Subclass 491 Processing Time: How Long Does the 491 Visa Take?
Subclass 491 Processing Time: How Long Does the 491 Visa Take?
The subclass 491 visa is not processed in a single queue. You are waiting in two separate queues simultaneously — one at the state nomination level, one at the federal visa processing level — and they operate on entirely different timelines. Most applicants who ask "how long does the 491 take?" are conflating these two stages, which is why the answer is more complicated than a single number.
Federal processing times (from lodgement to visa grant)
The Department of Home Affairs publishes processing time estimates that reflect actual recent outcomes. For the subclass 491, current data shows a stratified timeline:
- 25th percentile: 3 to 7 months
- 50th percentile (median): 6 to 20 months
- 90th percentile: 15 to 28 months
In plain terms: one in four applications is finalised within 3-7 months of lodgement. Half are done within 20 months. One in ten takes over two years.
The range is wide because processing is not first-in, first-out. The Department of Home Affairs processes visa applications according to Ministerial Direction No. 105, which establishes a priority order. Applications lodged in Category 2 regional areas (Perth, Adelaide, Gold Coast, Canberra, Newcastle, Wollongong, Geelong, Hobart) receive priority processing ahead of applications lodged for Category 3 areas (smaller regional centres and rural towns). This is a meaningful advantage for applicants targeting major regional cities over smaller inland or coastal communities.
What happens before federal lodgement
Federal processing time starts only after you receive a formal invitation and lodge your application. Before that, you are waiting in the state nomination system — and that timeline is entirely separate and state-dependent.
Western Australia processes nominations relatively quickly when their occupation ceilings have available places, with many applicants receiving outcomes within 4-8 weeks of a complete application. WA's high allocation (2,200 places in 2025-26) means their queue generally moves faster than smaller states.
South Australia runs structured invitation rounds. The April 2026 round issued 445 total invitations for 190 and 491 combined. If you miss a round or your score falls below the round's invitation threshold, you wait for the next round — typically monthly.
Victoria uses a Registration of Interest (ROI) queue with no fixed schedule. Selection happens in batches at the state's discretion, and ROI timelines can extend from weeks to many months depending on your occupation and score. VIC closed its 2024-25 skilled visa program mid-year due to allocation exhaustion, which left some applicants waiting until the 2025-26 program year opened.
New South Wales has multiple pathways with different timelines. Pathway 1 (regional employment) requires applicants to be already working regionally for six months, so the clock starts well before you even apply for nomination.
Tasmania operates a tiered priority system. Gold pass candidates (critical occupations, $57,000+ salary, or overseas applicants) receive invitations rapidly. Lower-tier candidates wait for their priority tier to be reached, which can take several rounds.
Northern Territory requires 12 consecutive months of NT residency before you can even apply for nomination. That residency requirement effectively sets a minimum one-year pre-nomination timeline for any onshore applicant who has not already been living in the NT.
Total expected timeline: a realistic view
For most applicants, the realistic total timeline from submitting your first skills assessment application to receiving the 491 visa grant runs as follows:
| Stage | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Skills assessment | 8-16 weeks (varies by assessing body) |
| English test (if not already completed) | 2-4 weeks from test date |
| EOI submission and waiting for state round | 1-3 months (varies by state) |
| State nomination process | 4-12 weeks after application |
| Federal visa processing after lodgement | 3-20 months (50th percentile) |
| Total from start to finish | 9 months to 2+ years |
The wide range reflects genuine variation across states and occupations. A healthcare worker applying through Western Australia under Schedule 1 with strong documents and a job offer in hand can reasonably expect the process to complete at the faster end. An offshore ICT professional applying through South Australia without an existing connection to the state will move more slowly through each stage.
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What causes processing delays
Incomplete or inconsistent documentation is the primary cause of unnecessary delays after lodgement. The Department of Home Affairs issues Section 56 requests for additional information when evidence gaps are identified. Responding to these requests takes time, and each response restarts a portion of the processing clock.
Health and police clearances are external-dependency items that can extend timelines unpredictably. Police clearances from some countries take significantly longer than others — applicants from certain jurisdictions report waiting 3-6 months for clearance letters. Start these processes early, ideally before or immediately after receiving your invitation.
Incomplete partner documentation frequently causes delays when applicants include a spouse or de facto partner. All evidence requirements apply to secondary applicants as well as the primary, including police clearances and health examinations.
Queue position under Ministerial Direction priorities means that an application lodged for a Category 3 location may genuinely take twice as long as a comparable application for a Category 2 city. If you have flexibility on where to settle, targeting a Category 2 designated regional area is a direct lever on processing speed.
Bridging visa during processing (onshore applicants)
If you are applying onshore and your current substantive visa expires while the 491 is processing, you will be placed on a Bridging Visa A automatically. A BVA allows you to remain in Australia and continue working under the same conditions as your previous visa. It does not restrict your location or occupation.
Bridging visas are not a crisis — they are the normal mechanism for visa transitions. However, travel outside Australia on a BVA without a Bridging Visa B will typically cancel the BVA, so do not leave Australia during processing without first confirming your bridging visa entitlements.
Offshore applicants and the timing of travel
Offshore applicants cannot receive a Bridging Visa and have no right to enter Australia until the visa is granted. Once granted, the first entry must occur before the initial arrival date specified in the visa grant letter (typically 12 months from grant). Plan travel bookings only after grant and verify the initial entry deadline.
For a full application walkthrough, state-specific nomination strategies, and everything you need to track from day one of your regional period, see the Australia Skilled Work Regional Visa (491) Guide.
Get Your Free Australia Skilled Work Regional Visa (491) Guide — Quick-Start Checklist
Download the Australia Skilled Work Regional Visa (491) Guide — Quick-Start Checklist — a printable guide with checklists, scripts, and action plans you can start using today.