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Parent visa places cut to 7,060 for 2026–27. Here’s what it means for your family’s wait.

GG Gary Grewal · July 11, 2026 · 4 min read
Parent visa places cut to 7,060 — Grewal Migration (WordPress block preview)
7,060

Parent visa places for 2026–27 — down from 8,500 the year before. A cut of 1,440 places, about 17%, in a category where queues were already measured in decades.

The 2026–27 Migration Program has landed, and there’s a number every family sponsoring a parent needs to know. And it arrives in the same month that lodgement fees for every parent visa subclass rose by about 25%. Fewer places, higher prices. Here’s what’s actually changed, and what it means if your parents are in the queue — or about to join it.

What the Government announced

On 12 May 2026, the Government confirmed the permanent Migration Program for 2026–27 stays at 185,000 places overall, split roughly 70:30 between the Skilled and Family streams. Within the Family stream of 52,460 places:

Family stream planning levels
Category 2025–26 2026–27 Change
Partner40,50041,500+1,000
Child3,0003,500+500
Parent8,5007,060−1,440
Other Family500400−100

Partner and Child places are demand-driven — the numbers are indicative and the Department processes what comes in. Parent places are different: they’re a hard cap. Once 7,060 grants are made in the program year, everyone else waits for the next one.

Why a smaller cap means longer queues — not fewer applicants

The parent visa queue works on simple arithmetic. Demand doesn’t fall just because the cap does — families keep lodging. So when the annual number of grants shrinks, the existing backlog clears more slowly, and every application behind it waits longer.

To put the queue in context: as at 28 February 2026, the Department was releasing contributory parent applications (143/864) lodged up to November 2018 for final processing, while non-contributory applications (103/804) were being released from lodgements up to July 2013. New contributory applicants were already facing well over a decade of waiting; non-contributory applicants, several decades.

Cut the annual grants by 17%, and those timeframes stretch further. Some commentators now put new non-contributory applications at waits that could approach a working lifetime. We won’t pretend to know the exact number — nobody does — but the direction is unmistakable: the queue just got slower.

The double hit: fewer places, higher fees

The quota cut landed alongside the 1 July 2026 fee increase. First-instalment charges rose about 25% across every parent subclass — the contributory 143 now costs $6,300 to lodge for the primary applicant, the non-contributory 103 costs $6,600, and the temporary 870 costs $1,515.

We’ve published the full before-and-after tables for every subclass and applicant type here: Parent visa fees have gone up — here’s what every stream now costs.

Notice something in those numbers? The non-contributory 103 is now more expensive to lodge than the contributory 143. Its saving sits entirely in the second instalment — around $2,065 per applicant instead of $43,600. You’re not paying less to join the queue; you’re paying less to leave it. That’s worth understanding before you choose a stream.

What should families do now?

There’s no one-size answer, but a smaller cap sharpens a few realities:

  • If a permanent parent visa is the goal, lodging sooner beats lodging later. Queue position is set by lodgement date. Every program year that passes with a reduced cap pushes new applicants further back. A well-prepared application lodged this year holds a better place than a perfect one lodged in two years.
  • The contributory streams remain the only realistic permanent pathway for most families. Most of the parent cap has historically gone to contributory visas (143/864). The 103 and 804 remain lawful options, but at current settings they function more as long-horizon or estate-planning choices than near-term reunion pathways.
  • The Sponsored Parent (Temporary) visa (870) matters more than ever. It sits outside the permanent cap, is typically decided in months, has no balance-of-family test, and allows stays of 3 or 5 years (up to 10 in total). Many families sensibly run both strategies — parents spend time in Australia on an 870 while a 143 sits in the queue.
  • Onshore aged options are worth checking for pension-age parents. Parents already in Australia who have reached pension age may be able to lodge an 804, 864 or 884 onshore and remain here on a bridging visa while the application is queued — turning a decade-long wait offshore into a decade spent with family.
Good to know

Parents’ health is assessed near the end of the queue, not at lodgement. With waits lengthening, a parent’s health years from now becomes part of today’s planning. If there are existing conditions, get advice before you lodge — the health requirement on contributory parent visas generally cannot be waived.

The right strategy matters more when places are scarce

A shrinking cap punishes mistakes. A refused or invalidly lodged application doesn’t just cost the fee — it costs your place in a queue that’s now moving slower. Our MARA-registered team will map every pathway open to your parents — permanent, temporary, or both in parallel — with the real costs and current queue data, before you spend a dollar on lodgement.

The fine print Planning levels are the number of places the Government intends to make available in the 2026–27 program year (announced 12 May 2026); they are targets, not guarantees, and can change. Queue release dates are as reported by the Department of Home Affairs as at 28 February 2026. Visa application charges cited are first-instalment Base Application Charges effective 1 July 2026; contributory parent visas carry a separate second instalment. This is general information, not immigration assistance for your circumstances — book a consultation for advice on your situation.

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