Yearly Archives: 2026

UK B2 English Test 2026: Pass for Skilled Worker Visa Approval

Since 8 January 2026, the UK B2 English test requirement has applied to all new Skilled Worker, High Potential Individual and Scale-up visa applicants — replacing the old B1 standard. B2 is roughly A-Level English, two CEFR rungs above the older threshold, and the change has caught Nigerian engineers, Ghanaian nurses and Kenyan IT specialists off-guard. The pass rate on first attempts is down, but the path through is well-mapped: the right Secure English Language Test, the right prep window, and the right evidence stack still gets approvals through quickly.

What B2 actually demands on test day

B2 on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) means you can read complex texts on familiar subjects, write clear connected text on a range of topics, follow extended speech, and hold a discussion with native speakers without strain. For Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up routes, the Home Office accepts only Secure English Language Tests (SELT) from approved providers: IELTS for UKVI (Academic or General Training), Pearson PTE Academic UKVI, LanguageCert, PSI Services and Trinity College London ISE. All four skills — listening, reading, writing, speaking — must reach B2 minimum: that means IELTS 5.5 across the board, PTE 59 across the board, LanguageCert SELT B2.

The single most common failure pattern Africans report is one component coming in at 5.0 while the other three are 6.0+. Writing and listening are the usual weak points; targeted prep on these two skills lifts most candidates over the line on the second attempt.

Where to book the test in Africa

IELTS for UKVI is available at official test centres in Lagos, Abuja, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Algiers, Cairo, Casablanca and Dakar. Pearson PTE Academic UKVI is currently more limited on the continent, with test centres in Johannesburg, Cairo, Casablanca and Algiers. Booking lead times in May 2026 are 4–6 weeks in Lagos and Accra; closer to 8 weeks in Nairobi and Kampala. Slots open faster outside of major cities — Aba, Eldoret and Kumasi sometimes have availability within two weeks.

Take Adaeze, a Nigerian electrical engineer with a Skilled Worker job offer in Manchester. She booked the IELTS for UKVI Academic six weeks out at the Lagos British Council, sat the test, scored 6.5 / 6.5 / 6.0 / 7.0, and uploaded the Test Report Form to her visa application three days after sitting.

Lock in your English exam strategy with Travel Explore — we will walk you through prep, registration and what counts as evidence. https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Three-week prep plan that actually works

For candidates with strong everyday English, three weeks of focused prep is usually enough. Week one: take a full-length official practice paper from the British Council IELTS site or the Pearson sample tests and score yourself honestly. Identify the weakest component. Week two: drill the weak component for 90 minutes a day, alternating with timed practice in the other three. Week three: two full mock tests under timed conditions, then rest the day before. Most reliable resources: official Cambridge IELTS books 17–18 for Academic; PTE Practice Test Plus 3 for PTE. Skip the YouTube grammar binges — your time is better spent on timed mock papers.

When you can skip the test entirely

You do not need to sit a SELT if your nationality automatically meets the English requirement (the Home Office’s majority English-speaking country list), or if you hold a degree taught in English from a recognised institution. Degrees from universities in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Cameroon (English-medium institutions), Malawi and Sierra Leone are commonly accepted — but you must apply via UK ENIC (formerly UK NARIC) for a confirmation statement: an Academic Qualification Level Statement plus an English Language Proficiency Statement. The combined ENIC application takes 5–10 working days and costs around £140 in 2026. For applicants holding a Master’s or PhD from these countries, this route is faster and cheaper than re-sitting IELTS.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is IELTS Life Skills accepted for the Skilled Worker visa?

No. IELTS Life Skills is only used for spouse and settlement routes that test at A1, A2 or B1. Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up applications need IELTS for UKVI (Academic or General Training) showing B2 across all four skills.

Does my Nigerian university degree count toward English?

Often, yes — but you must obtain a UK ENIC statement confirming both academic level and English-medium instruction. Submit both the Academic Qualification Level Statement and the English Language Proficiency Statement with your visa application.

How long is a SELT valid for visa purposes?

Two years from the test date. If your visa is extended within that window you do not need to retake the test, provided you remain on the same route.

Can I take the test in the UK?

Yes — IELTS for UKVI, PTE Academic UKVI and LanguageCert SELT are all available at UK test centres. This is the common route for applicants switching from a Student visa to a Skilled Worker visa.

What if I just miss B2 on one component?

There is no rounding. A score of 5.0 in writing fails the test even if the other three components are 7.0. You must retake the full exam; partial re-sits are not allowed under SELT rules.

Highlights to remember

  • B2 across all four skills is mandatory for new Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up applicants from 8 January 2026
  • IELTS for UKVI, PTE Academic UKVI and LanguageCert SELT are the most common SELTs in Africa
  • Book 4–8 weeks ahead in Lagos, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala and Johannesburg
  • A degree taught in English plus a UK ENIC statement can replace the test entirely
  • SELT scores stay valid for two years from the test date

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • Skilled Worker visa English bar jumped to B2 — how Africans are clearing it
  • Skip IELTS legally: when your African degree replaces the test
  • Three weeks of the right prep — your B2 IELTS pass plan

Plan your move with us

From your first IELTS booking to your final visa decision, Travel Explore walks beside you.

https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

US Embassy Pause May 2026: South Sudan, DRC, Uganda Visa Plans

The US embassy pause May 2026 has frozen visa services in Juba, Kinshasa and Kampala overnight, leaving thousands of South Sudanese, Congolese and Ugandan applicants staring at locked appointment portals. The pause covers everything — tourist and business B-1/B-2, F-1 student, J-1 exchange, immigrant visas, and most other nonimmigrant categories — with no firm reopening date. If you were counting on a summer interview, this changes your plan, but it does not end it. Below: what the order actually covers, who is hit hardest, and the third-country processing routes that are still working in 2026.

What the May 18 announcement actually covers

The US Department of State notice took effect on 18 May 2026 and applies to the embassies in Juba (South Sudan), Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of the Congo) and Kampala (Uganda). All routine immigrant and nonimmigrant categories are paused — that means B-1/B-2 visitor, F-1 and M-1 student, J-1 exchange visitor, H, L and O work categories, and the full slate of family-based and employment-based immigrant visas. Diplomatic and limited emergency services continue at the discretion of each post.

Crucially, the pause does not invalidate visas that were already printed. Grace, a Ugandan nurse who picked up her IR1 immigrant visa in March, can still travel on it. What she cannot do is book a new appointment for her sister’s follow-to-join case until services resume — and the Department of State has given no public reopening date.

The pause is the third such regional freeze the State Department has used in 2026, after similar moves around the January travel-restriction rollout, so applicants should treat “indefinite” as plausibly several months rather than several weeks.

Who is hit hardest in the coming six weeks

Four groups feel the squeeze first. Students with August or September I-20 start dates need a visa interview within a 120-day window; missing the window forces a deferral and a new SEVIS fee. Diversity Visa selectees have an even harder ceiling — DV-2026 cases must be issued by 30 September 2026 or they expire under State Department rules. Family reunification cases (IR1, IR2, F2A) lose their priority date momentum and often have to re-do medical exams that expire after six months. Premium H-1B transfers and L-1 intracompany moves where the employee is currently in DRC, Uganda or South Sudan effectively pause until either the embassy reopens or the file moves to another post.

The most painful category is DV-2026: a winning notification that took six months of paperwork can be wiped out if the case is not issued before the fiscal-year cut-off. Acting in May or June, not August, is the difference between a US flight and a wasted entry.

Booking time with our Travel Explore advisors lets you map the right next step — visa choice, document order, and timeline. https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Third-country processing routes still working in 2026

The cleanest workaround is a transfer to a US consular post in a neighbouring country that is currently accepting third-country nationals. In practice three posts on the continent take African TCN cases on a discretionary basis: Nairobi, Kenya (commonly accepts DRC, South Sudan, Burundi and Rwandan nationals legally resident in Kenya), Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (accepts South Sudan, Eritrea, Somalia cases when applicants can show lawful presence in Ethiopia), and Accra, Ghana (broad West African intake, sometimes flexible for Central African applicants).

Patrick, a Congolese mining engineer who had an H-1B visa appointment scheduled in Kinshasa for June, immediately filed for a transfer to Nairobi. He already had a six-month Kenyan business visa from prior work travel and a clean US travel record from 2023 — both factors that posts use when deciding whether to take a third-country case. Eight days later he had an October interview slot in Nairobi.

For DV selectees, the transfer route is different: you write to the Kentucky Consular Center (KCC@state.gov) with your case number, current location, and the post you want to be reassigned to. Approval is not guaranteed but is often granted when the original post is in pause status.

Document refresh — what to fix before you book anything

Before you spend money on a new flight or post-transfer fee, make sure your file is appointment-ready at any post. Refresh police certificates from your current country of residence and any country you have lived in for 12+ months in the past five years. Order at least three certified copies each of birth and marriage certificates — third-country posts sometimes ask for an extra original. Update employment letters and bank statements to the most recent month. Re-confirm your DS-160 and download a fresh confirmation page; old confirmation pages tied to a specific post are sometimes rejected after a transfer.

Medical exams are the silent killer. Panel physician exams expire six months after issue, so if your interview slipped from June to November you almost certainly need a new exam at a panel physician in the country where your interview will actually take place. Booking the new exam before you have a fresh interview date is wasted money — do it in the right order.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are visas I already received still valid for travel to the US?

Yes. The pause only blocks new visa issuance — existing visas remain valid until their printed expiry, subject to admissibility checks at the US port of entry.

Can I get my MRV visa fee refunded if my appointment was cancelled?

MRV receipts remain valid for one year from the date of payment and can normally be used at a transferred post. Refunds are rare and only granted in narrow medical or death-related circumstances.

Will Nairobi or Accra accept my case as a third-country national?

Each post applies its own caseload screen. Nairobi has historically taken DRC and South Sudan cases when applicants can show legal stay in Kenya. Accra is broader on West African intake. There is no guarantee, but a prior US travel history and a clean local immigration record help.

I am a DV-2026 winner — what is the deadline?

DV-2026 visas must be issued by 30 September 2026. If your interview was scheduled at Juba, Kinshasa or Kampala, email KCC@state.gov with your case number and request a transfer to an open post immediately.

Does the pause affect my F-1 student visa renewal if I am already studying in the US?

Renewals are processed at US consulates abroad, not inside the US. If you planned to renew during summer travel to your home country, route your renewal through a third-country post rather than Juba, Kinshasa or Kampala.

When will the embassies reopen?

The Department of State has not announced a date. Past pauses have lasted from a few weeks to several months depending on local conditions and political negotiations.

Quick recap

  • The 18 May 2026 pause covers all visa categories at Juba, Kinshasa and Kampala
  • Already-issued US visas remain valid for travel
  • Third-country interviews in Nairobi, Addis Ababa or Accra are the fastest fix
  • DV-2026 selectees must contact KCC before 30 September 2026 or lose their slot
  • Refresh documents and panel-physician medicals before you book a transferred appointment

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • US embassies just shut visa services in three African capitals — your 5-minute action plan
  • If your US interview was in Juba, Kinshasa or Kampala, read this before Friday
  • DV-2026 winners in DRC, South Sudan, Uganda: do not lose your slot to the pause

Speak to a Travel Explore advisor

Bring your timeline, documents and questions. Our advisors will tell you the cleanest, fastest route forward — including which third-country post is most likely to take your case.

https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

New Zealand Green List 2026: Fast-Track Residence Pathways for African Nurses, Engineers and IT Professionals

While Australia, Canada and the UK have all tightened in 2026, New Zealand has held an unusually open door for skilled African applicants — and the New Zealand Green List 2026 is the proof. The Green List names occupations where INZ allows either Straight-to-Residence or Work-to-Residence pathways. African nurses, IT professionals, civil engineers, electricians and senior teachers continue to be in the top decile of approvals, and 2026 has so far been a strong year for African Green List grants.

  1. What is the Green List
  2. Tier 1 vs Tier 2 — what differs
  3. African-relevant Green List occupations
  4. Application process step-by-step
  5. When AEWV is a faster route
  6. FAQs from African candidates

What is the Green List

The Green List is INZ’s named list of occupations in shortage. It comes with two streams:

  • Straight to Residence — direct PR if you have a job offer in a Tier 1 role, meet the salary floor and clear skills, health and character.
  • Work to Residence — a 2-year work visa for Tier 2 occupations, with PR available after 24 months in role.

Tier 1 vs Tier 2 — what differs

Tier 1 occupations get the Straight-to-Residence pathway: file once, land with PR. Tier 2 occupations get Work-to-Residence: file for a 2-year visa first, then file for PR after the 2-year mark. Tier 1 examples relevant to African applicants:

  • Registered nurses (all branches).
  • Medical specialists, GPs.
  • Civil, structural, environmental engineers.
  • ICT security specialists, devops, software engineers.
  • Secondary teachers in maths, physics, science.

Tier 2 examples:

  • Electricians, plumbers, gasfitters.
  • Heavy vehicle mechanics, automotive technicians.
  • Carpenters, joiners.
  • Early childhood teachers.

African-relevant Green List occupations

The full list runs to roughly 80 occupations. African applicants with confirmed approvals in 2025-26 commonly come from:

  • Nigeria — civil engineers, registered nurses, telecoms specialists.
  • South Africa — software engineers, electricians, IT security.
  • Kenya — registered nurses, civil engineers, secondary teachers.
  • Zimbabwe — registered nurses, GPs, heavy vehicle mechanics.
  • Ghana — IT professionals, secondary teachers.
  • Egypt — civil engineers, urban planners, IT.

Application process step-by-step

  1. Get your occupation registered or licensed in NZ — Nursing Council, Engineering NZ, Teaching Council, EWRB.
  2. Find a New Zealand employer accredited for AEWV sponsorship.
  3. Confirm your salary meets the floor — NZD 31.61/hour for AEWV from February 2026 (the median wage may change later in the year).
  4. Submit the AEWV (work visa) if Tier 2, or Straight to Residence if Tier 1.
  5. Provide police certificates, medical exam, full CV and qualification evidence.
  6. For Tier 2 applicants, complete 24 months in role then apply for residence.

👉 Travel Explore’s NZ desk runs a registration shortlist tailored to your occupation. Start at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

When AEWV is a faster route

The Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) is the main work pathway in NZ. For African candidates whose occupation is not on the Green List, AEWV may still offer a route — and certain AEWV roles convert to residence after the Skilled Migrant Category (SMC) rebuild later in 2026. The trade-offs:

  • Green List Tier 1: best — PR on arrival.
  • Green List Tier 2: solid — PR in 2 years.
  • AEWV only: faster to get into NZ if you do not yet meet Green List criteria, but PR is via SMC points later.

Linet, a Kenyan registered nurse, was offered a contract at Auckland City Hospital in March 2026 at NZD 78,000/year. Her Straight-to-Residence application was approved 47 days after submission and she now lives in Auckland with her husband (full work rights) and two children (free public schooling).

Pre-screen your Green List eligibility

Most Green List rejections trace back to a missed registration or a salary just below the floor. Travel Explore can pre-screen both at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

FAQs from African candidates

Do I need a job offer before applying?
Yes for both Tier 1 and Tier 2.

Can my partner work in NZ on a dependant visa?
Yes. Partners of Green List visa holders typically receive open work rights.

What is the minimum salary for Green List?
It varies by occupation. Most Tier 1 roles require salary at or above NZ’s median wage.

How long until I can apply for NZ citizenship?
Five years of holding residence, with physical presence requirements.

Do African nursing qualifications need re-validation?
Yes. Nursing Council registration is required, and you may need to complete a Competence Assessment Programme depending on your country.

What is the IELTS score required?
An overall IELTS 6.5 (with no band below 6.5) is the typical baseline for skilled-occupation applications.

Bottom line

  • Tier 1 = Straight to Residence; Tier 2 = 2-year Work to Residence.
  • Registered nurses, engineers, IT and secondary teachers are the African sweet spot.
  • Get your NZ occupation registration sorted before applying.
  • Partner gets open work rights and children get free public schooling.

More from Travel Explore

Share this story

  • “New Zealand Green List 2026 — straight to residence for African nurses, engineers, IT.”
  • “Tier 1 vs Tier 2: the only difference that matters for African applicants.”
  • “Auckland City Hospital approves African nurses in 47 days. Here is how.”

Sources: immigration.govt.nz · beehive.govt.nz

Canada Express Entry Processing Times May 2026: What the FSWP Backlog Means for African Candidates

IRCC updated its Canada Express Entry processing timeline on 12 May 2026 and the picture for African candidates is mixed. The Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP) added one month — now at seven months — while the queue surged by 7,900 applicants to roughly 52,000 people. The Provincial Nominee Program edged in the right direction, the Atlantic Immigration Program shed two months, and the Parents and Grandparents Program saved a month. Here is exactly what to do with that information if you are in the African Express Entry pool right now.

In this update

  1. The 12 May 2026 processing snapshot
  2. Why FSWP slowed and PNP sped up
  3. May 2026 draw pattern: PNP-only with CRS 798
  4. Strategy for African candidates in pool
  5. 2026-2028 levels plan consultation
  6. FAQs from African candidates

The 12 May 2026 processing snapshot

  • Federal Skilled Worker Program: 7 months (+1 month).
  • Provincial Nominee Program via Express Entry: down one month.
  • Canadian Experience Class: stable at 5 months.
  • Atlantic Immigration Program: -2 months.
  • Parents and Grandparents Program: -1 month.
  • FSWP queue: ~52,000 active cases (+7,900 vs April).

Why FSWP slowed and PNP sped up

Three drivers behind the move:

  • IRCC reallocated officers to category-based and PNP draws, leaving general FSWP cases under-resourced.
  • The 2026 Express Entry pool grew faster than expected from international student PR conversions.
  • The category-based draws (healthcare, STEM, trades, agriculture, French-speaking) absorbed officer time.

May 2026 draw pattern: PNP-only with CRS 798

The first Express Entry round of May 2026 (held 11 May) was a PNP-only draw with 380 invitations and a CRS cutoff of 798 — three points higher than the 27 April draw. The signal: provincial nomination remains the single highest-leverage move an African candidate can make to escape the FSWP backlog. With a PNP nomination, you add 600 CRS points and effectively guarantee an ITA in the next round.

Strategy for African candidates in pool

  1. Submit PNP Expressions of Interest in multiple provinces. Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Alberta, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Yukon all have active 2026 streams.
  2. Push your French to NCLC 7. French-speaking category-based draws cleared at CRS 379 in some rounds. Even basic written French can move an African candidate into a separate pool.
  3. Verify your education with WES, ICAS or ICES. Lapsed ECAs are still one of the top reasons African profiles are missing points.
  4. Keep your IELTS or CELPIP within two years. Many African candidates submitted EOIs in 2023-24 with English tests that have since expired.
  5. If you are on FSWP route only, prepare for a 7-month grant timeline. Avoid quitting your African job until you have an AOR (Acknowledgement of Receipt).

👉 Travel Explore’s Canada desk can pre-screen your CRS and PNP fit in a 30-minute call. Book at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

2026-2028 levels plan consultation

IRCC opened public consultations on 12 May 2026 (running through 14 June 2026) on the 2026-2028 immigration levels plan. African candidates and the diaspora can submit input directly via the IRCC consultations portal. The plan will determine total PR admissions, which influences how aggressively the draws clear the pool in 2027 and 2028. Submit a thoughtful response — it actually goes into the consultation report.

Pool-aware CRS coaching

Whether you have 450, 500 or 550 points, there is usually a tweak that lifts you into the next draw cohort. Get a tailored CRS coaching session at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

FAQs from African candidates

Should I still apply through FSWP with a 7-month wait?
Yes if your CRS is above 500. The 7-month wait is from AOR. Many African applicants will not be invited at lower CRS levels anyway.

What is the fastest PNP for African candidates in 2026?
Saskatchewan SINP Occupations In-Demand and Manitoba MPNP Skilled Worker Overseas have been the most generous in early 2026.

Does the May 2026 update affect category-based draws?
No. Category-based draws continue independently of FSWP processing.

What if my CRS dropped because I aged out of a band?
Look for PNP, French points, or extra Canadian work experience to recover the gap.

Can I work in Canada while my Express Entry application is processing?
Only if you have a separate work permit. Express Entry itself is a permanent residence application.

Is the FSWP being phased out?
No. But its share of overall PR admissions has fallen relative to PNP and category-based streams.

What to do this week

  • Update your Express Entry profile with current scores and documents.
  • File at least one PNP Expression of Interest.
  • Re-take IELTS or CELPIP if your old test is over 20 months old.
  • Submit input to the 2026-2028 Levels Plan consultation.
  • Book a CRS strategy session with Travel Explore.

More from Travel Explore

Share this story

  • “Canada FSWP just grew by 7,900 cases — Africans, here is how to skip the queue.”
  • “PNP-only Express Entry draw, CRS 798. Provincial nomination is the African shortcut.”
  • “IRCC processing update: AIP -2 months, FSWP +1 month. The strategy shift.”

Sources: canada.ca · cicnews.com

Australia 189 Visa 2026: Skilled Independent Comeback for African Candidates Explained

In a 3 May 2026 closed-door briefing to the Migration Institute of Australia, senior Department of Home Affairs officials hinted that Skilled-Independent (Subclass 189) invitation numbers could “recover substantially” in the 2026-27 programme year. After three lean years — only 7,000 invitations in 2025-26 against more than 44,000 in 2018-19 — that is a major signal for African candidates currently sitting on their SkillSelect EOI. Here is the Australia 189 visa 2026 playbook to be ready.

  1. What changed on 3 May 2026
  2. What the Subclass 189 visa actually offers
  3. Points test snapshot for 2026
  4. Three things to do before invitations restart
  5. 189 vs 190 vs 491 — which fits African candidates
  6. FAQs from African candidates

What changed on 3 May 2026

Australia’s points-tested independent route has been frozen in low-volume mode since the migration programme was tilted toward employer-sponsored streams in 2022-23. The 3 May briefing — first reported by Visa HQ News — signals a re-opening of the route in the 2026-27 programme year. The fiscal year runs 1 July 2026 to 30 June 2027. While no fixed invitation round date has been announced, the next 189 round is expected in May or June 2026 to clear backlog before the year-end.

What the Subclass 189 visa actually offers

The 189 Skilled Independent visa is a points-tested permanent residence visa. You do not need a sponsor, an employer or a state nomination. African accountants, software engineers, civil engineers, registered nurses, secondary teachers and biomedical scientists are over-represented in past 189 grants, and the visa offers immediate Australian permanent residence with full work, study and Medicare rights for you and your dependants.

Points test snapshot for 2026

The minimum entry threshold is 65 points, but invitations in recent rounds have required 95-105 points for most occupations. Africans need to maximise:

  • Age (best score at 25-32 — 30 points).
  • English (Superior — 20 points; Proficient — 10 points).
  • Skilled employment outside Australia (up to 15 points).
  • Skilled employment inside Australia (up to 20 points).
  • Qualifications (doctorate — 20 points; bachelor — 15 points).
  • Partner skills, single status bonus, regional study, NAATI accreditation.

Three things to do before invitations restart

  1. Re-submit a fresh EOI. EOIs that have sat dormant for over 12 months are deprioritised. Submit a new one with current evidence.
  2. Push English from Proficient to Superior. The 10-point jump from Proficient to Superior (IELTS 8.0 / PTE 79) is the cheapest way for African candidates to add points.
  3. Verify your skills assessment is current. Most assessments lapse after 3 years.

👉 Need a points-test calculation for your African profile? Send your CV via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

189 vs 190 vs 491 — which fits African candidates

Three points-tested visas overlap:

  • 189 Skilled Independent — no sponsor required, PR on grant, hardest to invite under current low-volume settings.
  • 190 Skilled Nominated — state government nomination required, PR on grant, easier in 2025-26 because states have been issuing nominations.
  • 491 Skilled Work Regional — regional state nomination, provisional 5-year visa with PR pathway after 3 years of regional residence.

African candidates with 95+ points should keep 189 as their target. Candidates with 75-90 points should target 190 or 491 in parallel — and South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory are still nominating Africans in critical occupations.

Kwame, a Ghanaian software engineer in Accra, scored 95 points with a 32-year-old age band, PTE Superior, three years of overseas experience and a Master’s degree. He has an EOI in for both 189 and 190 Victoria nomination and expects a 189 invitation in the August round.

Lock in your points score before the round

Even a 5-point swing changes your invitation probability. Travel Explore’s Australia advisors can run your case against the current point cut-offs — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

FAQs from African candidates

Can I include my partner on a 189?
Yes. Spouse and dependent children are included on the application.

Do I need to live in Australia first?
No. You can apply, be invited and migrate from your African country directly.

Which African nationalities are most successful on 189?
Nigerians, South Africans, Kenyans, Egyptians and Ghanaians have been the largest African 189 grant recipients in past programme years.

What is the minimum age?
18 years. Maximum is 44 years for points-test eligibility.

How long does a 189 grant take after invitation?
Processing times currently run 8-13 months from invitation to grant.

Is the 189 a one-shot route or can I reapply?
EOIs auto-renew. If you are not invited, you can update your score and stay in the pool.

Three lines to remember

  • 189 invitations expected to “recover substantially” in 2026-27.
  • African candidates should re-file fresh EOIs now.
  • Push English to Superior and verify skills assessment validity before the next round.

More from Travel Explore

Share this story

  • “Australia hints at 189 Skilled Independent comeback. African candidates, fresh EOI today.”
  • “From 7,000 to 44,000? Subclass 189 invitations may rebound in 2026-27.”
  • “Three ways African candidates can add 10+ points before the next 189 round.”

Sources: immi.homeaffairs.gov.au · dewr.gov.au