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A clear, source-referenced eligibility guide for professionals, founders, researchers, investors, athletes and creative talent considering Australia’s subclass 858 permanent residence pathway.
National Innovation Visa vs Skilled Migration Explore Our Blog National...
National Innovation Visa Subclass 858 Eligibility National Innovation Visa Subclass...
National Innovation Visa Subclass 858 Australia Explore Our Blog National...
A clear, source-referenced eligibility guide for professionals, founders, researchers, investors, athletes and creative talent considering Australia’s subclass 858 permanent residence pathway.
Understand who qualifies and who is not yet ready.
A clear, source-referenced eligibility guide for professionals, founders, researchers, investors, athletes and creative talent considering Australia’s subclass 858 permanent residence pathway.
Understand who qualifies and who is not yet ready.
A clear, source-referenced eligibility guide for professionals, founders, researchers, investors, athletes and creative talent considering Australia’s subclass 858 permanent residence pathway.
Understand who qualifies and who is not yet ready.
Australia’s migration strategy in 2026 increasingly focuses on talent, innovation and high-calibre professionals who can drive productivity and create jobs. The National Innovation Visa subclass 858 sits at the centre of that strategy a permanent visa for exceptionally talented migrants who can help create jobs and drive productivity growth in key sectors of the Australian economy.
The National Innovation Visa subclass 858 is a permanent visa for people with an internationally recognised record of exceptional and outstanding achievement in an eligible area. The visa allows the holder to stay in Australia indefinitely and to become a permanent resident on the day the visa is granted.
In 2026, the eligibility framework for subclass 858 continues to centre on seven core requirements. Each one matters a strong profile in one area cannot make up for a gap in another. The sections below walk through each requirement and what credible evidence tends to look like.
Eligible profile categories include:
The NIV is strictly invitation-only. A candidate must submit an Expression of Interest showing their achievements, and the Department must then invite them before they can apply for the visa. Once invited, a candidate receives a unique reference or identifier and must apply within 60 days; applications without an invitation, or made outside that timeframe, are not accepted.
The Department considers EOIs with regard to claimed indicators of exceptional achievement and NIV program priorities, and extends invitations according to the published priority order. Understanding where your profile is most credibly positioned shapes both your evidence strategy and your realistic expectations.
| Priority | Who it covers |
|---|---|
| Priority 1 | Global experts and recipients of international, top-of-field level awards. |
| Priority 2 | Candidates from any sector nominated on an approved Form 1000 by an expert Australian Commonwealth, State or Territory Government agency. |
| Priority 3 | Candidates with exceptional and outstanding achievements in a Tier One sector. |
| Priority 4 | Candidates with exceptional and outstanding achievements in a Tier Two sector. |
Unlike many points-tested skilled visas, the NIV does not impose a hard age cap. A candidate can be any age; however, applicants under 18 or aged 55 or older must show that they would be of exceptional benefit to the Australian community.
This is meaningful for senior leaders, business owners, late-career researchers and long-experienced professionals whose strongest evidence often sits later in their career. Being above 55 does not automatically close the door the question becomes whether your achievements, capital, research, leadership or innovation can credibly demonstrate exceptional benefit to Australia.
Applicants aged 18 or over must provide evidence of at least functional English, or may be required to pay a second instalment visa application charge if they do not. Functional English is a lower threshold than the high-band English scores chased on many points-tested pathways, but the requirement and supporting evidence still need to be planned correctly.
When applying, the applicant must provide a completed Form 1000. Home Affairs will not process the application without a completed Form 1000. Form 1000 is the nomination instrument that supports a candidate’s claim of exceptional and outstanding achievement.
Form 1000 also intersects with priority strategy: a candidate from any sector nominated on an approved Form 1000 by an expert Australian Commonwealth, State or Territory Government agency may be considered under Priority 2. Selecting and approaching the right nominator is therefore both an eligibility step and a priority strategy step
The applicant and any family members included in the application must meet Australia’s health and character requirements. These are standard for permanent visas but should not be left to the last moment, particularly where there is long international travel history, dependants with medical conditions, or any prior police, visa or immigration history that may need disclosure and explanation.
A candidate may include members of their family unit in the visa application. This typically encompasses a partner and dependent children. Family members must also meet health and character requirements, and English-related rules may apply to adult family members.
Some profiles tend to translate well into NIV evidence assuming the underlying achievements are genuine, current and well documented. Examples include:
Many candidates self-disqualify because they assume the NIV requires Nobel-level fame. That is a misreading of the framework. The eligibility test is an internationally recognised record of exceptional and outstanding achievement, not celebrity. What it does require is strong, credible evidence and the right positioning clear documentation of impact, recognition that is verifiable beyond your immediate workplace, and a coherent story that maps to one of the four priorities.
Candidates often hold stronger evidence than they realise but it sits scattered across old CVs, project records, press mentions, citations, internal recognitions, business metrics and IP filings. Without disciplined achievement mining and positioning, a strong profile can read as a generic one.
Not sure if you qualify?
Let Voyager Compass check your eligibility before you submit an EOI. We assess your real achievements, mine for hidden recognition and impact, review documentation gaps, and tell you candidly whether the National Innovation Visa subclass 858 is worth pursuing and how to position your profile if it is.
Voyager Compass Consultancy Consultancy LLP provides profile assessment, documentation strategy, evidence organisation, and application coordination support for exceptional talent visa pathways.
Voyager Compass Consultancy LLP provides profile assessment, documentation strategy, evidence organisation, and application coordination support for exceptional talent visa pathways.