Close to the 189 threshold
Your points score is close to but not at the 189 invitation threshold. The 5-point nomination bonus can close the gap.
If you cannot get to the high points score the Subclass 189 demands, the Subclass 190 opens a second door. It costs you a two-year commitment to live and work in a nominating state. In exchange, you get permanent residency from grant and access to state-specific occupation lists that are often broader than the national CSOL.
If any of these apply, the 190 is worth a hard look before you wait out another 189 invitation round.
Your points score is close to but not at the 189 invitation threshold. The 5-point nomination bonus can close the gap.
Your occupation is not on the CSOL but is on a state list. The 190 is the only skilled pathway open to you.
You have a connection to a particular state through work, family, or study. States prefer applicants with genuine connections.
You are willing to live and work in a specific state for two years. The moral commitment is real, not a formality.
You want a permanent visa faster than waiting years for a competitive 189 invitation that may never come.
You cannot apply to "Australia" for a 190. You apply to a specific state or territory. Matching the applicant to the right state is strategic work.
Every state has its own occupation list, its own criteria, and its own application process. States often require more than just the right occupation, including working or living in the state, a relative there, or a state job offer.
First, submit an EOI in SkillSelect and a nomination application to the state. Second, nomination triggers a formal invitation from the Department, and you lodge the 190 visa.
Nomination gives you 5 extra points. For applicants sitting at 70 to 80 points, this is often the difference between a competitive score and an invitation.
Criteria change frequently. We track current criteria for every state and territory. Here is the general picture of how each one tends to behave.
Many applicants focus only on the 189 and wait years for invitations that may never come, while their profile would get a 190 nomination in a different state within months. Multi-state strategic analysis is often the single most impactful piece of advice a migration agent can give.
Subclass 190 nominations come with a moral commitment to live and work in the nominating state for two years. It is not a visa condition that can be legally enforced. But the state takes it seriously.
The commitment is not a visa condition like 8503 or 8107. It cannot be legally enforced against you. The visa itself is permanent from grant.
If you accept nomination and move away immediately, the state may flag you on future applications. It can affect nomination applications from family members.
Life happens. Jobs end, family situations change. If you have to move before two years, be honest with the state and document why. States generally accept genuine reasons.
For a specific assessment of which state is most likely to nominate you, book a consultation.