The question isn’t if Uber reports your hours, but how the Department of Home Affairs accesses them. While Uber doesn’t send a “weekly report” to Immigration, the data-sharing landscape in 2026 has become highly automated through the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and new Digital ID frameworks.
If you are on a student visa, your Uber “Online Time” is now more visible to the government than ever before.
1. The ATO Data-Matching Bridge
The most common way Home Affairs sees your Uber activity is not through the app itself, but through the ATO.
- Automatic Sharing: In 2026, the ATO and Department of Home Affairs have a formal data-sharing agreement. Uber is legally required to report your Gross Earnings and ABN activity to the ATO.
- The “Income-to-Hours” Audit: If you report $3,000 in ABN income for a fortnight, Home Affairs uses “earnings-based algorithms” to estimate your hours. If your income suggests you worked 60 hours to earn it, they may issue a Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation (NOICC).
2. Single Touch Payroll (STP) Phase 2
As of 2026, STP Phase 2 is fully operational for all digital platforms.
- Real-Time Reporting: Platforms like Uber and DoorDash report payment data to the ATO every time a payment is finalized.
- Identity Matching: Because your ABN is linked to your TFN and your Digital ID, Home Affairs can instantly see how much you are earning across all platforms (Uber + DoorDash + a TFN job) and flag combined breaches.
3. The “Online Time” vs. “Active Time” Trap
A major 2026 compliance risk is how the government defines “work” for gig workers.
- The Department’s View: Home Affairs typically considers the time you are logged in and available for trips as “work.”
- Uber’s Data: If requested during a manual audit, Uber can provide “Online Logs” showing exactly when you toggled the app on and off.
- The Danger: If you spend 10 hours sitting in your car with the app on waiting for a delivery, those 10 hours count toward your 48-hour fortnightly limit.
4. 2026 Update: The 60-Hour Proposal
As of April 2026, there is a legislative proposal to increase the student work limit to 60 hours per fortnight starting July 1, 2026.
- Current Status: Until that date, the limit is strictly 48 hours.
- Monitoring: Even if the cap increases, the automated monitoring via the ATO will only become more precise.
5. How to Protect Your Visa in 2026
| Action | Why it matters |
| Log Off Promptly | Do not stay “Online” if you aren’t actively looking for trips; every minute counts as visa work time. |
| Keep a Personal Log | Capture screenshots of your weekly Uber “Online Time” summaries. These are your primary evidence if audited. |
| Combined Tracking | Remember: [Uber Hours] + [TFN Job Hours] must be under 48 hours per Monday-to-Monday fortnight. |
| STP Consistency | Ensure your ABN details on your tax return match your visa name exactly to avoid “Identity Mismatch” flags. |





