Employer sponsored visas - 482, 186 and 494
sponsor the worker you need, without the compliance headache
Finding skilled staff is hard enough without the visa system making it harder. We help Perth and WA businesses sponsor overseas workers properly - from becoming an approved sponsor to getting your person in the role and keeping you compliant.
Sponsorship visas and what you'll need.
Not sure where to start? an assessment will point you to the right one. Here's the lay of the land.
Skills in Demand
The main temporary sponsored visa, for filling a skilled role you can't fill locally. Can lead to permanent residence.
About the 482 → For PRSubclass 186Employer Nomination
Permanent residence for a skilled worker your business wants to keep for the long term. The destination after a 482.
About the 186 → WA AdvantageSubclass 494Regional Sponsored
A regional sponsored visa - and Perth counts as regional. A strong option for WA employers, leading to PR.
About the 494 → Step OneStandard Business Sponsorship
Before you can sponsor anyone, your business needs to be an approved sponsor. This is where it starts.
Become a sponsor → For Regular SponsorsAccredited Sponsor Status
Priority processing for businesses that sponsor often. If hiring overseas workers is a regular part of how you staff up, accreditation is worth pursuing.
About accreditation → OngoingSponsor Obligations & Compliance
Sponsoring a worker isn't a one-off form. It's an ongoing commitment with real legal duties - and real penalties for getting them wrong.
What to know →Sponsorship is doable. You just need it done right.
- 01
Become an approved sponsor
Before you can nominate anyone, your business needs Standard Business Sponsorship. It's the foundation of the whole process. Getting it right first time sets up every hire that depends on it.
- 02
Nominate the role and the worker
You nominate the specific position and the specific person. The occupation, the salary and the labour market testing all need to stack up - this is where most refusals come from.
We check all three before you lodge. - 03
Your worker's visa is lodged and granted
We run the sponsorship, the nomination and the visa as one coordinated job, so the three pieces line up instead of tripping over each other.
- 04
Stay compliant as a sponsor
The obligations don't end when the visa is granted. The Department monitors sponsors actively, and the businesses that get caught out are usually the ones who treated sponsorship as a single transaction.
Which employer-sponsored path fits your role?
Most Perth and WA employers land on one of four answers. Work down the questions - the right path usually becomes obvious. An assessment confirms it for your business and your worker.
| Path | Type | Typical processing | Leads to PR? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Business Sponsorship | Entry step (approval to sponsor) | Generally ~4 to 12 weeks | Not a visa - enables nominations |
| Subclass 482 | Temporary sponsored | Generally ~6 to 8 weeks | Yes, via the 186 |
| Subclass 186 | Permanent (ENS) | Generally ~3 to 4 months post-nomination | Permanent residence |
| Subclass 494 | Regional sponsored | Varies by case | Yes, regional pathway |
What it costs to sponsor. As an illustrative total only, employers commonly budget somewhere in the order of $5,000 to $15,000 across a sponsorship, nomination and visa, depending heavily on the visa, the nomination period and your circumstances. That is a guide, not a fixed price.
Within that, government charges sit separately from our professional fee. The government charges (including the Skilling Australians Fund levy) are set by the Department and depend on your nomination; our fee is something we set out in writing before you commit. Your final figure depends on your circumstances - see fees and how we quote.
Employer sponsorship questions.
Written and reviewed by Brian Chan, Registered Migration Agent (MARN 2217857)
Visa Store Australia, Perth · Last reviewed June 2026 · Verify on the MARA register · General information only, not personal migration advice.
Ready to sponsor?
Let's work out which visa suits your role and what it'll take to get your person in the door.