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Australia quietly changed the rules on the Subclass 407 Training Visa on 11 March 2026, and if you are on a temporary visa or planning to apply for one, this matters more than most government announcements do. On a recent episode of The Talk Show on Radio Haanji 1674 AM, host Ranjodh Singh sat down with migration agent Preetinder Singh Grewal from Grewal Visa Solutions (MARA #2418381) to go through what actually changed, in plain language, for the people this affects.
What changed on 11 March 2026Before 11 March, you could lodge a Subclass 407 Training Visa application while your sponsorship and nomination were still being processed. The two things ran alongside each other. That is no longer the case.
From 11 March, both the Temporary Activities Sponsorship and the Nomination must be fully approved before you can lodge the visa application. Not pending. Approved.
This means the overall timeline is longer. How much longer depends on how quickly your sponsor gets processed, but if you were planning based on the old parallel model, your timeline needs to change. The applications do not run concurrently anymore. They are sequential now.
Why the government made this moveThe government's position, as Grewal explained in the interview, comes down to two things it wants to stop.
The first is visa chaining — people moving from one temporary visa to another without any genuine pathway to permanent residency or real vocational training. The 407 Training Visa had developed a reputation, in some quarters, as a tool for extending stay rather than actually developing skills. The new rules force the government to check the training and the sponsor before a visa application even gets lodged.
The second concern is worker protection. Requiring sponsor approval upfront means the Department can vet whether a sponsoring organisation is legitimate and whether the training arrangement is genuine, before someone ends up in it. Foreign workers on training visas have sometimes found themselves in arrangements that looked acceptable on paper and were less so in practice. This change pushes the scrutiny earlier.
Whether it fully solves either problem is hard to say at this stage. What it does do is make the preparation harder to leave until the last minute.
What you should actually do about itGrewal's guidance in the episode is specific. If you are on a 407 visa or planning to apply for one, start coordinating with your sponsor much earlier than you would have before. The buffer you had when applications could run concurrently is gone. Six months before expiry is a reasonable minimum to start the conversation. If your sponsor's approval has lapsed or their business circumstances have changed, that needs to be resolved first — before the nomination goes in, before the application goes in.
For employers and organisations that sponsor 407 holders, the same logic applies. Your sponsorship approval and the nomination both need to be current and confirmed before your trainee or employee can apply. If there is paperwork to update on your side, do not wait.
The documentation supporting the training arrangement needs to be solid, not assembled in a rush when the application window opens. The government is now checking whether the training is genuine and whether the sponsor is credible at the front end of the process, not after the visa has been lodged.
Why The Talk Show gets these conversations rightImmigration information is an area where vague or outdated guidance does genuine harm. Getting it wrong costs people money, legal status and sometimes years of planning. Ranjodh Singh's conversation with Grewal on The Talk Show worked because Grewal is a MARA-registered migration agent — regulated, accountable, and qualified to give migration advice in Australia. The registration number is on the record: MARA #2418381.
That is a different category from general summaries you might find online. It is advice from someone whose professional standing depends on getting it right. For the Indian and Punjabi community in Melbourne navigating Australia's migration system, that distinction matters.
You can find more episodes across Radio Haanji's programming at haanji.com.au/podcast — including current affairs through Indian Updates and geopolitical analysis from The Insight Report.
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If you have migration questions after listening, contact Preetinder Grewal and the team at Grewal Visa Solutions directly for registered, professional advice.
No transcript available for this episode.
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