If you’re waiting for a Skilled Independent (subclass 189) invitation, it can feel random. One person gets invited at a certain score, another person with a similar profile doesn’t-and everyone starts guessing.
The truth is: SkillSelect isn’t random. It’s a ranking system. Once your Expression of Interest (EOI) is submitted, you sit in a queue that is mainly influenced by points and timing. Home Affairs explains that 189/190/491 are points-based, you need to meet or exceed the 65-point threshold, and even then, there is no guarantee you’ll receive an invitation.
Aussizz Group has helped 200,000+ applicants move closer to their Australian dreams. This guide explains (in simple language) how EOI ranking works for 189, why two people with the “same points” can get different outcomes, and the practical steps that usually improve invite odds.
Home Affairs states you must submit an EOI before you can be invited for 189, 190, or 491.
They also explain that SkillSelect asks for your personal, education and professional background, and that information contributes to your points score (age, work experience, qualifications, English, etc.).
So, for 189, ranking starts here:
Home Affairs is clear: 65 points is the minimum threshold for 189/190/491, but it’s not a promise of invitation.
A simple way to understand it:
If your occupation is crowded (many EOIs), the “top” might mean a higher score and tighter tie-break timing.
1) Your points (the score)
This is the number SkillSelect calculates based on what you entered. Home Affairs calls it an indicative points score based on your EOI information.
2) Your “date of effect” (the time you reached that score)
When many people sit on the same points, SkillSelect uses a tie-break. Home Affairs publishes invitation round outcomes that include a “tie break month and year” in the results table.
Think of it like a concert ticket line:
If two people have the same points, the person who “reached that score earlier” typically sits ahead. Migration practitioners commonly describe this as the EOI’s date of effect-the time when the EOI achieved that points score.
This is one of the most searched questions after every invitation round.
Here’s the simple version:
This is also why “waiting to improve later” can backfire. If you can lawfully improve points today (e.g., English score upgrade or experience milestone), delaying means your EOI reaches the higher score later-so you may sit behind others at the same score.
Home Affairs states:
This matters for ranking because the time between rounds is when you can still improve your position.
Improve English first (it’s the fastest high-impact lever for many people)
English is one of the biggest point levers you can control. Home Affairs’ 189 points table shows Proficient English = 10 points and Superior English = 20 points.
In crowded occupations, those extra points can be the difference between:
Update new skilled work experience as soon as it becomes claimable
Home Affairs explicitly says you should update your EOI when you have new work experience.
Many applicants miss this because they think “it’s only a few months.” But if that new experience changes your points, you don’t want that improvement sitting offline while your EOI stays behind.
Keep qualifications current (don’t leave completed study “out of the EOI”)
Home Affairs also lists “received a higher education qualification” as a reason to update your EOI.
If your course is completed and you can evidence it, updating the EOI is part of staying competitive.
Use partner strategy properly (including switching the primary applicant if it helps)
Home Affairs even suggests using the points calculator to see whether a partner can meet the points threshold and, if so, consider the partner submitting the EOI as the primary applicant.
This is a very practical ranking move in real life:
Treat your EOI like a document you’ll be judged on later
SkillSelect gives an indicative score based on what you enter, but whatever you claim must be backed by evidence if invited. Home Affairs’ EOI process makes it clear that information you provide contributes to points and that you’ll later lodge a visa application through ImmiAccount if invited.
So improving ranking is not about “creative claiming.” It’s about clean, provable upgrades.
Home Affairs states that if you’re invited, you have 60 days to complete and submit the visa application online.
That’s why EOI optimization is not just about getting invited-it’s about being ready when the invitation comes, so you don’t waste the invitation window.
If your occupation is crowded and the invitation rounds are tight, relying only on 189 can be slow. Home Affairs makes clear that EOIs also exist for 190 and 491 pathways, which can sometimes provide more movement depending on state priorities.
A smart approach many applicants take:
This is the “pivot plan” mindset: don’t let one pathway stall your entire timeline.
After each invitation round:
Q1. What is EOI ranking in SkillSelect?
EOI ranking is how SkillSelect orders applicants in the pool-mainly by points, and then by tie-break timing when points are equal.
Q2. What is “date of effect” in simple terms?
It’s the time your EOI reached its current points score. If many people have the same points, the person who reached that score earlier can be considered first (tie-break).
Q3. Can I update my EOI after I’m invited?
No. Home Affairs states you can’t update your EOI after receiving an invitation.
Q4. Can I update my EOI if I wasn’t invited?
Yes. Home Affairs states you can update your EOI any time before you receive an invitation.
Q5. How long does my EOI stay active?
Home Affairs states an EOI remains active for 2 years from submission.
Q6. Is 65 points enough to get a 189 invitation?
65 is the minimum threshold to be eligible for points-based skilled visas, but Home Affairs states there is no guarantee you’ll receive an invitation even if you meet the minimum.
Q7. What’s the fastest way to improve my 189 invite odds?
For many applicants, English improvements are the fastest high-impact lever. Home Affairs’ 189 points table shows Proficient English (10 points) and Superior English (20 points).
Q8. How long do I get to apply after invitation?
Home Affairs states you have 60 days from the invitation date to submit the visa application online.
When 189 invitation outcomes feel confusing, the fastest way forward is usually a clear ranking plan: what to improve, what to update, and what to run in parallel.
Aussizz Group has helped 200,000+ applicants move closer to their Australian dreams.
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