Employment in Australia for Ukrainians
- Global Talent visa (subclass 858). This is a permanent residence visa for people who have internationally recognized, exceptional and outstanding achievements in the relevant field.
- Employer Nomination Scheme (subclass 186). This visa allows skilled workers appointed by an employer to live and work permanently in Australia.
- Permanent Residence (Skilled Regional) visa (subclass 191). This visa allows workers who hold an eligible visa and meet the income requirements to live and work permanently in Australia.
- Regional Sponsored Migration Scheme (subclass 187). This visa allows skilled workers appointed by an employer in a specific region of Australia to live and work permanently in Australia.
- Skilled Employer Sponsored Regional (provisional) visa (subclass 494). This visa enables regional employers to address identified labor shortages in their region by sponsoring skilled workers if employers are unable to find a suitably qualified Australian worker.
- Skilled Independent visa (subclass 189). This visa is for guest workers, New Zealand citizens and Hong Kong or British (overseas) passport holders who have the necessary skills to live and work permanently anywhere in Australia.
- Skilled Nominated visa (subclass 190). This visa allows designated skilled workers to live and work in Australia as permanent residents.
- Skilled-Recognized Graduate visa (subclass 476). This visa allows recent graduates (engineering) to live, work or study in Australia for up to 18 months. You must have obtained a degree or higher qualification from a specified institution within the last 2 years and be under 31 years of age.
- Skilled Regional (provisional) visa (subclass 489). For skilled workers who want to live and work in a specific region of Australia. If you are granted this visa, you can apply for a regional (permanent) skilled worker visa (subclass 887).
- Skilled Regional visa (subclass 887). This visa is for people who have lived and worked in certain areas of regional Australia on a previous eligible visa. With this visa, you can work and study anywhere in Australia, apply for Australian citizenship.
- Skilled Work Regional (Provisional) visa (subclass 491). A visa for qualified people designated by a state or territory government to live and work in regional Australia.
- Temporary Activity visa (subclass 408). This visa allows you to come to Australia to perform certain types of work on a short-term, temporary basis.
- Temporary Graduate visa (subclass 485). A temporary visa that allows international students to live, study and work after completing their studies.
- Temporary Work (International Relations) visa (subclass 403). A temporary work visa in special circumstances that improves Australia's international relations.
- Temporary Work (Short Stay Specialist) visa (subclass 400). The highly skilled work stream of this temporary visa allows you to undertake short-term highly skilled work in Australia. Suitable if you have special skills, knowledge or experience not normally available in Australia.
- Temporary Skill Shortage visa (subclass 482). This temporary visa allows an employer to sponsor a qualified worker to fill a position for which they cannot find a qualified Australian.
Work Visa in Australia - permission to stay in the country during the term of the contract. The visa will be issued to citizens who go to the state for the purpose of earning. You need to prepare the following documents:
- Passport;
- Questionnaire (filled in);
- 1 color photo;
- A copy and the original of the document on the work permit;
- An official letter from the employer about a job offer;
- Data on the position, the income received, as well as the available savings of the applicant.
However, this is a list of the main documents that must be collected. Detailed information on how to apply for a working visa to Australia can be obtained at the link.
For most work visas, there is an option to include a spouse or common-law partner on your application, or to use the subsequent entry scheme where the worker's partner applies for the same visa type and is also entitled to work and live in Australia with the main applicant.
However, to include a partner in your application or to apply for subsequent entry, you must prove that your relationship is genuine. As proof, you can provide a marriage certificate, joint bank accounts, lease agreements, confirmation of joint trips and vacations, etc.
Partners of student visa holders (subclass 500) also receive student visas, so they have the same employment rights as a student and can work no more than 40 hours per fortnight. The only exceptions are partners of students who are studying at a master's or doctorate. They can work an unlimited number of hours after the student has started their course.