Skilled Migration Visas
Australia’s General Skilled Migration (GSM) program is a points-tested migration system designed to attract highly qualified professionals whose occupations are in demand across Australia.
Australia’s General Skilled Migration (GSM) program is a points-tested migration system designed to attract highly qualified professionals whose occupations are in demand across Australia.
• Skilled Independent Visa (Subclass 189)
• Skilled Nominated Visa (Subclass 190)
• Skilled Work Regional (Provisional) Visa (Subclass 491)
1. Skills Assessment
2. Expression of Interest (EOI)
3. Visa Application after Invitation
We provide complete end-to-end strategic management of all three stages.
A Skills Assessment is a mandatory requirement for all GSM applicants. It verifies that your qualifications and employment experience meet Australian standards for your nominated occupation.
Each occupation is assessed by a designated assessing authority. For example:
Engineers – Engineers Australia
Accountants – CPA Australia, CAANZ
IT Professionals – Australian Computer Society
Trades – Trades Recognition Australia
Health Professionals – Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency
What Is Assessed?
Educational qualifications
Employment history
Relevance of work experience
Licensing or registration (if required)
English language competency (in some cases)
Key Considerations:
Your nominated occupation must match your qualifications and employment duties.
Incorrect occupation selection is one of the most common reasons for refusal.
Employment evidence must clearly demonstrate duties aligned with ANZSCO standards.
Some authorities require Continuing Professional Development (CPD) evidence.
Our Skills Assessment Services:
Occupation suitability analysis
ANZSCO code matching
Document review and restructuring
Employment reference drafting guidance
CDR preparation assistance (for engineers)
Appeal and reassessment support (if required)
A positive skills assessment is required before lodging your Expression of Interest.
An Expression of Interest (EOI) is submitted through the Australian Government’s system. It is not a visa application — it is a formal declaration of your interest in applying for skilled migration.
The EOI Includes:
Personal details
Nominated occupation
Skills assessment details
English test results
Education qualifications
Employment history
Points claim calculation
State/territory nomination preferences (if applicable)
Points Test Categories:
Age
English language proficiency
Skilled employment (Australian & overseas)
Educational qualifications
Australian study requirement
Specialist education qualification
Regional study
Partner skills
State nomination (5 points for 190)
Regional nomination/sponsorship (15 points for 491)
Important Notes:
Minimum threshold is 65 points (however competitive occupations often require higher).
Claims must be accurate and verifiable.
Over-claiming points can lead to refusal and bans.
EOIs remain valid for 2 years.
For Subclass 190 and 491, applicants must also apply for state nomination, which has separate eligibility requirements.
Our EOI Strategy Includes:
Accurate points assessment
Strategic occupation selection
State comparison analysis
Competitive score optimisation
Partner skills evaluation
Ongoing monitoring for invitation rounds
A well-structured EOI significantly improves invitation prospects.
Once an Invitation to Apply (ITA) is issued, applicants have 60 days to lodge the visa application. This stage involves detailed documentation and strict compliance verification.
Core Requirements:
Identity documents
Positive skills assessment
English test results
Employment evidence
Education certificates
Health examinations
Police clearances
Partner and dependent documents (if applicable)
Key Risk Areas:
Discrepancies between EOI and documents
Insufficient employment evidence
Incorrect points claim
Character issues
We conduct a comprehensive pre-lodgement audit to ensure accuracy and compliance.
Skilled Independent Visa – Subclass 189
Permanent residency visa for invited skilled workers without sponsorship.
Benefits:
• Live and work anywhere in Australia
• Permanent residency upon grant
• Access to Medicare
• Pathway to citizenship
Skilled Nominated Visa – Subclass 190
Permanent residency visa requiring nomination by a state or territory government.
Benefits:
• Additional 5 points
• Permanent residency
• Priority for state-identified occupations.
Skilled Work Regional (Provisional) Visa – Subclass 491
5-year provisional visa requiring regional nomination or family sponsorship.
Benefits:
• Additional 15 points
• Pathway to permanent residency (Subclass 191)
• Access to regional employment opportunities
Why Professional Guidance Matters
Skilled migration is highly competitive and increasingly complex. Small errors in:
• Occupation selection
• Points calculation
• Employment evidence
• State nomination alignment
can result in refusal or long delays.
Our firm provides: Comprehensive eligibility assessments
Detailed document preparation guidance
Risk identification and mitigation
Strategic EOI management
State nomination expertise
Complete visa lodgement support
Post-grant compliance advice
Tonio Lawyers is a full-service law firm providing dedicated legal divisions across immigration, criminal, family, property, commercial and personal injury law.
© 2026 Tonio Lawyers