Income Threshold (SSIT) for high-earning roles rises to approximately AUD $146,717 from the same date — roles at this level skip the restricted occupation list entirely.
Source: Australian Department of Home Affairs, confirmed 5 March 2026; figures apply to nominations lodged on or after 1 July 2026.
Visa Types for Construction Workers
| Visa | Purpose | Duration | PR Pathway? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subclass 482 (Skills in Demand) — Core Skills stream | Most sponsored trade and professional roles | Up to 4 years | Yes, via 186 TRT after 2 years |
| Subclass 482 — Specialist Skills stream | High earners (≈$146,717+), no occupation list restriction | Up to 4 years, faster processing | Yes |
| Subclass 186 (Employer Nomination Scheme) | Permanent, direct sponsorship | Permanent | Immediate PR |
| Subclass 494 (Skilled Employer Sponsored Regional) | Regional employers only | 5 years | Yes, via subclass 191 after 3 years |
| DAMA (Designated Area Migration Agreement) | Negotiated regional arrangements with reduced thresholds | Varies | Often leads to 494/186 |
The subclass 482 replaced the old Temporary Skill Shortage (TSS) visa on 7 December 2024 under the “Skills in Demand” framework — older guides referencing “TSS” or “TSMIT” are now outdated; the correct current terms are CSIT and SSIT.
How Employer Sponsorship Works
- The employer becomes an approved Standard Business Sponsor (SBS) with the Department of Home Affairs — a prerequisite before nominating anyone.
- The employer nominates your specific position, confirming your occupation matches an ANZSCO code on the Core Skills Occupation List (CSOL), and that the role is genuine.
- Labour Market Testing (LMT) — for Core Skills nominations, the employer must generally advertise the role for at least four weeks to show no suitable Australian worker was available (the 186 visa does not require LMT).
- The employer pays the Skilling Australians Fund (SAF) levy and nomination fee — this cannot legally be passed on to you.
- You lodge your visa application, providing evidence of at least one year of relevant full-time work experience within the last five years, a positive skills assessment (for most trades), and English language test results.
- Processing currently runs roughly 4–8 months for most Core Skills cases; Specialist Skills nominations can be processed in as little as 7 days.
- After 2 years with the same sponsor (Core Skills/482), you become eligible to apply for the subclass 186 via the Temporary Residence Transition stream — permanent residence, with no further labour market testing.
Where to Find Legitimate Sponsorship Opportunities
Official/verified sources:
- Department of Home Affairs — employer sponsorship information: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/employing-and-sponsoring-someone
- Core Skills Occupation List (CSOL) — verify your occupation is actually eligible before pursuing any offer: available via the Department of Home Affairs skilled occupation lists page
- Salary requirements to nominate a worker (official CSIT/SSIT reference): https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/employing-and-sponsoring-someone/sponsoring-workers/nominating-a-position/salary-requirements
Registered Migration Agents (RMAs): Any agent assisting with an Australian sponsorship application should be a Registered Migration Agent, listed on the Office of the Migration Agents Registration Authority (MARA) public register — verify any agent or agency here before paying any fee: https://www.mara.gov.au
A note on job boards and recruiters: Several Australian migration and recruitment firms operate construction- and engineering-specific placement services connected to registered migration agents. Because firm names, staffing levels, and services change often, verify any specific agency’s current registration on the MARA register above rather than relying on a static list — and never pay an employer, agent, or recruiter for a nomination or sponsorship itself, only for legitimate migration agent professional fees, which should be disclosed upfront in a written service agreement.
Eligibility Requirements and Documents Checklist
Core eligibility:
- Genuine job offer from an approved Standard Business Sponsor
- Occupation listed on the Core Skills Occupation List (or salary above the Specialist Skills threshold)
- At least 1 year of relevant full-time work experience in the last 5 years
- Positive skills assessment from the relevant assessing authority (for most trades)
- English language ability — typically IELTS 5.0 overall (no band below 4.5) for 482, though requirements vary by stream and occupation
- Under 45 years old at time of nomination for most streams (some exemptions apply, e.g., high income earners)
- Health and character requirements (medical exam, police clearances)
Documents typically required:
- Valid passport
- Signed employment contract/nomination details
- Skills assessment result (trade occupations)
- English language test results
- Evidence of relevant work experience (reference letters, payslips, contracts)
- Police clearance certificates from all countries lived in for 12+ months
- Medical examination results from a Home Affairs-approved panel physician
- Proof of qualifications (trade certificates, degrees where relevant)
Applying and Visa Verification
- Confirm your employer’s Standard Business Sponsor status and the nomination approval before lodging your own visa application.
- Lodge your visa application online through ImmiAccount (the Department of Home Affairs’ official portal).
- Complete biometrics and health examinations as instructed.
- Track your application status directly through ImmiAccount — do not rely on third-party status trackers.
- For nominations lodged on or after 1 July 2026, confirm the updated visa application charges apply, as fees increased significantly from that date.
To verify visa application charges, processing times, or your application status, always use the official Department of Home Affairs portal: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au
Mistakes to Avoid During the Process
- Assuming the old TSS/TSMIT terminology still applies. The subclass 482 was restructured into the Skills in Demand framework in December 2024 — using outdated guides can lead to incorrect salary or process assumptions.
- Underestimating the salary threshold. Nominations are automatically refused if the offered salary is below the CSIT, regardless of the local market rate — always check the current threshold before accepting an offer.
- Skipping the ANZSCO code match. Mismatched duties between your actual role and the nominated occupation code is one of the most common reasons for nomination refusal.
- Not securing a skills assessment early. Trade occupations require a positive skills assessment, which can take weeks to months — start this well before you need it.
- Paying sponsorship, nomination, or SAF levy costs yourself. These are illegal to pass on to the worker under Australian law — if asked to pay, treat it as a serious red flag.
- Assuming any migration “agent” is legitimate. Only agents on the official MARA register are authorized to charge for immigration assistance in Australia.
- Ignoring visa fee changes. Visa application charges rose again from 1 July 2026 — budget for the current fee schedule, not older figures you may find online.
Permanent Residence Pathways
| Pathway | Best For | Timeline to PR |
|---|---|---|
| 482 Core Skills → 186 TRT | Most sponsored trade/professional workers | 2 years with same sponsor, then apply |
| 482 Specialist Skills → 186 | High earners | 2 years, faster initial processing |
| 494 Regional → 191 | Workers willing to relocate to regional Australia | 3 years in regional employment |
| 186 Direct Entry | Employers sponsoring directly for permanent roles from the outset | Immediate PR upon approval |
Final Word
Australia’s employer-sponsored visa system gives construction tradespeople and professionals one of the more direct and well-documented routes to permanent residence available anywhere in the world — provided you go through a properly registered Standard Business Sponsor and, where you use one, a MARA-registered migration agent. Given how frequently salary thresholds and visa fees change (both moved again on 1 July 2026), always verify current figures on the Department of Home Affairs website before accepting any offer or making relocation plans.