
The Department of Home Affairs has released the 15th edition of its flagship “Administration of the Immigration and Citizenship Programs” (the “Administration Paper”), dated 22 October 2025. The 80-page report is the first comprehensive stock-take since Australia’s post-pandemic migration reset and offers the clearest official picture yet of how the system is coping with record demand and rapidly evolving policy settings. According to the paper, 9.48 million visa applications were lodged in 2024-25, up 1.7 % on the previous year, while 9.45 million decisions were finalised, keeping overall backlogs broadly stable at 312,000 cases.
Temporary visa holders in Australia rose 3.5 % to 2.78 million, driven largely by strong take-up of the revamped Skills-in-Demand (SID) and Working-Holiday programs. Net Overseas Migration eased to 316,000 in the year to March 2025—well below the post-COVID peak of 556,000—indicating that last year’s record surge is moderating in line with Treasury forecasts of 225,000 by 2028-29.
The report credits recent reforms—including the new three-stream SID visa, tightened genuine-student tests and higher English-language and financial thresholds—with sharpening the economic focus of the program while curbing unsustainable growth in low-skill segments. Student-visa lodgements, for example, fell 26 % after the reforms, but offshore skilled and innovation streams grew 14 %. Employers, meanwhile, are benefiting from faster digital processing: median decision times for employer-sponsored nominations dropped from 51 to 34 calendar days.
For global mobility managers, the data confirm that processing pressures are easing but not disappearing. The Department warns that “service standards remain highly sensitive to application surges,” urging companies to continue building lead-time buffers into assignment planning. Analysts also note that refusal rates (7.3 %) remain elevated relative to pre-pandemic norms, underscoring the importance of high-quality lodgements.
Practically, the paper’s granular statistics—broken down by nationality, occupation and visa subclass—provide employers with rare visibility into where bottlenecks still exist. Mobility teams are advised to monitor upcoming quarterly addenda (now promised within six weeks of quarter-end) and to align workforce planning with the government’s stated aim of attracting “migration that fills critical skill gaps and lifts productivity.”
Temporary visa holders in Australia rose 3.5 % to 2.78 million, driven largely by strong take-up of the revamped Skills-in-Demand (SID) and Working-Holiday programs. Net Overseas Migration eased to 316,000 in the year to March 2025—well below the post-COVID peak of 556,000—indicating that last year’s record surge is moderating in line with Treasury forecasts of 225,000 by 2028-29.
The report credits recent reforms—including the new three-stream SID visa, tightened genuine-student tests and higher English-language and financial thresholds—with sharpening the economic focus of the program while curbing unsustainable growth in low-skill segments. Student-visa lodgements, for example, fell 26 % after the reforms, but offshore skilled and innovation streams grew 14 %. Employers, meanwhile, are benefiting from faster digital processing: median decision times for employer-sponsored nominations dropped from 51 to 34 calendar days.
For global mobility managers, the data confirm that processing pressures are easing but not disappearing. The Department warns that “service standards remain highly sensitive to application surges,” urging companies to continue building lead-time buffers into assignment planning. Analysts also note that refusal rates (7.3 %) remain elevated relative to pre-pandemic norms, underscoring the importance of high-quality lodgements.
Practically, the paper’s granular statistics—broken down by nationality, occupation and visa subclass—provide employers with rare visibility into where bottlenecks still exist. Mobility teams are advised to monitor upcoming quarterly addenda (now promised within six weeks of quarter-end) and to align workforce planning with the government’s stated aim of attracting “migration that fills critical skill gaps and lifts productivity.”





