SKILLED NOMINATED VISA (SUBCLASS 190)

Is your score enough for 190 Transport Engineer?

Two questions, one honest answer: is your points score enough, and how long is the wait for Transport Engineer (ANZSCO 233215) on the Skilled Nominated visa (subclass 190). Drag your score below.

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Move the slider to your real PR points. Everything updates live for the Skilled Nominated (190) stream.

80pointsAbout 7–12 months
55105

At 80 points, roughly 280 people sit at or above you in this Transport Engineer Skilled Nominated (190) queue. That puts you roughly in the top 55% of eligible EOIs. That queue has grown about 29% over the months we can see, so waiting tends to add competition. Honest wait estimate: roughly 7–12 months. This stream already includes the +5 state-nomination points.

For context only: recent rounds we could read cleared near 80 points, but invitation data is heavily redacted, so treat that as a rough marker, not a target.

At or above you
~280
Your standing
~Top 55%
Queue trend
Up 29%

Modelled from queue movement, not a prediction. Queue as at 06/2026.

Good data coverage. Most of this queue is exact public counts, so these positions are dependable.
Queue depth trend13 months
was 396now 512 in queue

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190 | Transport Engineer (233215) | 80 pts | est. wait 7–12 months | via sortedout.app/tools/190/transport-engineer-233215

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Compare other visa streams for Transport Engineer

Skilled Independent visa (subclass 189)Skilled Work Regional visa (subclass 491)

How to read this

The Department of Home Affairs invites the highest-scoring Expressions of Interest first, so what matters most is roughly how many people sit at or above your score in the Transport Engineer queue, and whether that queue is growing or shrinking. The fewer people ahead of you and the more the queue is easing, the shorter your likely wait. We read this from the real submitted queue, not from invitation cut-offs, because the published invitation numbers are heavily redacted. Smaller brackets are published only as under twenty, so we frame your position as approximate, and at the very top of the queue, where almost everything is redacted, we describe where you sit rather than invent a precise count. The confidence note on the tool tells you how much of that queue is real public data. When the data is too thin to model a wait, we say so rather than guess.

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