Subclass 485
February 20, 2026

Subclass 485 Visa: You Only Get One Shot – Don’t Make These Costly Mistakes (2026 Guide)

The Temporary Graduate visa (subclass 485) is one of the most important visas for international students in Australia. It gives you time to work, gain local experience, and plan your next step (PR pathways, employer sponsorship, further study, or regional options).

But here’s the part many people don’t realise until it’s too late:

For most graduates, your first 485 application is the make-or-break one. A single mistake-wrong stream, late lodgement, missing documents, weak evidence-can lead to refusal, and you may not get another clean chance under the same pathway.

Important clarity (because it’s often misunderstood):

Many people effectively get one main 485 opportunity for their situation. However, some graduates may be eligible for another 485 in limited circumstances, such as the Second Post-Higher Education Work stream (for eligible regional graduates).

Also, Home Affairs confirms the Replacement stream was closed to new applications from 1 July 2024.

Aussizz Group has helped 200,000+ applicants move closer to their Australian dreams, and this guide is written to help you avoid the most common 485 mistakes we see in real cases.

Choosing the wrong 485 stream (and then realising you can’t change it)

This is one of the most common and most expensive mistakes.

The 485 has different streams (for example, Post-Higher Education Work vs Post-Vocational Education Work). If you pick the wrong stream, it can cause refusal or complications-and you may not be able to “fix it later”.

In fact, official guidance highlights that applicants must apply for the eligible stream and it is not possible to change streams after you apply.

What to do instead

  • Confirm your qualification type (higher education vs vocational/trade pathway)
  • Confirm your occupation/requirements (where relevant)
  • Confirm your course and evidence align to the stream you are choosing

Missing the “apply in time” window (this one catches people off guard)

A 485 isn’t like some other visas where you can “wait a year and apply when ready”.

Many applicants delay because they are busy with:

  • graduation
  • job hunting
  • travel
  • waiting for documents
  • English tests
  • health/AFP checks

But the 485 is time-sensitive. Multiple reputable guidance sources consistently state you should apply within 6 months of course completion.

What to do instead

  • Start your checklist early (before course completion)
  • Plan for processing time of documents (AFP, transcripts, completion letter)
  • Don’t delay because of “one missing thing”-get proper advice on what must be ready at lodgement vs what can be provided later (where allowed)

Assuming “I can apply again if something goes wrong”

This mindset creates risky applications.

Many graduates think:

  • “If I get refused, I’ll just reapply.”
  • “If I choose the wrong stream, I’ll switch it later.”
  • “If I miss documents, I’ll upload later.”

In reality, 485 eligibility is tightly tied to timing, stream rules, and evidence. A refusal can affect your options, your bridging visa situation, and your future visa strategy.

Also, while a second 485 may be possible for some (for example, eligible graduates under the Second Post-Higher Education Work stream), it is not a general “second chance” for everyone.

Getting the Australian Study Requirement wrong (the hidden eligibility trap)

A lot of people believe:

“I studied in Australia, so I qualify.”

But the Australian study requirement has specific rules. For example, Home Affairs explains study must be completed in Australia, and it cannot be met in less than 16 calendar months.

What goes wrong in real life

  • Course packaging misunderstandings
  • Study period not meeting the calendar-month requirement
  • Incorrect evidence or incomplete completion documentation

What to do instead

  • Confirm your CRICOS course details and completion timing
  • Keep clear documents: completion letter, transcript, enrolment history (if needed)

Uploading “some documents” instead of the right evidence (document mistakes cause refusals)

A 485 application is not assessed on intention. It’s assessed on evidence.

Common document mistakes include:

  • Uploading an unofficial letter instead of the correct completion evidence
  • Missing key identity documents
  • Incorrect health insurance evidence (or wrong policy type for your situation)
  • Not providing required police/character evidence properly (AFP vs overseas as relevant)
  • Not showing the required visa history (for example, evidence of recent Student visa holding where required)

Study Australia’s guidance lists basic eligibility items including: holding an eligible visa, having held a Student visa in the last 6 months, having a recent qualification in a CRICOS course, and attaching required evidence when you apply.

What to do instead

  • Treat your upload list like a compliance checklist, not a “best effort”
  • Use correct naming, clear scans, and consistent personal details across documents

Forgetting English test timing rules (or using an outdated result)

English requirements are one of the fastest-changing areas, and people get caught using:

  • an older test result they assumed was valid
  • the wrong test type
  • a result outside the accepted timeframe

Home Affairs’ English language guidance notes that test validity depends on the visa, and it also includes time-based rules around when tests were taken.

Home Affairs has also published updates indicating Temporary Graduate applicants may need an English test taken within a set period before application (check the rule for your stream at the time you lodge).

What to do instead

  • Check the current 485 English evidence requirements right before you lodge
  • Don’t assume your “old IELTS/PTE” is automatically acceptable

Thinking “my agent will fix it later” (but the damage happens at lodgement)

A lot of issues become hard to fix after submission, especially if:

  • you chose the wrong stream
  • you lodged late
  • you made claims that don’t match evidence
  • you omitted critical documents at lodgement (where mandatory)

This is why the safest approach is: build a correct application from day one, not a rushed one.

Not understanding that policy settings change

The 485 program has seen changes over recent years. Home Affairs publishes formal updates to the Temporary Graduate program, including changes effective from 1 July 2024.
And Home Affairs confirms the Replacement stream closed to new applications from 1 July 2024, so advice about “replacement stream options” may now be outdated for new applicants.

What to do instead

  • Treat any “2022/2023 advice” as risky unless verified
  • Always check current eligibility rules before applying

Confusing the 485 with a PR visa (and making decisions that weaken your PR plan)

A 485 is usually a bridge, not the destination.

Mistakes here include:

  • taking any job without a strategy (then later struggling to align skills/experience)
  • not planning English and skills assessment timelines
  • staying in the wrong location if your longer-term plan involves regional pathways
  • ignoring state nomination requirements until the last minute

A good 485 strategy ties together:

FAQs

Q1. Can you apply for the 485 visa only once?

Many graduates effectively only get one main 485 opportunity for their situation-because stream rules and time windows are strict. However, some people may qualify for another 485 in limited circumstances, such as the Second Post-Higher Education Work stream (for eligible regional graduates).

Q2. Can I change my 485 stream after applying?

Generally, no-guidance clearly states it is not possible to change streams after you apply.

Q3. When should I apply for the 485 after course completion?

Common guidance is to apply within 6 months after your course ends/completion date.

Q4. What is the Australian study requirement for 485?

Home Affairs explains the study requirement includes completing study in Australia and that it cannot be met in less than 16 calendar months.

Q5. Is the 485 Replacement stream still available?

Home Affairs states you can no longer apply for the Temporary Graduate (Replacement stream) as a primary applicant, and it was closed to new applications from 1 July 2024.

Q6. Do I need a fresh English test for 485?

English evidence rules can change and depend on the stream and timing. Home Affairs publishes English language requirements and updates-always check the current requirement for your visa before lodging.

The safest rule for 485: Treat it like a “one-shot” application

Even though some limited second options exist for some people, the best mindset is still:

Apply once. Apply correctly. Apply on time.

Because a mistake can cost you far more than money:

  • it can cost you time,
  • lawful status,
  • and your PR pathway momentum.

Book a consultation with Aussizz Group’

If you’re unsure about stream selection, timelines, document readiness, or how your 485 fits into a 190/491/PR plan, book a consultation with Aussizz Group.

Aussizz Group has helped 200,000+ applicants move closer to their Australian dreams-and we can help you lodge a 485 application that’s strategic, compliant, and aligned with your next step.

Book your consultation with Aussizz Group today.

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