Length of stay
3 years or 5 years. You choose which you want when you apply, and the cost depends on the length chosen.
It is a long-stay temporary visa that lets parents live in Australia with their children for up to 5 years at a time, up to 10 years total. For families who cannot afford the 143 and cannot wait for the 103, the 870 is often the right answer.
The 870 was created in 2019 to fill the gap between short visitor visas and permanent parent visas.
3 years or 5 years. You choose which you want when you apply, and the cost depends on the length chosen.
After one 870 ends, the parent can apply for a second. Combined maximum is 10 years (two 5-year visas, or a 3+5, or other combinations).
The 870 is temporary. It does not lead directly to the 103 or 143. However, applying for the 103 or 143 while holding an 870 is possible and sometimes strategically useful.
The 870 is a multiple-entry visa. The parent can travel in and out of Australia during the visa period without needing separate visas.
The 870 does not allow work in Australia. Parents on this visa can visit family, travel, and live in Australia, but they cannot be employed.
Unlike the 103 and 143, there is no Balance of Family test for the 870. This is one of the biggest advantages of this visa.
Must be an Australian citizen, PR, or eligible NZ citizen. Parent's child (biological, step, or adopted). At least 18. Usually resident in Australia for at least 4 years. Meets an income threshold (updated annually).
Must be the parent of the sponsor. Meets health and character requirements. Access to health insurance in Australia (or pay out of pocket for medical care). Must not have exceeded the 10-year cap.
The 870 has no Balance of Family requirement. Parents can qualify even when most of their children live outside Australia. A major advantage over the 103 and 143.
The 870 application fee varies by length (3 or 5 years). But the visa fee is only part of the cost.
Depends on the length of stay (3 or 5 years). Fees are published by the Department and updated annually.
Parents on an 870 are not covered by Medicare. Comprehensive health insurance is essential. Usually a significant ongoing cost.
Parents cannot work. They need to be financially supported by the sponsor or have their own retirement income. Plan carefully.
This is a major advantage for families where most children live overseas. A parent who fails the 103 and 143 Balance of Family test because only one child is in Australia can still qualify for the Subclass 870.
For 870 strategy, book with Neha Sharma.