407 Training Visa
The Subclass 407 Training visa is a temporary Australian visa that can be applied for both onshore and offshore, with a primary focus on occupational training and skills development.
400 Training Visa Overview
The Australian Subclass 407 Training Visa is a temporary visa of up to two years, designed for overseas applicants who need to undertake structured training in Australia for occupational registration, skills enhancement, or professional development purposes.
The visa is centred on a training objective, rather than employment, and applicants must be sponsored by an approved Australian sponsor who provides a genuine and compliant training program.
The Subclass 407 visa can be lodged either offshore or onshore (where eligibility requirements are met), and eligible family members may be included as secondary applicants.
407 Visa Training Streams
The Australian Subclass 407 Training Visa is officially divided into three main categories based on the purpose of training. Each category has distinct compliance priorities, target applicants, and assessment logic. Choosing the wrong category is one of the most common—and most fatal—mistakes in 407 applications.
Occupational Training for Registration
This stream applies to applicants who must complete specified training or supervised practice in Australia in order to meet requirements for occupational registration, licensing, or professional membership.
Key characteristics:
The training purpose directly supports occupational registration or licensing
Training content is usually mandated by a registration authority or industry regulator
The purpose is not employment, but completion of pre-registration requirements
Common applicable occupations include:
Nurses, midwives, and other healthcare professions
Accounting, engineering, and other professions requiring Australian registration or membership
Other regulated professional or technical occupations
Practical focus: The training content, duration, and structure must be highly aligned with the registration requirements. Generic or vague “training” descriptions are not acceptable.
Occupational Training – Skills Improvement
This stream applies to applicants who already have a relevant occupational background and come to Australia for structured, workplace-based skills improvement training. The aim is to enhance, refine, or formalise existing skills—not to learn a new occupation from scratch.
Key characteristics:
The applicant already has practical work experience in the nominated occupation
The training must be organised, structured, and directly linked to skill development
If assessed as “ordinary employment,” refusal risk increases significantly
Mandatory requirement:
At least 12 months of relevant work experience within the last 2 years
Practical focus: If the training is considered something that could be completed in a local junior role, or appears to fill a standard position, refusals or requests for further explanation are common.
Occupational Training – Overseas Training
This is the most structurally complex but relatively flexible 407 stream. It primarily applies to overseas applicants who must undertake specific training in Australia due to educational, government, or business development needs. It is further divided into three sub-categories:
Overseas qualification or course-required practical training (up to 6 months)
The applicant is currently enrolled with an overseas education provider
Practical training, research, or internship is required to complete the course
Training in Australia is generally limited to a maximum of 6 months
Government-supported training
Training is supported by the Australian Government or the applicant’s home government
Commonly linked to public programs, industry development, or bilateral cooperation projects
Customised professional development for overseas company employees
An overseas employer sends managers or professionals to Australia
Training is customised and non-generic
Training must be directly related to business development or role capability enhancement
Practical focus: This stream is assessed more strictly on the genuineness, necessity, and structural design of the training. It must not be confused with short-term work, or it may be questioned as disguised employment or unclear intent.
Key reminder: The core of the Subclass 407 visa is never “what you do in Australia,” but why you must come to Australia to receive this training. If the category selection is incorrect, or the training purpose does not match the actual arrangement, the application may be refused even where the sponsor is genuine and documentation is complete.
Eligibility
| Assessment Area | Official Requirements & Key Focus for the Subclass 407 Training Visa |
|---|---|
| Visa Nature | The Subclass 407 Training Visa is not a traditional work visa, but it is still a temporary visa category with clear compliance thresholds. In practice, many refusals arise not from the training itself, but from insufficient preparation of basic requirements. |
| Age Requirement |
|
| English Language Requirement |
|
| Financial Capacity |
|
| Compliance & Background Checks |
|
| Risk Reminder | Assessment of the 407 visa is not based on a single factor, but on an overall evaluation of whether the applicant has genuine and workable training arrangements. Weaknesses in basic requirements can directly undermine the credibility of the entire training plan. |
| Assessment Area | Official Requirements & Key Focus for the Subclass 407 Training Visa |
|---|---|
| Visa Nature | The Subclass 407 Training Visa is not a traditional work visa, but it is still a temporary visa category with clear compliance thresholds. In practice, many refusals arise not from the training itself, but from insufficient preparation of basic requirements. |
| Age Requirement |
|
| English Language Requirement |
|
| Financial Capacity |
|
| Compliance & Background Checks |
|
| Risk Reminder | Assessment of the 407 visa is not based on a single factor, but on an overall evaluation of whether the applicant has genuine and workable training arrangements. Weaknesses in basic requirements can directly undermine the credibility of the entire training plan. |
assessed to confirm genuine capacity to participate in training
consistent with training length and personal background
and compliant health insurance for 407 visa holders
weak basic conditions can undermine the entire training proposal
Sponsoring & Training Requirements
| Assessment Area | Subclass 407 Training Visa: Key Requirements for Sponsors and Training Structure |
|---|---|
| Sponsor Eligibility | The sponsor for a Subclass 407 visa must be an approved Temporary Activities Sponsor. Organisations that are not approved, or whose approval is incomplete, cannot lawfully sponsor a 407 Training visa. |
| Substantive Sponsor Responsibilities | Sponsorship is not a nominal role. The sponsoring organisation must take substantive responsibility for the design, delivery, and compliance of the training, rather than merely issuing an invitation letter. |
| Training Plan | A genuine, workable, and clearly structured Training Plan must be provided, typically detailing:
|
| Boundary Between Training and Work | Training must be centred on learning and capability development, not on performing the sponsor’s day-to-day business operations. Where training activities resemble ordinary job duties, the arrangement is likely to be questioned as disguised employment. |
| Non-Displacement of Local Labour | Training arrangements must not:
|
| High-Risk Issues in Practice | The following commonly trigger concerns during assessment:
|
| Key Practical Reminder | Within the Subclass 407 framework, the quality of the Training Plan often determines the success or failure of the visa. A plan that is impractical, poorly structured, or employment-focused will significantly undermine the credibility of the entire application. |
| Assessment Area | Subclass 407 Training Visa: Key Requirements for Sponsors and Training Structure |
|---|---|
| Sponsor Eligibility | The sponsor for a Subclass 407 visa must be an approved Temporary Activities Sponsor. Organisations that are not approved, or whose approval is incomplete, cannot lawfully sponsor a 407 Training visa. |
| Substantive Sponsor Responsibilities | Sponsorship is not a nominal role. The sponsoring organisation must take substantive responsibility for the design, delivery, and compliance of the training, rather than merely issuing an invitation letter. |
| Training Plan | A genuine, workable, and clearly structured Training Plan must be provided, typically detailing:
|
| Boundary Between Training and Work | Training must be centred on learning and capability development, not on performing the sponsor’s day-to-day business operations. Where training activities resemble ordinary job duties, the arrangement is likely to be questioned as disguised employment. |
| Non-Displacement of Local Labour | Training arrangements must not:
|
| High-Risk Issues in Practice | The following commonly trigger concerns during assessment:
|
| Key Practical Reminder | Within the Subclass 407 framework, the quality of the Training Plan often determines the success or failure of the visa. A plan that is impractical, poorly structured, or employment-focused will significantly undermine the credibility of the entire application. |
and be genuine and workable
must not involve ordinary operational job duties
often directly determine whether the visa is approved
Validity Period
The Subclass 407 visa has a maximum validity of up to two years, however, the actual period granted is determined by the reasonable duration of the approved training program and is not automatically issued for the maximum timeframe.
Common Refusal Reason
In practice, refusals of the Subclass 407 Training visa are often not because “documents are missing”.
More commonly, the case officer forms the view that
the training arrangement itself does not align with the policy intent and design of the 407 framework.
Below are the most common and highest-risk refusal reasons seen in practice:
The Training Plan lacks genuineness or is not deliverable
The core of the 407 visa is not whether there is a “training label”, but whether there is a
genuine, well-structured, and deliverable Training Plan.
If the training description is vague, the objectives are unclear, or the plan simply lists job duties without concrete training activities,
it is likely to be assessed as a “formal” or superficial training arrangement and refused.
The training is assessed as disguised employment
If the case officer believes the applicant will, in substance, be performing routine day-to-day duties in Australia,
and the training is merely a label used to “package” the arrangement,
the 407 visa may be considered a non-compliant use of the program.
This risk increases significantly where the training content overlaps heavily with an ordinary employee role,
or where the arrangement appears output-driven rather than learning-driven.
Poor alignment between the applicant and the training content
The 407 visa is generally not suitable for “starting from scratch” in a brand-new occupation.
If the applicant’s qualifications and work background do not logically connect to the proposed training,
the necessity and reasonableness of the training is often questioned.
For Skills Improvement training, an inability to demonstrate
at least 12 months of relevant work experience in the past two years
can be a major adverse factor.
The sponsor or training provider does not meet the requirements
The 407 visa requires the sponsor to be an approved
Temporary Activities Sponsor.
Where the sponsoring organisation appears weak, lacks credible training capacity, or cannot demonstrate an ability to deliver the program,
the application may fail at the sponsorship and training-structure level.
English level is not sufficient for the training program
While the 407 English threshold can be lower than other visas, English is not merely a “tick-the-box” requirement.
If the proposed training relies heavily on English communication but there is no credible evidence of language ability,
the case officer may doubt whether the applicant can genuinely participate in the training.
Concerns about long-term stay or migration intent
If an applicant has the following background, even a seemingly compliant training plan may be assessed unfavourably overall:
Multiple periods of long-term stay in Australia on temporary visas
Frequent visa changes without a clear and consistent pathway
Any history of refusals, cancellations, or compliance issues
In this context, a 407 application may be viewed as a
tool to extend stay,
rather than a genuine training program, and may be refused.
A key practical point is this:
407 refusals are rarely caused by a single issue.
They are usually the outcome of an overall assessment of training genuineness, compliance, and the applicant’s broader background.
For that reason, a structured assessment of the training design, sponsorship arrangements, and applicant profile before lodgement
is often far more valuable than trying to explain issues after the fact.
Your Next Move
The most critical misunderstanding about the Subclass 407 Training visa is assuming that “having a Sponsor + having a Training Plan = automatic approval”. In reality, the focus of 407 assessment has never been about how many documents you submit, but whether the case officer is convinced that your training structure is genuine, necessary, and deliverable.
In simple terms: If your arrangement looks like “coming to Australia to work”, even if it is written as “training”, it may still be assessed as disguised employment and refused. Once a refusal record is created, the impact is not limited to this application — it can affect your visa options for years to come.
If you plan to use the 407 visa to come to Australia, a professional assessment before lodgement is essential. The risks are significantly higher in the following situations, where trying to fix issues after lodgement is often too late:
-
Blurred boundaries between training and a regular role: duties look like normal employment, while the plan is written as training — a classic “packaging” risk.
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Long training duration or close to the 2-year maximum: the longer the period, the higher the burden to justify the necessity and non-replaceability of each training stage.
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First-time 407 sponsors: unclear compliance boundaries and poorly structured plans often lead to applications that look complete but lack credibility.
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Complex visa history of the applicant: prior refusals, cancellations, frequent visa changes, or long stays can trigger heightened scrutiny of genuine intent.
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Intended pathway to 482 or permanent residence: these pathways are highly sensitive to compliance history — one incorrect 407 application can seriously undermine future planning.
The real risk of a 407 visa is not “waiting longer”, but “making one mistake and leaving a permanent mark”. Many applicants are refused not because they lack eligibility, but because they treat a “training visa” as a simplified work visa — and are refused decisively as a result.
If you are unsure whether your training arrangement could be assessed as disguised employment, or if you want your Training Plan to be prepared at a “decision-ready” level rather than a template level, a professional pre-lodgement assessment is strongly recommended to clarify risks, evidence structure, and pathway strategy in one step.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Subclass 407 visa a way to legally work under the name of “training”?
No — this is one of the most common and most dangerous misconceptions. The core purpose of the 407 visa is training, not output or job contribution. If the training arrangement is assessed as effectively replacing a normal work role, it may be refused outright, even if presented as a Training Plan.
Why was the visa refused even though the Training Plan was very detailed?
Because the issue is often not a lack of detail, but that it looks too much like a work arrangement. If the Training Plan resembles KPIs, job duties, or deliverables rather than a skills development pathway, its genuineness may be questioned.
If the sponsor is an approved sponsor, does that mean the visa risk is low?
Not necessarily. Sponsor approval is only an entry requirement — it does not automatically make the training structure compliant. In practice, many refusals occur where the sponsor is approved but the training content itself is not.
Is it a problem if the training closely overlaps with the applicant’s existing work experience
Yes — and it is a high-risk factor. The 407 visa requires skills development or a specific training purpose. If the applicant has already been performing similar work for a long time and cannot explain why further training is necessary, the genuineness of the training will be heavily questioned.
Can the 407 visa be used as a “stepping stone” to a 482 visa or permanent residence?
This is a very risky approach. The 407 visa is intended as a time-limited training visa with a clear endpoint. If materials reveal an obvious transition or migration intention, this can undermine the credibility of the training purpose.
Is a training period close to two years more likely to be refused?
Yes — the level of scrutiny increases significantly. The longer the training period, the more the case officer expects to see a staged, non-compressible training rationale. If the two-year period appears to be continuous on-the-job work, the refusal risk is very high.
If the applicant just meets the English requirement but the training relies heavily on English communication, is that acceptable?
There is a clear risk. English is not merely a “threshold requirement”, but a key factor in assessing whether the training can genuinely be completed. If language ability does not match the intensity of the training, feasibility may be que
Will a 407 refusal affect future student or work visa applications?
Yes — and this impact is often underestimated. A 407 refusal commonly involves findings about genuineness and integrity. These findings remain on immigration records and can have a flow-on effect on all future visa applications.
Can the applicant contribute to projects during training if the company benefits?
This is highly sensitive. Once the contribution is seen as essential labour or project dependency, the arrangement may be assessed as disguised employment — a common ground for refusal under the 407 visa.
What is the most commonly overlooked but fatal issue in 407 applications?
Assuming that “reasonable training” automatically equals “visa compliance”. The 407 visa is fundamentally about migration law logic, not education or HR approval. If the overall structure does not align with legislative intent, the application may still be refused, even if the training itself has value.
Is the Subclass 407 visa a way to legally work under the name of “training”?
No — this is one of the most common and most dangerous misconceptions. The core purpose of the 407 visa is training, not output or job contribution. If the training arrangement is assessed as effectively replacing a normal work role, it may be refused outright, even if presented as a Training Plan.
Why was the visa refused even though the Training Plan was very detailed?
Because the issue is often not a lack of detail, but that it looks too much like a work arrangement. If the Training Plan resembles KPIs, job duties, or deliverables rather than a skills development pathway, its genuineness may be questioned.
If the sponsor is an approved sponsor, does that mean the visa risk is low?
Not necessarily. Sponsor approval is only an entry requirement — it does not automatically make the training structure compliant. In practice, many refusals occur where the sponsor is approved but the training content itself is not.
Is it a problem if the training closely overlaps with the applicant’s existing work experience?
Yes — and it is a high-risk factor. The 407 visa requires skills development or a specific training purpose. If the applicant has already been performing similar work for a long time and cannot explain why further training is necessary, the genuineness of the training will be heavily questioned.
Can the 407 visa be used as a “stepping stone” to a 482 visa or permanent residence?
This is a very risky approach. The 407 visa is intended as a time-limited training visa with a clear endpoint. If materials reveal an obvious transition or migration intention, this can undermine the credibility of the training purpose.
Is a training period close to two years more likely to be refused?
Yes — the level of scrutiny increases significantly. The longer the training period, the more the case officer expects to see a staged, non-compressible training rationale. If the two-year period appears to be continuous on-the-job work, the refusal risk is very high.
If the applicant just meets the English requirement but the training relies heavily on English communication, is that acceptable?
There is a clear risk. English is not merely a “threshold requirement”, but a key factor in assessing whether the training can genuinely be completed. If language ability does not match the intensity of the training, feasibility may be questioned.
Will a 407 refusal affect future student or work visa applications?
Yes — and this impact is often underestimated. A 407 refusal commonly involves findings about genuineness and integrity. These findings remain on immigration records and can have a flow-on effect on all future visa applications.
Can the applicant contribute to projects during training if the company benefits?
This is highly sensitive. Once the contribution is seen as essential labour or project dependency, the arrangement may be assessed as disguised employment — a common ground for refusal under the 407 visa.
What is the most commonly overlooked but fatal issue in 407 applications?
Assuming that “reasonable training” automatically equals “visa compliance”. The 407 visa is fundamentally about migration law logic, not education or HR approval. If the overall structure does not align with legislative intent, the application may still be refused, even if the training itself has value.
Note: This FAQ is general information only and not legal advice. Settings (e.g., eligibility tests, exemptions, and evidentiary rules) can change; always check the latest legislative instruments before applying.