We are Visa and Migration Advisory Service – a team of professionals with vast experience in the legal matters relating to Australian visa and migration law. We have the highest success rate with majority of our clients receiving positive outcomes on their visas.


We feel a great personal responsibility for every case that we take on. We realize with all our heart that behind every case is the fate of a person and his or her entire family. That’s why, if we take on a client, we combine all our resources, energy and faith to ensure the success!
Before taking the case, we assess a potential client’s eligibility for an Australian visa. Other agents have turned down many of our clients, who successfully remained in Australia with our help.
New Australians Created
Successful Visa Applications
We have been successfully helping people to migrate to Australia for over 20 years and know Australian immigration law insight out. However, we totally understand that most people might not understand how to immigrate to Australia, what paths are available, where to begin etc. If you are new to the notion of relocating to Australia, this article is for you.
Four major paths pf Australian immigration:
This is it! You might notice that there is no “Immigration to Australia through Education” or “Work in Australia and then stay in the country” programs. Temporary work and study in Australia do not lead to permanent residency on their own. After working or studying in Australia, you are most likely to go via the Skilled Migration route, if you want to migrate to Australia for good.

There are more than 120 types of visas to Australia. In addition, the Australian immigration law is constantly evolving. It can be quite challenging to complete a visa application correctly and hope for a positive result without the knowledge of nuances of Australian visa and immigration legislation.
Contact us today by fill up free online visa assessment and we will contact you
Want to live and work in Australia?
To qualify, you must be under 45, speak English well, and have skills in demand on Australia’s Skilled Occupation List. Your work experience and job tasks often matter more than your diploma title.
Main visa options:
- Subclass 189: Skilled Independent – no state or employer sponsorship required.
- Subclass 190: Skilled Nominated – requires state or territory nomination.
- Subclass 491: Skilled Work Regional – regional nomination or family sponsorship.
Watch our video blog for a step-by-step explanation or visit the Skilled Migration page for full details.


Australia is home to six of the world’s top 100 universities: University of Melbourne, Australian National University, University of Sydney, University of Queensland, University of New South Wales, and Monash University.
Seven Australian cities – Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra, Adelaide, Perth, and the Gold Coast – are ranked among the best student destinations globally.
With a Student Visa (subclass 500), you can:
- Enrol in a recognised course
- Work part-time during studies
- Bring family members with you
This visa may open pathways to permanent residency after graduation. For details, visit the Student Visa page.
Bring your loved ones to Australia without points tests or English exams. You must have a close family member who is an Australian citizen or permanent resident.
Visa options:
- Partner Visas – for spouses, de facto partners, and fiancés/fiancées. The Department of Home Affairs checks relationship evidence carefully. Application fees are high and non-refundable if refused, so many couples work with registered migration agents.
- Parent Visas – for parents meeting the Balance of Family Test (at least half of your children live in Australia).
- Other Family Visas – for children, remaining relatives, or carers under specific conditions.
Visit the Family Migration page for eligibility and document requirements.


This path is for those individuals that have plenty of money or a serious experience running a business. Minimum requirement for this visa is total net business and personal assets of at least AUD1.25 million.
This path might suit businessmen or investors that are under 55 years of age and have no English, as there are visas within the Business Migration stream that allow Australian immigration without English knowledge (you would need to pay a fee of about AUD$10000 for the English classes through).
Here you will find more information about various business programs and its requirements.
Australian businesses can sponsor skilled workers when local talent isn’t available. To qualify, workers must have a relevant occupation , meet skills and English criteria, while employers must:
- Provide a full-time contract
- Pay the market salary rate
- Contribute to the Skilling Australians Fund
Key visa options:
- Subclass 482: Temporary Skill Shortage – 2–4 years, possible PR pathway
- Subclass 494: Skilled Regional – up to 5 years, with PR option
- Subclass 186: Employer Nomination Scheme – permanent residency
Get full guidance on obligations and requirements on the Employer Sponsored Visas page.


Planning a short stay, family visit, or business trip?
Visa options:
- Tourist & Visitor Visas (subclass 600, ETA 601, eVisitor 651) – for tourism, visiting family, or business trips. ETA and eVisitor visas offer quick online approval for stays up to 3 months for eligible nationalities.
- Working Holiday Visas (subclass 417, 462) – for young people wanting to work and travel in Australia.
- Training & Temporary Activity Visas (subclass 407, 408) – for training, research, or cultural exchange activities.
For more information about applying for a Tourist Visa or Visitor Visa to Australia, please visit the Short-Stay Visa page.
We’ll help you pick the right visa for your trip.
The latest from Australian Migration news, information, announcements, developments and articles about Immigration and Visas to Australia.
More details:
Immigration to Australia from Iran
If you are planning immigration to Australia from Iran, the most helpful starting point is not a long list of visa names. What usually changes everything is a clear pathway plan and a document roadmap that matches your profile, family situation, and timeline. This page is for people who want paid consultation and structured support with preparation and submission, so each step is predictable and consistent. Below you will find what the service covers, how consultations work, what pathways are commonly assessed, what affects fees, and what to prepare before you book.
What this service is and who it suits
In this section you will quickly confirm whether professional support is relevant for your case and what you can expect as a practical output. The aim is clarity: a realistic direction, evidence priorities, and a sequence of actions that reduces rework. A consultation is most valuable when you want to stop guessing, avoid inconsistent documents, and move forward with a plan that you can execute step by step.
People often start with motivation and scattered information, but without a structure they lose time on the wrong order of actions. A structured approach helps you define the goal, identify viable pathways, and then build the evidence pack around what must be proven. That is the difference between “collecting documents” and “building a case”. If your case includes family members, mixed employment history, or prior visa issues, a roadmap and checkpoints usually make the process calmer and more controlled.
Who typically requests migration support from Iran
- Applicants who want to migrate to Australia from Iran and need a realistic pathway plan before investing time in forms, translations, and evidence collection. The decision is usually between skilled migration, employer sponsorship, study-based planning, and family routes, and the main value is confirming what is viable and what is not. 1) Define the goal and timeframe 2) Shortlist realistic pathways 3) Set evidence priorities that match the chosen direction.
- Families who want one coordinated plan rather than separate checklists per person. When multiple applicants are involved, consistency is the main risk: names, dates, addresses, education history, and employment timelines must match across documents and statements. 1) Align personal details across all profiles 2) Build a single shared chronology 3) Prepare a coordinated evidence pack with clear responsibilities.
- Professionals who have already started collecting documents and want a structured review that turns scattered files into a clean submission-ready set. This is common when applicants have multiple employers, timeline gaps, or documents issued by different institutions. 1) Map education and employment chronology 2) Identify gaps and inconsistencies 3) Build a staged document roadmap with review checkpoints.
Why a structured visa plan matters
In this section you will understand why planning is not a theoretical step but a practical way to save time. A pathway plan aligns your story and evidence with the visa direction you choose, and it sets the order of actions so you do not redo work later. Many delays come from starting with forms first and only later discovering missing evidence or contradictions that force a rebuild.
A structured plan is also a decision filter. It helps you focus on what you can prove clearly and consistently. Instead of collecting “everything”, you collect what supports eligibility, then add supporting documents in layers. This approach is particularly helpful when your case involves more than one applicant or when you need to make sure timelines are consistent across many sources. The goal is simple: fewer revisions, clearer narrative, and a smoother progression from assessment to submission.
What you receive after an eligibility assessment
- A pathway-focused summary you can act on, not a generic list. You get a clear explanation of the most realistic directions for your profile and what evidence matters most for each. This makes the next step predictable because you know what must be proven and what can be strengthened. 1) Confirm viable directions 2) Identify key eligibility signals 3) Set next actions in a workable order.
- A document roadmap with priorities and checkpoints. Instead of collecting documents randomly, you start with core evidence that supports eligibility and the main narrative, then add supporting materials. This staged approach reduces late changes that can create new inconsistencies. 1) Build a core evidence pack 2) Add supporting documents by priority 3) Run consistency checks before final review.
- A risk map that highlights what can delay a case. Many applicants underestimate how much small inconsistencies can slow review. The assessment identifies typical risk points and helps you plan how to address them early. 1) List main risk points 2) Decide what to clarify or strengthen 3) Prepare a clean narrative supported by documents.
What is included and how support works
In this section you will see what is covered and how the workflow is structured from the first contact to preparation and submission support. The key idea is predictability: you know what happens next, what you need to provide, and how progress is tracked. Support can start from an assessment and expand to document planning and ongoing coordination depending on your needs.
The work can be done online or in person. Online consultations are a practical way to start from Iran with clear checklists and staged review. In-person consultations are available in Sydney for clients who prefer face-to-face discussion and practical document review in one session. Both formats follow the same principle: plan first, then documents, then structured preparation toward submission.
Before the table below, use it to decide which level of help matches your situation. The options differ by scope: from assessment-only to document roadmap to full coordination and checkpoints that keep the case consistent.
Option | What it includes | Who it suits |
Eligibility assessment and pathway plan | Goal and profile review, shortlist of realistic visa directions, evidence priorities, next-step checklist | Applicants who want clarity before committing to deeper preparation |
Consultation plus document roadmap | Pathway plan plus staged checklist, consistency guidance, evidence structure planning | Applicants who want structured preparation and fewer revisions |
Application support and case coordination | Preparation and submission support, document pack review, staged checkpoints, progress updates | Applicants who want end-to-end coordination and predictable next steps |
After the table, the practical takeaway is that complexity drives the value of coordination. If you have multiple applicants, mixed timelines, or prior adverse outcomes, staged review and consistency checks tend to reduce stress and reduce rework. Many clients start with an assessment and then extend support once the pathway is confirmed and the document roadmap is clear.
Visa pathways: options to consider
In this section you will see how a consultation helps you choose a pathway without turning the page into a general guide. The focus is commercial: you want advice, selection, and preparation support. The goal is to match your profile to a realistic direction and then build evidence around what must be proven, with a sequence that avoids rework.
Skilled migration support: how to prepare a clean case
- Skilled migration is commonly assessed when your education and professional background can be presented clearly and consistently as part of a skilled pathway. The key value of support is confirming that the pathway is realistic and then building an evidence roadmap that reduces late-stage corrections. 1) Map education and employment chronology 2) Identify strongest supporting evidence 3) Prepare a staged pack with early consistency checks.
- Complexity often increases when employment history spans several roles, includes gaps, or involves documents issued in different formats. A structured plan helps you identify weak points early and decide how to present the case clearly and consistently. 1) Identify timeline risks 2) Align titles and dates across documents 3) Build a coherent narrative supported by evidence.
- A good preparation strategy focuses on relevance and clarity. It helps you avoid overloading the case with unrelated documents while still covering what matters. 1) Prioritize core evidence 2) Add supporting documents by impact 3) Review the pack for clarity before finalization.
Employer sponsored support: what to align early
- Employer sponsorship is often assessed when you have a clear employment direction and you want to understand what evidence and sequencing will be needed. Advice is valuable when it reduces uncertainty and clarifies what should be prepared early by you and what is typically coordinated with an employer. 1) Confirm role alignment with your background 2) Build a shared evidence plan 3) Prepare a clean workflow with checkpoints.
- The main risk is starting with assumptions and then correcting late. A structured plan helps align narrative, timeline, and supporting documents early so the case remains consistent. 1) Clarify responsibilities and inputs 2) Align timeline and supporting evidence 3) Keep documentation consistent across steps.
- When multiple parties are involved, coordination becomes the service. Staged review and progress tracking makes the process calmer and easier to manage. 1) Set a timeline with checkpoints 2) Review documents in stages 3) Keep updates predictable and easy to follow.
Fees: what influences the cost of support
In this section you will understand what typically drives fees without publishing numbers. Pricing usually depends on the pathway scope, the number of applicants, and how much coordination you want. Some clients only need a pathway plan and a document roadmap. Others prefer ongoing support because they want structure, checkpoints, and a clear division of responsibilities.
A helpful way to think about fees is to focus on case complexity. More applicants means more documents and more consistency checks. Prior refusals or cancellations often require more careful organization and planning. If you want full coordination from preparation through submission with progress updates, the scope is larger than a single assessment session.
Before the table below, use it to pick a working format that matches your schedule. The choice is not only about location, but also about how you prefer to communicate and how you want progress to be structured.
Format | Timeframe | Features | When to choose |
Online consultation | Scheduled session | Remote planning, staged checklist, document priorities, review checkpoints | When you want to start from Iran without travel |
In-person consultation in Sydney | Scheduled session | Face-to-face discussion, practical document review, decision clarity | When you prefer in-person planning or complex family cases |
Ongoing application support | Case-based | Structured preparation, document pack review, progress updates | When you want end-to-end coordination and clear checkpoints |
After the table, the simplest next step is to request an assessment, share a short goal summary, and prepare your basic timeline. This makes the first conversation efficient and helps you receive a pathway plan and a practical checklist instead of general advice.
Why clients choose Sydney Visa
In this section you will see practical trust signals that relate to accountability and process. Sydney Visa provides visa and migration advisory services related to Australian immigration law, including consultations and visa application support. The team works with clients worldwide, offering online consultations and in-person consultations in Sydney.
The agency has been providing migration services since 2001. Services are delivered by registered Australian migration agents, including MARN 0103440 and Migration Agent No 1683658. Many clients prefer a structured workflow that starts with an assessment and then moves to evidence planning, staged review, and coordinated preparation, because it keeps the case consistent and reduces avoidable rework.
FAQ and next steps
In this section you will find practical questions that help you prepare for a useful first conversation. A productive consultation depends on clarity: goal, timing, and a clean timeline of education and employment. If family members may be included, it helps to list who is involved and your intended timeline for the move.
FAQ
- What should I prepare before the first consultation?
Prepare a short summary of your goal and timing, then outline your education and employment history in chronological order. If family members may be included, list who is involved and your intended plan. A clear timeline makes the consultation focused and helps you receive a practical pathway plan and a staged document checklist rather than broad suggestions. - Do you work with clients outside Australia?
Online consultations are available and are a common way to start planning immigration to Australia from Iran. A staged workflow works well remotely when you follow clear priorities, keep documents consistent, and review in checkpoints. This approach helps you progress steadily without collecting evidence randomly. - Can you help if my case is complex or I had a refusal before?
Support can be structured for complex situations, including cases where you need careful case history organization and a clean plan for next actions. Many applicants prefer structured support to identify risk points early, prioritize evidence, and avoid repeating weaknesses. The goal is a clear roadmap and predictable steps. - What happens after I contact you?
After you reach out, the first step is typically an eligibility assessment or booking a consultation time. You will be guided on what details to share so the discussion stays pathway-focused and evidence-driven. If you proceed with support, the work usually moves into staged document planning with review checkpoints and progress updates.
Book an assessment
If you want immigration to Australia from Iran with a clear pathway plan and structured support, start with an assessment and consultation. You can call +61 283 112 398 to book a time and outline your goal. For messages, use WhatsApp at +61 466 594 832 and request an assessment to confirm the best next step for your case.






