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Australia Student Visa Rejections Hit a 20-Year High — What Is Going Wrong and Who Is Being Turned Away

Australia’s international student visa system is in crisis. Rejection rates have hit levels not seen in two decades — and the students bearing the brunt are overwhelmingly from South Asia.

Here is what the data actually shows.

The 32.5% Rejection Rate No One Saw Coming

In February 2024, the refusal rate for university student visa applications in Australia hit 32.5% — a 20-year high, according to data analysed by Universities Australia.

That figure was not evenly distributed. The breakdown by country is stark:

CountryRejection rate
Nepal60.2%
Bangladesh47.2%
India40%
China3%

By the March 2026 intake, the situation for some source countries had worsened further. An Australian education provider told industry publication The Koala News that approximately 78 per cent of Nepalese applicants had been refused — and 55 per cent of Bangladeshi applicants — despite students meeting the institution’s own financial and academic thresholds.

What Changed — and Why

The Albanese government introduced a series of policy changes designed to reduce Australia’s net overseas migration, which had edged up to 311,000 in late 2025 — above Treasury forecasts.

Key changes hitting international students:

  • Visa fee doubled to $2,000 — one of the highest in the world, and non-refundable if refused
  • Genuine Student (GS) requirement replaced the old Genuine Temporary Entrant test from July 2024 — requiring applicants to answer targeted questions about study intent, financial capacity, and career goals
  • National Planning Level cap set at 295,000 student commencements for 2026
  • Stricter financial evidence requirements introduced in the Department of Home Affairs’ January 2026 briefing to education providers

The result, in the words of Universities Australia CEO Luke Sheehy, has been “whiplash” — a sharp reversal from the government’s earlier commitment to expand international student enrolments.

The Damage to Australia’s Education Sector

The impact extends well beyond individual visa refusals.

In 2024, more than 15,300 study visa applications were withdrawn — triple the number from 2023. Students are abandoning applications before they are even decided.

The English language teaching sector has been hardest hit. In the last six months of 2025, fewer student visas were granted for English language courses than at any point in the past 20 years. The industry estimates 5,000 to 9,000 jobs have been lost across the sector.

Processing times have blown out to an average of 61 days — adding further uncertainty for students trying to plan their studies.

Is Australia Still Worth It?

For students from low-risk countries — particularly China, which maintains a 3 per cent rejection rate — Australia remains accessible. But for students from India, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, the risk calculation has changed dramatically.

A non-refundable $2,000 visa fee on a 60 per cent chance of refusal is a significant financial gamble. Many students are redirecting their plans to Canada, the UK, or New Zealand — all of which are actively recruiting international students Australia is turning away.

Universities Australia has warned that the “stop-start” settings are causing long-term reputational damage to Australia as a study destination — damage that takes years to rebuild once international student confidence is lost.

For anyone still planning to apply, the full requirements for the subclass 500 student visa — including the new Genuine Student assessment and financial evidence rules — are in our subclass 500 visa guide. And for graduates already in Australia looking at what comes next, see our subclass 485 graduate visa guide.

Related guides: Subclass 500 Student Visa Australia 2026 | Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate Visa 2026

General information only. Sources: Universities Australia, Department of Home Affairs, The Koala News, ICEF Monitor. Visa policy changes frequently — always verify current requirements at immi.homeaffairs.gov.au.

Author

  • I'm Shubham Bhardwaj, based in Sydney. I research and write about Australian economic data, cost of living, migration, and tax — topics I've had to navigate firsthand since moving to Australia.

    I went through the Australian migration system myself, including a Subclass 485 Temporary Graduate visa application — so I understand the complexity of visa pathways from personal experience, not just research. I work in retail management in Sydney, which gives me a ground-level view of wages, award rates, and cost pressures that official data alone doesn't capture. I've also managed my own tax obligations as a sole trader under ATO rules.

    Everything I publish on Fenro is built on primary sources — ABS, RBA, ATO, Fair Work Australia, Services Australia, and Department of Home Affairs. I don't summarise other journalists. I go to the original data and translate it into plain language for people who need to understand it.

    Fenro exists because most cost-of-living and finance content written for Australians either talks down to the reader or buries the useful information under disclaimers. I write the article I wish existed when I needed the answer.

    Disclaimer: Everything published on Fenro is general information only. Nothing on this site constitutes financial, tax, legal, or migration advice. Data is sourced from named Australian government bodies and verified at the time of publication. Always verify current figures directly with the relevant authority — ABS, RBA, ATO, Fair Work Australia, Services Australia, or Department of Home Affairs — and consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your circumstances.

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