Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
28th Apr 2025

Australia’s Labor Party signals an increase in student visa fees

Short on time? Here are the highlights:
  • Student visa application fees continue to figure in the 2025 Australian federal election
  • Following earlier proposals from the opposition Coalition, the governing Labor Party has now also said that, if re-elected, it too will raise visa fees later this year

Australians will vote in a federal election on 3 May 2025. The two main political parties contesting the election are polling within a few percentage points of each other, with the governing Labor Party edging ahead in recent polling.

Speaking at a joint news conference on 28 April, Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Finance Minister Katy Gallagher announced plans for a further AUD$1 billion in savings from pre-election forecasts.

Their revised outlook includes a plan to increase the application fee for an Australian study visa from AUD$1,600 to AUD$2,000. This move, the ministers estimate, will raise an additional AUD$760 million for government coffers over the next four years.

The planned increase echoes recent proposals from opposition leader Peter Dutton, who has said that, if elected, his Liberal/National Coalition Party will increase the student visa application fee to AUD$5,000 for applicants to Group of Eight universities and AUD$2,500 for all remaining international students.

Labor's planned increase in visa fees means that Australian student visas will remain the most expensive in the world. The current fee of AUD$1,600 was set in July 2024, and represented at the time a 125% increase from the previous fee of AUD$710. Leaving aside the prospect of any further increase, the current fee level considerably outstrips the visa fees levied by other major destinations. For example, the fee to apply for a Canadian study permit is CDN$150 (AUD$172), and students need US$185 (AUD$299) to apply for an F-1 study visa in the United States.

"We think that's a sensible measure that really prizes, I think, the value of studying here in Australia," said Minister Gallagher.

Needless to say, the prospect of any further increase is a serious concern for international educators in Australia, their international partners, and prospective students.

In its briefing for the Australian election, which pre-dates the Labor announcement this week, English Australia calls for:

"An urgent review of student visa application fees and the study rights of visitor and working holiday visa holders to regrow the short-term study market. In 2024, the government increased the student visa fee by 125%, making it double the UK fee, four times the USA fee, and nearly 10 times the Canadian fee. This has proven especially damaging to the ELICOS sector as the average student enrolment of less than 20 weeks makes the AUD$1,600 fee particularly disproportionate. The fee’s introduction was followed by an immediate and sustained fall in applications for ELICOS-only enrolments of approximately 50%. English Australia urges the government to move quickly to reduce the student visa fee for students applying for courses of less than one year to a fee of less than AUD$800."

Writing on LinkedIn, International Education Association of Australia (IEAA) CEO Phil Honeywood said, "At least we have a commitment from Labor that they will be open to discussion about visa fee reductions as per IEAA’s Election Platform which calls for a 50% discount for less than 12 months study programmes including English language and learning abroad."

For additional background, please see:

Most Recent

  • UK transnational education enrolments poised to surpass onshore students this decade Read More
  • Trump administration’s proposed deal with select US colleges includes a cap on international undergraduate enrolment Read More
  • Australia introduces new integrity measures through proposed amendments to the ESOS Act Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

UK transnational education enrolments poised to surpass onshore students this decade The latest available numbers from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) tell us that there were 732,285 international...
Read more
Trump administration’s proposed deal with select US colleges includes a cap on international undergraduate enrolment The White House has sent a draft “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education” to nine US colleges...
Read more
Australia introduces new integrity measures through proposed amendments to the ESOS Act Australian Minister of Education Jason Clare tabled the Education Legislation Amendment (Integrity and Other Measures) Bill 2025 in...
Read more
Australia: With ELICOS under pressure, peak bodies push for reduction in “extortionate” visa fees The latest data from the Department of Education reveals that enrolments in Australia’s ELICOS sector (English Language Intensive...
Read more
South Korea hits its 300,000 student target two years ahead of schedule In 2023, the South Korean government announced a plan to attract 300,000 international students by 2027: 220,000 in...
Read more
Canada: Study permit numbers are in steep decline in 2025 In 2024, the first year under Canada’s current cap on new international student enrolments, the total number of...
Read more
UK confirms levy on international student fees as new analysis argues that government is “drastically underestimating” the impact of the move Updated for 30 September 2025: On 29 September, the Department of Education announced that it would reinstate “means-tested...
Read more
US administration’s new H-1B policies create uncertainty around post-study work rights The H-1B programme is a key policy mechanism for international students in the United States. Aside from the...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links