Genuine study intent
Why you want to study this course. Not why you want to be in Australia. Study-first narrative.
Our education specialists Vishal Sharma and Sourabh Aggarwal prepare 500 GS statements and 485 transitions across Brisbane, Gold Coast, and Darwin offices. It applies to every Subclass 500 application. Higher scrutiny of study intent, course alignment, and return plans. Here is what examiners look for and how to write a GS statement that succeeds. Our education specialist Vishal Sharma prepares GS statements.
GS assessment covers four specific areas. Each requires direct engagement in the statement.
Why you want to study this course. Not why you want to be in Australia. Study-first narrative.
Why this course at this institution. Course features, specialisations, faculty, research, industry links that drove your choice.
Where this qualification fits in your career plan. For offshore applicants, how returning home benefits from this course.
How this course progresses from your prior study. Not a step backward. Meaningful academic or career development.
A strong GS statement has specific structural elements. Generic templates fail.
Most GS refusals follow identifiable patterns. Avoiding them changes outcomes.
Statements that read like filled-in templates. Same phrases used across different statements. Department officers recognise these.
Statement talks about wanting to study X but chose Y. Or refers to features the institution does not offer. Shows weak engagement with the choice.
Statement focuses on Australia lifestyle, migration opportunities, or staying long-term. Not study. Fails GS immediately.
The statement is the first thing the officer reads and often sets the tone for the whole assessment. Officers read many statements weekly. Generic or inconsistent statements stand out in a negative way. Specificity, voice, and engagement with the chosen course change outcomes.
For GS statement preparation, book with Vishal Sharma.