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Oct 27, 2025

Government Tables Response on Pacific Engagement Visa Bill, Signals 3,000 Places From Mid-2026

Government Tables Response on Pacific Engagement Visa Bill, Signals 3,000 Places From Mid-2026
On 27 October 2025 the Department of Home Affairs lodged its formal response to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee’s report on the Migration Amendment (Australia’s Engagement in the Pacific and Other Measures) Bill 2023. The long-awaited reply confirms the government will press ahead with a lottery-style Pacific Engagement Visa (PEV) offering up to 3,000 permanent-residency places annually to citizens of Pacific Island countries and Timor-Leste.

Home Affairs agreed to 22 of the committee’s 29 recommendations, including stronger worker-exploitation safeguards and recognition of de facto partners in visa ballots. However, it rejected calls to give state governments a formal role in allocating regional settlement locations, saying federal-level planning would retain “operational agility.”

The response sets a target launch date of 1 July 2026, but departmental officials told Parliament preparations—such as biometric-enabled mobile enrolment and English-language support services—will begin immediately. Employers in agriculture, aged care and construction are identified as priority sponsors, aligning with critical-skills gaps highlighted by Jobs & Skills Australia.

Migration-law specialists welcomed clarity after months of uncertainty. Emma Drysdale, Partner at Fragomen, said companies planning major infrastructure projects should factor the PEV into workforce strategies, particularly because visa holders will have unrestricted work rights and a pathway to citizenship after four years.

Critics remain: Opposition spokesperson Dan Tehan argued the lottery undermines skills-based selection and could exacerbate housing shortages. The government counters that the visa is capped and geographically dispersed, with 70 % of arrivals to be placed in regional centres.
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