If you are an Australian employer and planning to sponsor an overseas worker for specific skilled visas, you are required to pay an upfront contribution known as the Skilling Australians Fund Levy.
You must pay the SAF Levy when lodging a nomination for the following employer-sponsored visas:
For Skills in Demand (Subclass 482) visas, the levy is calculated per year of the visa duration and is based on your business’s annual turnover.
| Nominated Visa Period | Turnover Under AU$10 Million | Turnover Over AU$10 Million |
| One Year | AU$1,200 | AU$1,800 |
| Two Years | AU$2,400 | AU$3,600 |
| Three Years | AU$3,600 | AU$5,400 |
| Four Years | AU$4,800 | AU$7,200 |

For permanent (Subclass 186) and provisional regional (Subclass 494) visas, the levy is a one-off payment rather than an annual fee.
| Employer’s Annual Turnover | One-Off Payment Amount |
| Under AU$10 Million | AU$3,000 per nomination |
| Over AU$10 Million | AU$5,000 per nomination |
Important Note for Subclass 494 Visa Transfers: If a subclass 494 visa holder changes employers, the new sponsoring employer must pay a pro-rated levy based on the time left on the visa. The reduction is calculated as follows:
There are three very important rules the Department of Home Affairs strictly enforces:
In most cases, the it is non-refundable. However, the Department of Home Affairs will consider full or partial refunds on a case-by-case basis in the following specific scenarios:
Please note: Refunds are never automatic. You must submit a formal refund request with supporting evidence.
Yes. The SAF levy is not required if you are nominating an occupation as a Minister of Religion or Religious Assistant, provided they are being nominated under the Labour Agreement stream for any of the above visa subclasses.
The Department of Home Affairs does not give automatic refunds. You have to officially apply for one, and they only say yes in very specific situations.
Here are the most common reasons an employer can get a full or partial refund of their SAF levy:
1. The approved visa holder never arrives or fails to start work.
2. The visa application is refused on health or character grounds.
3. The employer withdraws the nomination due to incorrect details being provided.
4. The 482 or 494 visa holder leaves the business within their first 12 months.
5. The nomination is withdrawn before a Labour Agreement is finalised.
6. The associated Standard Business Sponsorship application is refused or withdrawn.
The levy payments are tax deductible to the sponsor. Employers pay this levy when hiring skilled overseas workers to help fund training for Australians.
SAF Levy are mandatory fees that Australian employers must pay to the government when they sponsor an overseas worker for a skilled visa.
The money collected from these charges goes into a national fund used to train Australian citizens and permanent residents through apprenticeships and traineeships.
You are exempt from paying the SAF levy only if:
1. You are nominating a Minister of Religion or a Religious Assistant and
2. The nomination is made under the Labour Agreement stream for the Subclass 482 or Subclass 186 visa.