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Work Rights on Australian Student Visa 2026: The 48-Hour Fortnightly Cap Explained

The question comes up in every student WhatsApp group within weeks of arriving in Australia: how many hours can I actually work? The official answer is 48 hours per fortnight. The follow-up questions — when does a fortnight start? Do volunteers count? What happens during exams? — trip up students who rely on group chat answers rather than the actual visa condition.

Getting your work hours wrong is not a minor administrative slip. Exceeding the 48-hour cap is a breach of Condition 8105, and breaching your visa conditions can lead to cancellation. A cancelled student visa means you lose your onshore status, your ability to apply for the 485 Temporary Graduate Visa, and potentially your right to re-enter Australia for a specified period. The stakes are high enough that understanding the exact rules is worth more than ten minutes.

The 48-Hour Rule: Exact Mechanics

Condition 8105 applies to the primary student visa holder. The cap is 48 hours per fortnight during any period in which your course is in session — including examination periods.

The Department of Home Affairs defines a fortnight strictly as a 14-day period beginning on a Monday. This means the fortnightly cycle resets every Monday, and you calculate your hours worked from Monday to the following Sunday.

The 48-hour cap is cumulative across all jobs. If you work 30 hours at one employer and 20 hours at another in the same fortnight, you are at 50 hours — which is a breach. Employers may not be aware of your other employment, but the Department monitors employment data through tax records and ATO data-matching. Two jobs, one cap.

When Hours Are Unrestricted

There are important exceptions where the 48-hour limit does not apply:

Official academic recess periods (semester breaks, term holidays) — your work hours become fully unrestricted during scheduled academic breaks. If your university's semester one ends on a Friday and semester two begins six weeks later, every hour you work in that interval is uncapped.

Master's by Research and Doctoral (PhD) students — students enrolled in a Master's degree by research or a Doctoral degree have no work hour restriction at any time once their coursework has commenced. This reflects the government's recognition of the research contribution these students make. If you are considering upgrading from a Master's by Coursework to a Master's by Research, the unrestricted work rights are one substantive benefit to factor in.

You Cannot Start Work Before Your Course Starts

This is a catch that surprises new arrivals: you cannot commence any paid employment in Australia until your principal enrolled course of study has officially begun.

Students who arrive early and start working before semester one commences — even by one week — are in breach of Condition 8105. The visa condition is clear: employment cannot commence until the course has commenced. If you arrive two weeks before semester starts and want to work to cover initial expenses, you need to wait.

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What Counts as "Work"

For the purposes of Condition 8105, work is broadly defined as any work for which you receive remuneration — wages, salary, or any other form of payment for services rendered. This includes:

  • Part-time hospitality or retail jobs
  • Gig economy work (food delivery, rideshare driving)
  • Freelance work or contract work
  • Any work for a family member's business, even if payment is informal

Unpaid volunteer work for registered charities or not-for-profit organisations does not count toward the 48-hour cap, provided no remuneration is received. However, if a so-called "volunteer" role involves regular, structured work for a for-profit entity, or if you receive benefits that substitute for wages (free accommodation, meals credited against wages), that arrangement may be treated as employment.

Work undertaken for your own study purposes (academic placements, practicum hours mandated by your course) is generally not counted as work hours under Condition 8105, but check with your institution — they have specific guidance on mandatory course components.

The Strategic Importance of Your Work Hours

Beyond the compliance dimension, your work hours matter for your PR pathway. Every hour of relevant, skilled employment you accumulate during your student visa period is documented experience that can:

  1. Count toward your skills assessment (ACS, Engineers Australia, ANMAC, VETASSESS)
  2. Form part of your work experience evidence for skilled employment migration points
  3. Build professional references in your industry

Students who work strategically in their field — not just in hospitality or retail — are building their PR profile while studying, not starting from zero after graduation. Even 24 hours per fortnight in a relevant junior role during your second and third years of study creates one to two years of documented skilled employment by the time you graduate.

Keep records: payslips, employment contracts, tax returns, and reference letters. Skills assessing bodies want documentation, not just claimed dates.

Condition 8105 and the 485 Visa Transition

When you apply for the 485 Temporary Graduate Visa, your student visa conditions — including Condition 8105 — remain in effect until the 485 is granted. There is no grace period between visa expiry and the 485 grant; you maintain bridging visa status during the processing period, and your work rights during that bridging period are generally the same as your student visa conditions.

Once your 485 is granted, the 48-hour work restriction disappears entirely. The 485 is an open work visa — you can work full-time for any employer, in any occupation, anywhere in Australia.

The Australia Student Visa (500) + Post-Study Work Guide includes a detailed section on maximising your work experience documentation during the student visa period to strengthen your 485 and PR applications.

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