On Thursday, 16 October 2025, the Department of Home Affairs conducted an information session for members about the Subclass 858 National Innovation Visa (NIV). The session served to clarify the program’s features, invitation process, priority tiers, and key statistics to date.
Here’s a detailed breakdown of what was shared — and how applicants and stakeholders should interpret it.
🌏 What Is the National Innovation Visa (Subclass 858)?
The NIV is a permanent visa pathway aimed at attracting exceptional global talent. It replaces the earlier Global Talent visa framework and is tightly focused on high-calibre individuals whose achievements are internationally recognized.
✅ According to the Department:
🔹 The program is invitation-only — you cannot apply directly without being invited.
🔹 Selection is based on indicators of exceptional and outstanding achievements, as well as alignment with program priorities set via Ministerial Direction 112 (MD 112).
🔹 The NIV is deliberately small and highly selective — it is meant for top-tier innovators, thinkers, creatives, researchers, entrepreneurs, or elite athletes.
During the session, it was emphasized that the Department expects only a limited number of invitations and that the program must remain exclusive to maintain its integrity.
📨 Invitation & Priority Matrix — How It Works
The session revealed how invitations (to apply for the NIV) are issued based on priority tiers. Applicants are classified under Priority 1, 2, 3, or 4, and invitations are managed differently depending on tier.
Key details include:
🔹 Priority 1 & Priority 2 candidates are invited as soon as they are identified (i.e. on an ongoing basis)
🔹 Priority 3 & Priority 4 candidates are invited on a monthly basis
🔹 The Department updates the number of invitations issued on its website on a quarterly basis
This approach means that certain top-tier candidates (P1/P2) may receive invitations more rapidly, while others in lower priority categories face a more regimented schedule.
📈 Numbers to Date: EOIs, Invitations & Visa Grants
From the session and recent public disclosures, here’s the snapshot of statistics:
🔹 Since the program’s launch, over 9,000 EOIs have been submitted
🔹 304 invitations have been issued
🔹 Roughly 85 visas have been granted so far
These figures underscore the extremely competitive nature of the NIV. The ratio of invites to total EOIs is small, reflecting the selective threshold the Department has set.
🗂️ Eligibility, Sectors & Nomination
📝 Who Can Apply & What Is Required
To be eligible for the NIV:
🔹 You must have an internationally recognised record of exceptional and outstanding achievement in one of the eligible fields (e.g. profession, academia/research, sport, arts)
🔹 You must still be prominent in your area
🔹 You should be an asset to the Australian community
🔹 You must show you can sustain yourself (employment or independent work) in your field in Australia
🔹 You must be nominated by an Australian citizen, permanent resident, eligible New Zealand citizen, or an Australian organisation that holds national reputation in your field
🔹 There is no formal age limit, but if under 18 or over 55, you need to demonstrate exceptional benefit to Australia
🔹 You must satisfy health, character, public interest criteria
📌 Priority Sectors & Ministerial Direction 112
The NIV prioritizes certain sectors in line with MD 112. The Department uses these priority areas in deciding which EOIs to invite first
According to migration-law commentary:
🔹 Priority 1: Global experts (e.g. Nobel laureates, Olympic gold medallists)
🔹 Priority 2: Candidates nominated by approved Australian government agency / body (i.e. endorsed nominations)
🔹 Priority 3: Exceptional and outstanding achievements in Tier 1 sectors (e.g. critical tech, health, clean energy)
🔹 Priority 4: Exceptional and outstanding achievements in Tier 2 sectors (e.g. agri-tech, infrastructure, transport, finance, education) State and territory governments are also rolling out nomination frameworks for NIV.
🗣️ What the Session Meant for Applicants & Stakeholders
✅ For Applicants & Prospective Candidates
🔹 This session clarified that EOIs cannot be edited or withdrawn. If your profile improves (e.g. new awards, publications), you must lodge a fresh EOI.
🔹 The timeline for invitation depends heavily on your priority tier — P1/P2 invites are faster, P3/P4 operate on a monthly cadence.
🔹 Only a tiny fraction of EOIs are progressing to invitations, underscoring how competitive the program is.
🔹 Having state or territory nomination (thus qualifying as Priority 2) could significantly increase the speed and likelihood of an invitation.
🔹 It remains essential to monitor the Department’s website for updates — invitation numbers, processing trends, and new guidance will be published there quarterly.
🤝 For Migration Advisers & Industry Stakeholders
🔹 This session and the published data offer transparency on how the Department is rolling out the NIV’s invitation framework.
🔹 Observing which sectors and categories receive more invitations could guide advice strategies (i.e. which fields currently have higher success rates).
🔹 The rigid nature of the program (no edits to EOI, strict priority tiers) means advisory practices must emphasize preparation and strength of evidence up front.
🔚 Conclusion
The 16 October 2025 member session by the Department of Home Affairs was a vital moment of clarity in the early stages of the National Innovation Visa (Subclass 858). The program’s invitation matrix, stringent EOI rules, and published statistics underline how selective it is.









