Permanent Residence
01Pathways that lead directly to Australian permanent residency
Permanent residence sponsored by an Australian employer. Direct Entry, Temporary Residence Transition, or Labour Agreement streams.
Provides skin analyses, facial therapies, skin-care treatments and body treatments such as massage to clients.
Broad state reach across 8 jurisdictions. Listed on the CSOL — employer-sponsored pathways prioritised.
Run a free EOI assessment against current DHA cut-offs.
“BEAUTY THERAPISTS provide skin analyses, facial therapies, skin-care treatments and body treatments such as massage to clients.”
Used for skilled visa lists lodged with the Department of Home Affairs.
AQF Certificate III including at least two years of on-the-job training, or AQF Certificate IV (ANZSCO Skill Level 3)
1 direct PR route, 0 provisional regional routes (convert via 191), and 1 temporary work visa.
Pathways that lead directly to Australian permanent residency
Permanent residence sponsored by an Australian employer. Direct Entry, Temporary Residence Transition, or Labour Agreement streams.
Live, work, and study in a regional area — lead to PR via 191
No skilled regional (provisional) pathway currently open.
Short to medium-term visas — some offer a PR pathway
Employer-sponsored temporary work visa. Core Skills, Specialist Skills and Essential Skills streams.
Designated Area Migration Agreements (DAMA)
This occupation is eligible under the following DAMA regions, which may offer concessions on age, English, and salary requirements.
A snapshot of how many people are competing for this occupation right now. Tap “View full EOI insights” for wait-time estimates, state-by-state difficulty, peer comparisons and cohort tracking.
Choose a state to view nomination criteria, place allocations, and recent invitation rounds.
Your employment history should align with these ANZSCO-defined tasks. VETASSESS looks for demonstrable experience in at least five.
discussing client needs, analysing skin characteristics and advising on suitable skin care, treatments and application of make-up
applying general cosmetic and corrective make-up
performing manicures and pedicures including decorative nail art, application of artificial nails, nail repair, and other specialised hand and foot treatments
performing facial and body treatments such as massages
treating unwanted hair through waxing, bleaching, tinting, depilation and electrolysis
evaluating beauty therapy processes and products
receiving bookings, arranging appointments and maintaining client records
providing advice on and selling cosmetic products
The headline workforce, pay, shortage and demographic indicators for this occupation, sourced from Jobs and Skills Australia.
Our OMARA-registered agents will audit your points, cross-check Beauty Therapist nuances against the latest DHA bulletins, and map a step-by-step case file — in one free 30-minute consultation.