1. What is the “Housing for Seats” Rule?
In early 2026, the Australian Department of Education finalized a system where public universities are only allowed to increase their international student intake if they can prove they have created new, dedicated housing supply.
- The Logic: To stop international students from competing with local families in the private rental market, the government has turned “housing capacity” into the primary currency for enrollment growth.
- The Benefit: If your university is building beds, they get more “seats” (enrollment spots), and their students are moved to the top of the visa processing queue.
2. Ministerial Direction 115: The “Traffic Light” System
As of March 2026, Ministerial Direction 115 uses your university’s housing and enrollment status to determine your visa priority:
| Zone | University Status | Visa Processing Speed |
| Green Zone | Under 80% of their housing-linked cap | 1 – 4 Weeks (Fastest) |
| Amber Zone | 80% – 115% of their allocation | 5 – 8 Weeks (Standard) |
| Red Zone | Over 115% of their cap | 9 – 12+ Weeks (Delayed) |
3. 2026 “Housing Heroes”: Which Universities Won?
The universities that invested in Purpose-Built Student Accommodation (PBSA) have seen the largest increases in their 2026 allocations.
- The Regional Winners: Charles Sturt University and Federation University saw some of the highest proportional growth because they have ample space and have met the government’s housing criteria.
- The Metro Leaders: UniMelb and UNSW received moderate increases because they have over 10,000 new beds currently under construction or in the planning pipeline.
- The Capped Institutions: Universities that failed to demonstrate new housing (like USyd in certain sectors) have had their growth frozen at 0% for the 2026 intake.
4. Why Bed Count Matters to Your Enrollment
- Visa Reliability: If you choose a “Red Zone” university that is over-enrolled and under-housed, your visa might not be processed in time for the July 2026 intake.
- The “Housing Guarantee”: Many 2026 “Priority” universities are now offering Guaranteed Accommodation for first-year international students to help secure their “Housing for Seats” status.
- Cost Stability: Living in university-aligned PBSA means your utilities and internet are included, protecting you from the 2026 inflation spikes in the private rental market.
5. 2026 Strategy: Ask the “Housing Question”
Before you accept an offer, ask your education agent or the university directly:
- “Does this university have a ‘Green Zone’ priority under Ministerial Direction 115?”
- “Is there a housing guarantee for my course commencement?”
- “Has the university recently increased its on-campus bed capacity for 2026?”






