In 2026, the Significant Cost Threshold (SCT)—commonly known as the “$86,000 Health Cost Rule”—is the financial benchmark used by the Australian Department of Home Affairs to determine if a visa applicant’s medical condition or disability represents a “significant” cost to the Australian community.
If a Medical Officer of the Commonwealth (MOC) predicts that your healthcare or community service costs will exceed this amount over a specified period (usually 10 years), you may fail the health requirement.
1. How the $86,000 is Calculated
The MOC does not look at what you actually spend; they look at what the condition could cost the public system. The $86,000 threshold is typically calculated over:
- Permanent Visas: A 10-year period (effectively $8,600 per year).
- Temporary Visas: The expected duration of the visa stay.
- Ongoing/Permanent Conditions: If the condition is lifelong, the estimate is still capped at a 10-year projection for the sake of the threshold.
2. What Costs Count Toward the Threshold?
The MOC includes a wide range of “notional” costs in their 2026 assessment:
- Pharmaceuticals: Any drugs listed on the PBS (Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme).
- Medical Services: Medicare-funded doctor visits, specialist consultations, and hospital surgeries.
- Community Services: Disability support, home care, and special education services for children (e.g., speech therapy or OT provided through schools).
- Allied Health: Physiotherapy or mental health services if they are expected to be publicly funded.
3. High-Risk Conditions for 2026
Conditions that frequently trigger the $86,000 rule include:
- HIV/Hepatitis: Due to the high cost of ongoing antiviral medications.
- Autism & Intellectual Disabilities: Primarily due to the estimated cost of special education and community support.
- Chronic Kidney Disease: Specifically if the MOC anticipates a need for dialysis or a transplant within 10 years.
- Cancers: Depending on the stage and the likelihood of expensive immunotherapy or biological treatments.
4. The “One Fails, All Fail” Rule
Australia’s health requirement is a “family” requirement. Under Public Interest Criteria (PIC) 4005 and 4007:
- If a secondary applicant (e.g., your child or partner) fails the health requirement because their costs exceed $86,000, the entire family’s visa will be refused, even if the main applicant is perfectly healthy.
5. Your Options: The Health Waiver (PIC 4007)
Failing the health check because of the $86,000 rule is not an automatic “end of the road.”
- PIC 4007 Visas: Many visas (like Partner, Child, and some Employer-sponsored streams) allow for a Health Waiver. This is a legal submission where you argue that your (or your family’s) social and economic contribution to Australia outweighs the estimated $86,000 cost.
- PIC 4005 Visas: Most skilled independent visas (like Subclass 189/190) do not have a waiver. If you exceed the $86,000 threshold on these, the visa is usually refused with no room for argument.






