1. The 494 Advantage: 650+ Occupations
The 494 visa uses the Regional Occupation List (ROL), which is significantly broader than the lists used for city-based visas.
- More Jobs: It includes niche roles like Restaurant Manager, Agricultural Technician, and specialized Construction Trades that aren’t always available for 189/190 visas.
- Independent PR: Unlike the 482 (Skills in Demand) visa, once you hold a 494 for 3 years, you apply for the 191 PR visa without needing your boss to nominate you again. This gives you immense leverage and security.
2. Where to Look: The 2026 “Sponsor Hubs”
In 2026, “Regional” includes everywhere in Australia except Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane.
- The “Tier 1” Hubs: Perth, Adelaide, and the Gold Coast. These cities have thousands of “Standard Business Sponsors” (SBS) already approved to hire migrants.
- The “Priority” Hubs: Darwin, Townsville, and Hobart. Employers here are often more desperate for staff and are more likely to cover your relocation costs.
3. How to Find a Sponsoring Boss
Don’t just “apply for a job.” You need to find an employer who is “Visa Ready.”
A. Use Filtered Job Searches
On SEEK or LinkedIn, use specific keywords in your search:
- “494 sponsorship available”
- “Eligible for regional sponsorship”
- “Standard Business Sponsor”
- “Relocation assistance provided”
B. Target Small-to-Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
Large Tier-1 construction firms often have rigid HR policies. In 2026, local family-owned businesses in places like Geelong, Cairns, or Bunbury are your best bet. They value long-term loyalty and see the 494 visa as a way to keep a skilled worker for at least 5 years.
C. The “Cold Outreach” Strategy
Check the Skilled Migrant Employment Register (SMER) or state-specific talent pools (like South Australia’s Talent & Industry Connection Program). Many regional bosses don’t advertise sponsorship—they wait for a qualified candidate to ask for it.
4. The “Deal Breaker” Requirements (2026)
To get a 494 visa, you must meet these non-negotiable criteria:
- Work Experience: You must have 3 years of full-time, post-qualification experience in your trade. (Casual work generally does not count).
- Skills Assessment: You must have a positive skills assessment at the time of application.
- Age: You must be under 45 (unless you fall under specific high-income or academic exemptions).
- English: You need “Competent English” (IELTS 6.0 in all bands or PTE 50).
5. 2026 Financial Thresholds
As of July 1, 2025, the minimum salary for a sponsored worker (TSMIT) was indexed. In 2026, you can expect the threshold to be approximately $76,515 + Superannuation. Your employer must prove they are paying you the “Market Salary Rate”—meaning they can’t pay you less than an Australian doing the same job.
6. Summary: The Step-by-Step Pathway
- Skills First: Get your positive Skills Assessment (TRA/VETASSESS) and English test done.
- Target Regional: Focus your job hunt on Category 2 and 3 areas.
- The Pitch: When interviewing, highlight that the 494 visa is a 5-year commitment to their business.
- Nomination: Your boss lodges the nomination; you lodge the visa.
- The Result: After 3 years of regional work, you apply for the 191 Permanent Residency visa.






