ACS Skills Assessment for Skilled Migration

ACS Skills Assessment for Skilled Migration

What Is ACS Assessment?

ACS skills assessment Australia

Why It Matters

Australia’s Department of Home Affairs requires a positive skills assessment before you can apply for most skilled visas, including the:

  • Subclass 189 – Skilled Independent Visa
  • Subclass 190 – Skilled Nominated Visa
  • Subclass 491 – Skilled Work Regional Visa

Without ACS approval, your visa application simply won’t proceed. It’s not just a formality — it’s a critical checkpoint that validates your professional identity in the Australian context.

How the ACS Assessment Works

ACS evaluates two core pillars of your professional background:

1. Qualifications ACS reviews your academic credentials against the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF). A bachelor’s degree in ICT from a recognised institution is the benchmark. Degrees in non-ICT fields may still qualify, provided you have sufficient ICT content and supplementary work experience.

2. Work Experience Relevant post-qualification employment is assessed for quality, not just quantity. ACS wants proof that your real-world roles match your nominated occupation — from the tasks you performed to the technologies you used.

For most applicants, a combination of a relevant degree and at least one year of recent ICT work experience forms the foundation of a successful application.

The Application Process

  1. Create an ACS account via the online portal
  2. Select your ANZSCO occupation code
  3. Upload certified documents — transcripts, employment references, passport copies
  4. Pay the assessment fee
  5. Await the outcome — typically 4 to 6 weeks for standard processing

Skills Recognition International (SRI) handles assessments on behalf of ACS for most migration pathways.

Occupations ACS Assesses

ACS covers a broad spectrum of ICT roles. Below is a list of commonly assessed occupations:

ANZSCO CodeOccupation
135111ICT Project Manager
261111ICT Business Analyst
261112Systems Analyst
261311Analyst Programmer
261312Developer Programmer
261313Software Engineer
261314Software Tester
261315Penetration Tester
261317Artificial Intelligence Engineer
261318Machine Learning Engineer
262111Database Administrator
262112Cyber Security Analyst
262113Data Scientist
263111Computer Network & Systems Engineer
263112Network Administrator
263113Network Analyst
263211ICT Quality Assurance Engineer
263212ICT Support Engineer
263213ICT Systems Test Engineer
263311Telecommunications Engineer
263312Telecommunications Network Engineer
312111ICT Support Technician

Tips for a Successful Outcome

  • Match your role to the right ANZSCO code — a mismatch is the most common reason for negative assessments
  • Get reference letters notarised with specific duties listed, not vague descriptions
  • Highlight ICT-specific tasks in your employment evidence
  • Check your degree’s ICT content if your qualification is in a related but non-ICT field