Australia Student Visa Priority 2026: MD115 Explained — Who Gets a Faster Visa, and Who Waits
The Australian Government's PRISMS data (24 April 2026) shows the country is at 57% of its 295,000 National Planning Level — meaning most universities are still in the fast lane. Here's the complete plain-English guide for Indian and GCC students: who's Priority 1, who's Priority 2, and how to lodge your visa under Ministerial Direction 115.
Under Australia's Ministerial Direction 115 (MD115), your offshore student visa is processed in one of three priority lanes — fast, standard, or slow — based on whether your university has used less than 80%, 80–115%, or more than 115% of its 2026 student allocation. As of 24 April 2026, almost all 38 publicly funded universities are still in the fast lane (Priority 1), with only the University of Melbourne sitting in Priority 2. For students from Kerala, the GCC and India, this is a positive picture — but it can change weekly, so timing your application matters.
Section 1 · The Policy
What is Ministerial Direction 115 (MD115)?
Ministerial Direction 115 is a legally binding instruction issued under section 499 of Australia's Migration Act 1958. It tells Department of Home Affairs case officers which offshore student visa applications to process first when departmental capacity is constrained.
MD115 came into effect on 14 November 2025, replacing the earlier MD111. It applies to every Subclass 500 (Student) visa application lodged from outside Australia on or after that date.
📌 Key clarification — MD115 is not a visa cap
MD115 does not set the criteria to approve or refuse a student visa. Every application is still assessed on its own merits — Genuine Student criteria, finances, English ability, health, and character. What MD115 determines is processing speed: which queue your file joins.
The reason behind it is simple: in 2026, Australia is operating under a National Planning Level (NPL) of 295,000 New Overseas Student Commencements (NOSCs) — a managed-growth target that's 25,000 places higher than 2025. Each education provider has been given an indicative slice of that 295,000. When a provider fills its slice, new applications to that provider are slowed down so departmental resources can flow to providers that are still under-utilised.
You can read the official direction in full at immi.homeaffairs.gov.au and the live priority status report at education.gov.au.
Section 2 · The Three Lanes
Priority 1, 2 or 3 — How the Traffic-Light System Works
Every offshore student visa application is sorted into one of three lanes based on the main provider on your Confirmation of Enrolment (CoE) and how full their 2026 allocation is.
Lodge & relax
For providers below 80% of allocation, OR exempt student categories
Most public universities and many higher-ed providers are in this band right now. Applications here move first through the queue.
Allow extra time
For providers at 80% to under 115% of allocation
Files still get processed in full — they just sit longer in the queue. Currently, only one of Australia's 38 public universities is in this band: the University of Melbourne.
Plan ahead carefully
For providers at or above 115% of allocation
Mostly affects some private/independent higher-ed providers and TAFE-aligned colleges. Public universities very rarely sit here.
Indicative processing times based on Department of Home Affairs guidance. Actual times vary by case complexity, document quality, and integrity checks. See official processing priorities.
⚠️ Onshore applications are different
MD115 only applies to offshore Subclass 500 (Student) visa applications — those lodged from outside Australia. If you're already in Australia and applying onshore, MD115 does not affect your processing priority. However, several temporary visas (Visitor, Temporary Graduate, Maritime Crew) can no longer be converted to a Student visa from inside Australia under the 2026 changes.
Not sure which lane your university is in right now?
WhatsApp Abin's team — we track the weekly PRISMS update and tell you in plain English.
Section 3 · Live Numbers
How Full is Australia's 2026 Quota?
Data from Australia's PRISMS system as at 24 April 2026 — the official source the Department of Home Affairs uses to set priority status. View the source report.
🇦🇺 All Sectors Combined
🎓 Public Universities
📚 Other Higher Education
🛠️ Vocational Education (VET)
✅ What this means for you
The public university sector — by far the largest and most important for international students — is at just 41% utilisation. There is significant headroom for new applications throughout 2026, especially for the September 2026 and February 2027 intakes. The "other higher education" sector at 67% is filling faster, so for private-college applications you'll want to lodge sooner rather than later.
Section 4 · The Exempt List
Students Who Always Get Priority 1 Status
Even if your provider is sitting in Priority 2 or Priority 3, your application can still be processed in the fast lane if you fall into one of these exempt categories under MD115. The Australian Government has built these carve-outs to keep specific student cohorts moving quickly:
💡 Hidden insight: New 2026 transition exemptions
The PRISMS October 2025 update added two new exemption categories beyond the standard list: international students transitioning from Australian secondary school to tertiary study, and students transitioning from embedded pathway providers or TAFE institutes to affiliated publicly funded universities. If you're already in Australia and moving up — you're likely already exempt. Read the full factsheet.
Section 5 · The University Picture
Public University Allocations & Priority Status — 2026
Indicative allocations and priority status for all 38 publicly funded Australian universities, drawn directly from the PRISMS report dated 24 April 2026. Higher allocation generally means more international student capacity. ⭐ marks G2H scholarship partners.
| University | 2026 Allocation | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| University of Sydney | 11,900 | P1 · Fast |
| Monash University | 11,910 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Melbourne | 10,500 | P2 · Standard |
| UNSW Sydney | 10,350 | P1 · Fast |
| RMIT University | 8,199 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Queensland | 8,050 | P1 · Fast |
| Adelaide University | 7,350 | P1 · Fast |
| Deakin University | 6,300 | P1 · Fast |
| Macquarie University | 5,250 | P1 · Fast |
| UTS (University of Technology Sydney) | 5,050 | P1 · Fast |
| QUT (Queensland University of Technology) ⭐ | 4,750 | P1 · Fast |
| La Trobe University | 4,700 | P1 · Fast |
| Swinburne University of Technology | 4,523 | P1 · Fast |
| Curtin University | 4,100 | P1 · Fast |
| Western Sydney University | 4,000 | P1 · Fast |
| Murdoch University | 3,900 | P1 · Fast |
| Griffith University | 3,800 | P1 · Fast |
| Australian National University (ANU) | 3,750 | P1 · Fast |
| Edith Cowan University | 3,700 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Western Australia (UWA) | 3,550 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Wollongong | 3,550 | P1 · Fast |
| Central Queensland University | 3,170 | P1 · Fast |
| Flinders University | 3,000 | P1 · Fast |
| Charles Darwin University (CDU) | 2,740 | P1 · Fast |
| Victoria University | 2,689 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Newcastle | 2,425 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Tasmania (UTas) | 2,250 | P1 · Fast |
| James Cook University | 2,200 | P1 · Fast |
| Australian Catholic University (ACU) | 1,900 | P1 · Fast |
| Federation University Australia | 1,800 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Canberra | 1,800 | P1 · Fast |
| Charles Sturt University (CSU) ⭐ | 1,775 | P1 · Fast |
| University of the Sunshine Coast (UniSC) | 1,675 | P1 · Fast |
| Southern Cross University (SCU) | 1,500 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Southern Queensland | 1,000 | P1 · Fast |
| University of Notre Dame Australia | 800 | P1 · Fast |
| Bond University (private) | 800 | P1 · Fast |
| University of New England (UNE) | 700 | P1 · Fast |
Source: Australian Government Department of Education — International Education Providers — Progress Against Indicative Allocations, data from PRISMS as at 24 April 2026. Status updates weekly. View live report ↗
Section 6 · The Outlier
The University of Melbourne Exception
Of the 38 publicly funded Australian universities tracked in the 24 April 2026 PRISMS report, only the University of Melbourne is currently sitting in Priority 2. With a 2026 indicative allocation of 10,500 NOSCs, Melbourne has used between 80% and 115% of its capacity — meaning new offshore applications to Melbourne are now in the standard processing lane.
📍 What this means if Melbourne is on your list
Your Melbourne application will still be assessed — Priority 2 doesn't mean rejection. It just means the file may take 5–8 weeks instead of 1–4. If your course start date is tight, you have three smart options:
(1) Lodge as early as possible — every week counts. (2) Apply for a deferred intake with a longer cushion before the course start date. (3) Consider parallel applications at a Priority 1 alternative (UNSW, Monash, ANU, Sydney) so you have a fast-lane backup if timing becomes critical.
It's worth noting Charles Darwin University sits at Priority 1* — meaning all VET visa applications associated with CDU are processed at Priority 1 under the TAFE exemption rules of MD115, even though CDU as a whole is being closely monitored. This is an important detail for students looking at vocational courses with dual-sector universities.
Things change weekly. The PRISMS report is updated every week — so a university that's Priority 1 today could move to Priority 2 by next month, especially as the September 2026 intake fills up. Timing your visa lodgement around your provider's allocation status is now a genuine strategy decision, not just a paperwork question.
Section 7 · Smart Moves
How to Use MD115 to Your Advantage
For students lodging from Kerala or the GCC, choosing the right provider — and lodging at the right moment — can save weeks. Here's how Guide to Heights advises students under MD115.
Check the live status before paying tuition deposit
The PRISMS report is updated weekly. Before paying any tuition deposit or accepting a CoE, ask your counsellor to confirm the provider's current priority status. A provider can shift from Priority 1 to Priority 2 between your offer and your visa lodgement — and that affects your processing timeline directly.
Lodge offshore early, especially for September 2026
Visa applications are queued at the priority level that exists at the moment of lodgement. If a university is at 78% allocation today and you lodge today, you go in the Priority 1 queue. If you wait three weeks and they cross 80%, you're now in Priority 2 — even though nothing about your file has changed.
Use exempt course pathways where they fit your goals
Pathway/foundation programs that route through ELICOS or TAFE providers retain Priority 1 status regardless of allocation. For students whose target university is heading toward Priority 2, an exempt pathway course followed by a transition to the bachelor's program can be a smart workaround.
Keep a Priority 1 backup university shortlisted
If your dream university is the University of Melbourne (currently Priority 2), don't put all your applications there. Apply in parallel to a Priority 1 alternative — UNSW, Monash, Sydney, ANU — so that if Melbourne timing slips, you still have a fast-lane visa option ready.
Consider regional Priority 1 universities for PR pathway
Charles Sturt, Federation University, Southern Cross, UniSC, University of Tasmania, and James Cook are all Priority 1 in 2026 and count as regional under DHA rules — meaning extra post-study work years and PR points. This combination is genuinely powerful for migration-focused students.
Get GS and financials right — priority isn't a shortcut
MD115 only affects how quickly your file is picked up. Once it's being assessed, your Genuine Student statement, financial documents, English scores, and document quality decide the outcome. Priority 1 with a weak file still gets refused. Priority 2 with a strong, well-documented file still gets approved.
Want a personalised university shortlist based on live MD115 status?
Free 30-minute consultation with a QEAC-certified counsellor — book directly with Abin's team.
Section 8 · Avoid These
5 MD115 Mistakes Indian and GCC Students Make
1. Assuming "Priority 1" means automatic approval
Priority 1 is about speed, not outcome. Every visa is still individually assessed for genuine student criteria, finances, and English ability. A weak Priority 1 application can still be refused; a strong Priority 2 application is more likely to succeed. Don't mistake fast for guaranteed.
2. Choosing a high-risk private provider just to find space
Some private providers have already crossed 115% — Priority 3. Files there can wait 9–12 weeks and the provider's high refusal history adds further scrutiny. Cheaper tuition is rarely worth that timeline risk. Always cross-check provider priority status against their integrity record.
3. Lodging the wrong "main provider" on a packaged offer
If you have a packaged offer (ELICOS + Bachelor + Masters), MD115 priority is determined by the main provider on your CoE — usually the highest-AQF course. Listing the wrong main provider, or lodging without coordinating CoEs, can put you in the wrong lane. Get the packaging right before lodging.
4. Waiting for a "better intake" without checking allocation status
"I'll wait for February 2027 instead of September 2026." Sounds reasonable — but by February 2027, the same university could be at Priority 2 because of demand from other markets. The September 2026 intake is currently the sweet spot for most Priority 1 universities. Earlier is usually safer in 2026.
5. Assuming your agent already knows the latest status
The PRISMS report updates weekly. An agent who's not actively tracking it may be quoting status from two months ago. Ask your counsellor specifically: "What is this university's MD115 status as of this week?" If they can't answer with confidence, that's a red flag.
✅ The G2H approach
At Guide to Heights, we monitor the PRISMS weekly update and align it with each student's profile, intake timing, course preference, and PR goal. As a QEAC-certified consultancy with offices in Kochi, Sharjah, and Melbourne, we coordinate with registered MARA agents on visa lodgement so your file moves through the right lane the first time. WhatsApp Abin's team for a personalised MD115 strategy review.
Section 9 · FAQs
Your MD115 Questions, Answered
The most common questions Kerala and GCC families are asking us about Australian student visa priority status in 2026. Last reviewed by Abin Mathew Varghese (QEAC #10439) on 29 April 2026.
Ministerial Direction 115 is a legally binding instruction from Australia's Minister for Immigration, issued under section 499 of the Migration Act 1958. It tells Department of Home Affairs case officers which offshore Subclass 500 (Student) visa applications to process first. It came into effect on 14 November 2025, replacing MD111. MD115 is not a visa cap — every application is still assessed individually on merit. It only determines processing speed.
It doesn't directly affect outcome — it affects timing. The Department of Home Affairs has explicitly stated: "Provider priority status does not affect Student visa outcomes. All student visa applications will be considered by relevant delegated officers regardless of priority level." What changes is how quickly your file gets picked up. Priority 1 applications typically take 1–4 weeks, Priority 2 around 5–8 weeks, and Priority 3 around 9–12 weeks indicatively.
As of 24 April 2026, 37 of 38 publicly funded universities in Australia are in Priority 1. The full list includes Sydney, Monash, UNSW, ANU, UQ, Adelaide, Deakin, RMIT, UTS, QUT, Macquarie, Curtin, Western Sydney, Griffith, La Trobe, Flinders, Newcastle, Wollongong, James Cook, ACU, Charles Sturt, UniSC, Federation, Southern Cross, Tasmania, and more. The only public university currently in Priority 2 is the University of Melbourne.
Status updates weekly via the PRISMS system — check the live report before lodging.
Not necessarily. Melbourne is one of the world's top-30 universities and remains an excellent option. Priority 2 simply means processing takes 5–8 weeks instead of 1–4. If your start date allows that timeline, Melbourne is still a strong choice. If your timing is tight, lodge as early as possible, choose a deferred intake, or apply in parallel to a Priority 1 alternative such as UNSW, Monash, Sydney, or ANU as a backup.
No — TAFE students are exempt under MD115 and automatically receive Priority 1 processing regardless of provider allocation status. This applies to all eight Australian TAFE providers including TAFE Queensland, TAFE SA, NSW TECHE, Box Hill Institute, Chisholm Institute, Holmesglen Institute, Melbourne Polytechnic, and William Angliss Institute of TAFE. School students, ELICOS-only students, postgraduate research candidates, pilot training students, and Pacific/Timor-Leste students are also fully exempt.
The 2026 National Planning Level (NPL) is set at 295,000 New Overseas Student Commencements (NOSCs) — that's 25,000 places higher than the 2025 NPL. This 295,000 is split as: Higher Education 196,200 (with 161,500 for public universities and 34,700 for other higher-ed providers) and Vocational Education and Training 94,300. Each provider receives an indicative slice of this total. As of 24 April 2026, 64% of these allocations have been used.
Priority 1 status can be earned in two ways: (1) your provider is below 80% of its 2026 allocation — most public universities are in this group right now, or (2) you fall into an automatic exemption category under MD115 — for example school students, TAFE students, ELICOS-only students, PhD candidates, Pacific & Timor-Leste students, and DFAT/Defence-sponsored students. Exempt categories always get Priority 1 even if their provider is in Priority 2 or 3.
No. MD115 applies only to offshore Subclass 500 (Student) visa applications — those lodged from outside Australia. Onshore applications follow different processing rules. However, a related 2026 change does affect onshore applicants: several temporary visas (Visitor 600, Temporary Graduate 485, Maritime Crew) can no longer be converted to a Student visa from inside Australia, closing a previously popular workaround.
The Department of Education publishes the report weekly. The version we've used here is dated 24 April 2026. A university that's Priority 1 today may shift to Priority 2 within a month — especially as the September 2026 intake fills. Always confirm current status before paying any tuition deposit or lodging your visa. The official live report sits at education.gov.au/managed-system-international-education-2026/resources/visa-prioritisation-status.
Your priority is fixed at the moment you lodge your application. If your provider is at 78% and you lodge today, you go in the Priority 1 queue — and you stay there even if the provider crosses 80% the following week. This is why timing matters. Lodging early, while your university is still comfortably below 80%, locks in your fast-lane status.
The Small Provider Pool contains VET and dual-sector providers with a total Indicative Allocation of less than 100 and a prioritisation threshold count of less than 80 NOSCs. Visa applications associated with these small providers receive a shared priority level based on the combined progress of the entire pool, not the individual provider. This is intended to give very small providers more flexibility but is mainly relevant to niche specialist colleges, not the universities most Indian and GCC students apply to.
Family members lodged as part of the same Subclass 500 application generally take the same priority level as the primary student. So if you (the main student) are in Priority 1, your spouse and dependent children's visas should follow the same lane. If they're lodged separately later, they may be assessed under the rules in place at that future date. Always coordinate family applications through a registered MARA agent to avoid mismatched timing.
At Guide to Heights, every university shortlist we recommend is cross-checked against the latest weekly PRISMS update. We tell you which providers are in Priority 1, which are heading toward Priority 2, and which carry timing risk for your intake. We coordinate visa lodgement with registered MARA agents and structure packaged offers so the main provider sits in the safest priority lane available. Our service is completely free for students. Book a free 30-minute consultation to discuss your specific situation.
Section 10 · References
Official Australian Government Sources
This guide is based entirely on Australian Government primary sources. We strongly recommend reading the original documents — they're public, free, and updated regularly.
- 📊 Live PRISMS Visa Prioritisation Status Report — updated weekly
education.gov.au/managed-system-international-education-2026/resources/visa-prioritisation-status - 📄 Ministerial Direction 115 — Full Text (PDF) — Department of Home Affairs
immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/support-subsite/files/ministerial-direction-115.pdf - 🏛️ A Managed System for International Education 2026 — Department of Education overview
education.gov.au/managed-system-international-education-2026 - 🎓 Indicative Allocations for Publicly Funded Universities 2026 (Factsheet PDF)
education.gov.au — Indicative Allocations Factsheet - 📑 Managed Growth for International Education — 2026 Arrangements (Factsheet)
education.gov.au — Managed Growth Factsheet - ⚖️ Student Visa Processing Priorities — Department of Home Affairs
immi.homeaffairs.gov.au — Visa Processing Priorities - 🌐 Study Australia — Agent Hub (Australian Trade & Investment Commission)
studyaustralia.gov.au — Ministerial Direction 115 Explained
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About the Author
Abin Mathew Varghese
Founder & Director · Guide to Heights
Abin holds an MBA and Master's in Information Technology from Deakin University, Melbourne, and has helped over a thousand students from Kerala and the GCC into Australian universities since founding Guide to Heights in 2022. He is a QEAC-certified counsellor (#10439) and personally tracks the weekly PRISMS update so every G2H student gets advice based on this week's data — not last quarter's. Connect with him directly via WhatsApp on +91 73065 83820 or book a free consultation at the calendar link above.
Important Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and should not be relied upon as migration advice. All data is taken from Australian Government primary sources — the PRISMS report dated 24 April 2026, the Department of Home Affairs' Ministerial Direction 115, and the Department of Education's Managed System for International Education 2026 publications. Priority status is updated weekly and may have changed since publication. Guide to Heights is not a registered migration agent — visa lodgement and migration advice are provided by registered MARA agents we coordinate with on your behalf. Final visa outcomes are determined by the Australian Department of Home Affairs and cannot be guaranteed by any consultancy. Indicative processing times (1–4 weeks for Priority 1, 5–8 weeks for Priority 2, 9–12 weeks for Priority 3) are based on Department of Home Affairs guidance and vary by individual case complexity, document quality, and integrity checks. Always verify current status at education.gov.au before taking action. CIN: U80301KL2022PTC078017 · UAE Trade License: SC241129101 · QEAC #10439 · British Council #49805.