Caren Immigration – With you in starting a new life
Australian employer-sponsored visas allow businesses to employ skilled overseas workers when they cannot find suitably qualified Australian workers for the position. These visas may provide a temporary work pathway, a regional employment pathway, or a permanent residence pathway depending on the visa subclass, occupation, employer, salary, location, and applicant’s background.
At Caren Immigration, we assist both Australian employers and skilled candidates with employer-sponsored visa matters, including eligibility assessment, sponsorship, nomination, visa application preparation, compliance guidance, and document strategy.
The Skills in Demand visa, subclass 482, allows an approved employer to sponsor a suitably skilled worker for a position that cannot be filled by an appropriately skilled Australian worker.
This visa may be suitable for employers who need to fill genuine skill shortages and for candidates who have relevant qualifications, work experience, English ability, and an eligible occupation.
Common requirements include:
The Employer Nomination Scheme visa, subclass 186, is a permanent employer-sponsored visa that allows skilled workers nominated by an employer to live and work in Australia permanently.
The main streams include:
This pathway may be suitable where the employer can offer a genuine skilled position and the candidate meets the relevant age, English, skills, experience, health, and character requirements.
The Skilled Employer Sponsored Regional visa, subclass 494, allows regional employers to sponsor skilled workers where they cannot source an appropriately skilled Australian worker in their region.
This visa is generally designed for regional employment and may provide a pathway to permanent residence through the regional skilled migration framework, subject to meeting the relevant requirements.
This visa may be suitable for:
A labour agreement may be available where standard visa programs are not suitable, but there is a demonstrated need for overseas workers that cannot be met in the Australian labour market. Labour agreements may support visas under subclass 482, subclass 186, and subclass 494.
This may be relevant for employers in industries such as aged care, hospitality, meat processing, dairy, horticulture, and regional workforce shortage areas.
Caren Immigration assists employers with the complete sponsorship process, including:
We assess whether your business is suitable to sponsor overseas workers, including business operations, financial position, workforce needs, compliance history, and the genuine need for the nominated position.
We review the proposed role, duties, ANZSCO alignment, occupation list eligibility, salary level, market salary evidence, and whether the position appears genuine and full-time.
We assist eligible businesses to apply for approval as a Standard Business Sponsor, where required.
For some employer-sponsored visas, employers must provide evidence of labour market testing unless an exemption applies. Labour market testing generally involves advertising the position in Australia for at least four weeks in at least two advertisements.
We prepare and lodge the nomination application, including position documents, salary evidence, business documents, employment contract review, and genuine position submissions.
We guide employers on sponsorship obligations, including employment conditions, record keeping, notification duties, and ensuring sponsored workers are treated consistently with Australian workplace laws.
We assist employers to identify whether subclass 482, subclass 186, subclass 494, or a labour agreement pathway is more suitable for their recruitment and long-term staffing needs.
Caren Immigration assists skilled workers who are seeking employer-sponsored visa pathways in Australia.
Our candidate services include:
We assess your occupation, qualifications, work experience, English level, age, visa history, and potential employer-sponsored pathways.
We review whether your experience aligns with a suitable skilled occupation and whether a skills assessment may be required.
We advise whether subclass 482, subclass 186, subclass 494, or another visa pathway may be suitable for your circumstances.
We assist in preparing your professional profile, including CV review, experience alignment with ANZSCO requirements, and positioning your background for employer expectations in Australia.
Where appropriate, we may introduce suitable candidates to employers within our network who are actively seeking skilled workers, based on:
Please note that:
We assist with preparing evidence of employment, qualifications, English, identity, and other supporting documents.
We prepare and lodge the visa application and liaise with the Department of Home Affairs where required.
Where applicable, we provide advice on longer-term pathways, including transition from temporary employer sponsorship to permanent residence.
Not automatically. The business must usually be lawfully operating and must meet the relevant sponsorship, nomination, and compliance requirements.
Employer-sponsored nominations generally require a genuine position with proper employment terms. The specific requirements depend on the visa subclass and stream.
For some visa types, labour market testing is required unless an exemption applies. The Department states that labour market testing generally involves advertising the role for at least four weeks in at least two advertisements.
In many cases, yes. Depending on the occupation, employer, visa history, and eligibility, a subclass 482 holder may later be eligible for a subclass 186 pathway.
Employer-sponsored visas generally require an employer nomination. Candidates without an employer may need to consider skilled visas, regional visas, graduate visas, partner visas, or other options.