
The random-selection phase of Australia’s flagship Pacific Engagement Visa (PEV) closed on 1 February 2026, marking the end of a five-month ballot that attracted more than 56,000 registrations across 11 Pacific nations and Timor-Leste. (immi.homeaffairs.gov.au)
Up to 3,000 successful registrants will now have 120 days to file their permanent-residence applications, including proof of an Australian job offer paying at least the Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold (currently A$70,000). The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has granted only about 100 visas so far, citing rigorous integrity checks but acknowledging “refinements” are needed to speed processing.
Amid these tight timelines, VisaHQ’s Australia desk (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) can streamline the process for both registrants and sponsoring employers by coordinating required police certificates, health checks and certified translations, while also reviewing employment contracts to ensure they meet the A$70,000 income threshold—all via an online portal that tracks every step toward the 120-day deadline.
Applicants report steep document costs—up to A$5,500 in Papua New Guinea—and lost job offers while waiting. Employer awareness also remains low, prompting the government to expand its free PEV Support Service and to stage virtual job-matching fairs this month.
For Australian companies the PEV provides a new, permanent pathway to tap Pacific talent in construction, aged care and hospitality, but HR teams must move quickly to identify roles and issue compliant contracts before the 120-day deadline expires.
Up to 3,000 successful registrants will now have 120 days to file their permanent-residence applications, including proof of an Australian job offer paying at least the Temporary Skilled Migration Income Threshold (currently A$70,000). The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has granted only about 100 visas so far, citing rigorous integrity checks but acknowledging “refinements” are needed to speed processing.
Amid these tight timelines, VisaHQ’s Australia desk (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) can streamline the process for both registrants and sponsoring employers by coordinating required police certificates, health checks and certified translations, while also reviewing employment contracts to ensure they meet the A$70,000 income threshold—all via an online portal that tracks every step toward the 120-day deadline.
Applicants report steep document costs—up to A$5,500 in Papua New Guinea—and lost job offers while waiting. Employer awareness also remains low, prompting the government to expand its free PEV Support Service and to stage virtual job-matching fairs this month.
For Australian companies the PEV provides a new, permanent pathway to tap Pacific talent in construction, aged care and hospitality, but HR teams must move quickly to identify roles and issue compliant contracts before the 120-day deadline expires.






