Subclass 186 Visa Requirements for Hospitals & Health Services

Subclass 186 Visa

Subclass 186 Visa Requirements for Hospitals & Health Services

186 Visa Requirements for Healthcare Employers (Australia)

By Asif Consulting – Immigration & Workforce Advisory

As Australia’s healthcare sector continues to face workforce shortages, hospitals and health service providers are increasingly relying on the Subclass 186 Employer Nomination Scheme (ENS) visa to secure permanent skilled staff and reduce turnover in critical roles.

At Asif Consulting, we are seeing a growing number of hospital employers seeking clarity on nomination requirements, occupation alignment, and compliance standards. Below is a simplified, practical overview designed to help HR teams and hospital administrators understand how to prepare strong and decision-ready nominations.

Why Hospitals Use the Subclass 186 Visa

The Subclass 186 visa allows Australian employers to sponsor skilled workers for permanent residency. For hospitals and health services, it provides:

  • Workforce stability in hard-to-fill clinical roles

  • Long-term retention of skilled staff

  • Reduced recruitment cycles and visa uncertainty

  • Stronger service continuity across wards and campuses

However, nomination approval depends heavily on how clearly and consistently the employer presents the role.

Choosing the Right 186 Stream

Hospitals must nominate under the correct stream:

Temporary Residence Transition (TRT) Stream

Suitable where the hospital is sponsoring an existing employee who meets TRT pathway requirements.

Direct Entry Stream

Used when recruiting from offshore or nominating a candidate who does not qualify under TRT.

Labour Agreement Stream

Applicable where the hospital operates under a formal labour agreement with the Department of Home Affairs.

Selecting the correct stream is critical, as each pathway has distinct eligibility and evidence requirements.

What the Department of Home Affairs Assesses

Under migration law (including Regulation 5.19), nomination approval focuses on whether the role is:

  • Genuine

  • Full-time and ongoing

  • Consistent with the nominated occupation

  • Properly remunerated

  • Clearly embedded within the organisation

In simple terms, the nomination must tell one consistent story from start to finish.

Common Risk Areas for Hospital Nominations

Hospitals often face unique structural challenges:

  • Internal job titles may not match ANZSCO classifications

  • Staff rotate across wards, clinics, or campuses

  • Enterprise agreements include allowances and loadings

  • Multi-site operations complicate location reporting

These factors can create inconsistencies if not clearly explained.

Occupation Alignment: A Critical Factor

The nominated occupation must match the actual duties performed.

To strengthen alignment:

  • Ensure the position description reflects the correct ANZSCO occupation

  • Describe duties clearly, showing responsibility level and scope

  • Include reporting lines and supervision structure

  • Explain rotations as operational context — not as separate roles

All documents must align, including:

  • Position description

  • Employment contract

  • Organisational chart

  • Salary classification

  • Work location details

Work Location Clarity

Many hospitals operate across multiple sites. A strong nomination should clearly list:

  • Primary workplace

  • Secondary or rotational sites

  • Outreach clinics (if applicable)

  • Contract clauses reflecting actual work patterns

Unclear or inconsistent location reporting can delay decisions.

Salary and Enterprise Agreement Transparency

Healthcare employers commonly pay under enterprise agreements with loadings and allowances.

To avoid confusion, provide:

  • Base salary

  • Classification level and enterprise agreement reference

  • Ordinary working hours

  • Clear explanation of allowances and loadings

  • Superannuation details

The salary narrative must be simple, structured, and consistent.

Evidence That Strengthens a Nomination

Hospitals can significantly improve approval prospects by including:

  • Workforce or recruitment plans

  • Evidence of persistent vacancies

  • Roster data showing staffing gaps

  • Service demand indicators

  • Organisational charts demonstrating governance structure

This helps show the role is genuine and ongoing — not created solely for migration purposes.

Post-Approval Compliance Responsibilities

After nomination approval, hospitals must maintain records and monitor changes involving:

  • Duties

  • Work location

  • Employing entity

  • Hours and salary

  • Reporting lines

Changes that affect the core nominated role may require reassessment.

Employee Visa Requirements

In addition to employer obligations, the nominee must meet:

  • Skills and qualification requirements

  • Nomination approval

  • Health and character standards

  • Stream-specific criteria

Hospitals should also plan for professional registration and credentialing timelines where relevant.

Key Takeaway for Healthcare Employers

Successful Subclass 186 nominations in the healthcare sector depend on:

  • Clear occupation alignment
  • Transparent salary structure
  • Consistent documentation
  • Genuine, ongoing role design
  • Strong supporting workforce evidence

When every document tells the same story, approvals are faster and smoother.

How Asif Consulting Can Help

Asif Consulting supports hospitals and HR teams with:

  • Occupation alignment analysis

  • Nomination file preparation

  • Salary narrative structuring

  • Compliance reviews

  • Audit-ready documentation

Our goal is to ensure your nomination is decision-ready and risk-minimized from the outset.