The 485 visa has three streams: Post‑Higher Education Work (PHEWS), Post‑Vocational Education Work (PVEWS), and Second Post‑Higher Education Work. PHEWS suits degree holders; PVEWS suits vocational graduates whose qualification aligns to a skilled occupation and requires a skills assessment; Second PHEWS applies to regional degree graduates who already hold an eligible 485 and meet regional study/living criteria.
Stay lengths generally differ by stream: PHEWS ~2–3 years (HK/BNO up to 5 years), PVEWS up to 18 months (HK/BNO up to 5 years), Second PHEWS adds extra time for eligible regional cases.
Feature | Post‑Higher Education Work | Post‑Vocational Education Work | Second Post‑Higher Education Work |
Qualification level | Degree (Bachelor, Masters, PhD) | Diploma / trade / associate | Degree + previous 485 + regional study |
CRICOS requirement | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Occupation list required | No | Yes, must align | No |
Skills assessment | No | Yes | No |
Typical stay | 2–3 years | Up to 18 months | Additional stay (varies) |
HK/BNO duration | Up to 5 years | Up to 5 years | Up to 5 years |
Regional incentive | Optional | No | Mandatory regional study |
Degree graduates → PHEWS
Vocational graduates → PVEWS
Only PVEWS requires:
A relevant skilled occupation
Skills assessment evidence
Only the Second PHEWS requires proof of:
Study in a regional area
Living in a regional area
You cannot change streams after lodging, per Home Affairs.
If your highest qualification is degree‑level or higher → Post‑Higher Education Work
If you completed a vocational qualification → Post‑Vocational Education Work (Ensure your qualification ties to a listed occupation + skills assessment.)
If you already held a PHEWS visa and studied in a regional area → Second Post‑Higher Education Work
Picking a stream based on stay length, not qualification level
Applying for PVEWS without a skills assessment
Assuming all degrees qualify for extension
Overlooking the regional study proof requirement for Second PHEWS
Trying to switch streams after lodging (not allowed)
Source: Home Affairs