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If you’re from India and you’ve been waiting for your chance to live and work in Australia for a year, mark your calendar. The 2026–27 Work and Holiday Visa 462 ballot is open right now and it closes on 25 June 2026. Miss it, and you wait an entire year for the next one.
I want to explain this properly, because I’ve seen too many good applicants lose their shot over something as small as a mismatched ID number or a missed 28-day window. The ballot itself is simple. What trips people up is everything that happens around it.
So let’s go through exactly how this works, who qualifies, what it costs, and most importantly what happens after you’re selected, because that’s where most people actually go wrong.
Australia’s Subclass 462 visa lets young people travel and work in the country for up to 12 months. No employer needed. No points test. You just need to be the right age and meet some basic requirements.
The catch is demand. Every year, roughly 98,000 Indian nationals try for around 1,000 available places. China and Vietnam face similarly lopsided numbers against their own caps. Rather than process every application individually which would be unmanageable the Australian Government runs a random ballot instead. You register. You wait. If your name comes up, you get invited to actually apply for the visa.
That last point matters more than people realise. Being selected in the ballot is not the same as getting the visa. It just means the door has opened. You still need to walk through it properly health checks, character requirements, financial evidence, the whole application.
Here’s what’s confirmed for this year’s program:
| Stage | Timing |
|---|---|
| Registration opens | Thursday, 4 June 2026 |
| Registration closes | Thursday, 25 June 2026 |
| First random selection | 2 July 2026 |
| Further selections | Continue through to 30 April 2027 |
| Time to apply after selection | 28 calendar days |
Three weeks. That’s your entire window to register. There’s no late entry, no exception, no second chance until June 2027 rolls around again.
Before you even think about lodging your registration, check you tick every one of these boxes:
One more thing worth knowing: you can register from inside or outside Australia. But if you get selected, you must be outside Australia when you actually lodge the visa application. Plan your travel around that if you’re currently studying or working there on another visa.
The process itself runs entirely through ImmiAccount. Here’s the sequence:
Here’s something that catches people out: saving your form as a draft doesn’t count. Your registration status needs to show “Received” not “Draft” for you to actually enter the ballot pool. If you’ve filled in the form but not submitted and paid, you’re not in the running at all.
This is the part the original guides on this topic tend to rush through and it’s honestly the most important section.
If your name comes up in one of the random selection rounds between 2 July 2026 and 30 April 2027, you’ll get a Notification of Selection by email. Your ImmiAccount status changes from “Received” to “Selected.” From that moment, a clock starts running.
You have exactly 28 calendar days to lodge your full Subclass 462 visa application. Not 28 working days 28 calendar days, ending at midnight AEST. There’s no flexibility here. Miss it, and your registration simply expires. You don’t get to register again for the same program year. You wait for June 2027.
When you apply, you’ll need to provide a fuller set of documents than what you submitted at registration stage:
And remember the earlier point if you’re selected, you must lodge this application from outside Australia. If you happen to be there on a student or visitor visa when your selection comes through, you’ll need to plan your departure and re-entry carefully.
After helping clients through ballot processes like this one, the same handful of errors show up again and again:
Using Aadhaar instead of PAN. This is the single most common mistake among Indian applicants. The Department wants your PAN card. Aadhaar won’t be accepted.
Treating a Draft as a submission. If your status isn’t “Received,” you’re not in the ballot. Double-check this before the registration window closes.
Letting English test results expire. A 13-month-old IELTS score won’t be accepted at application stage even if it was fine when you originally sat it. Time your test around your expected application window.
Missing the 28-day deadline because you were travelling or studying onshore. Selection notifications arrive by email without warning. If you’re not checking your inbox regularly, or you’re not prepared to leave Australia quickly if needed, you can burn through nearly a month of your window before you’ve even started.
Assuming selection means approval. It doesn’t. You still need to clear health, character, financial, and education requirements. Selected applicants do get refused usually because they assumed the hard part was over.
A migration agent can’t influence the random draw nobody can, and anyone claiming otherwise is not someone you should trust with your application. What a registered agent can do is make sure nothing in your control goes wrong: your registration details are accurate, your documents are ready before you’re selected (not scrambled together in the 28 days after), and your English test timing lines up properly with your likely application window.
Given how unforgiving the deadlines are in this process, having someone double-check your details before you submit is genuinely worth it particularly if this is your only realistic shot at working in Australia this year.
Touseef Abbasi (MARN: 2518930) at Abbasi Migration helps applicants prepare for both stages of this process the ballot registration itself, and the full visa application if you’re selected.
📍 Melbourne Office: Office 3669, Ground Floor, 470 St Kilda Road, Melbourne VIC 3004
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📧 Email: info@abbasimigration.com
Yes. India is one of three countries alongside China and Vietnam required to register through the ballot before applying for a first Subclass 462 visa.
AUD 25, paid through ImmiAccount at the time of registration. It’s non-refundable regardless of whether you’re later selected.
You must be between 18 and 30 years old, inclusive, at the time of registration.
No not if this is your first Work and Holiday visa and you hold an Indian, Chinese, or Vietnamese passport. You must register and be selected first.
No. Selected applicants must be outside Australia when they lodge their first Subclass 462 visa application.
Approximately 1,000 places annually for Indian nationals against roughly 98,000 registrations most years. That ratio is exactly why the ballot exists.
Your registration expires, and you cannot reapply within the same program year. You would need to wait for the next ballot to open in June 2027.
No. The Work and Holiday visa doesn’t require a job offer or employer sponsorship. You find work after you arrive in Australia.
We provide a comprehensive range of visa services tailored to meet the needs of individuals from all nationalities seeking to travel, study, work, family or settle in Australia.
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