Indian students now in ‘highest-risk’ category as Australia revises visa evidence level from EL2 to EL3 – The Times of India

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Indian students now in ‘highest-risk’ category as Australia revises visa evidence level from EL2 to EL3

India in ‘highest-risk’ for Australia visas

An administrative adjustment in Australia’s student visa system has pushed Indian applicants into a stricter evidence category, raising fresh questions about documentation requirements and scrutiny faced by one of the largest groups of international students in the country.The change does not alter Australia’s demand for Indian students overnight. But it changes the bureaucratic pathway through which they must pass to enter the country’s universities.According to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), Australian authorities have revised the evidence requirement level for Indian student applicants under the Simplified Student Visa Framework (SSVF). The classification has moved from Evidence Level 2 (EL2) to Evidence Level 3 (EL3), placing Indian applicants in a higher risk category within the visa system.

What the change means

Under the SSVF, visa applicants are grouped into evidence levels based on the perceived immigration risk associated with their country of origin and the education provider.Evidence Level 2 generally requires a moderate amount of documentation to demonstrate financial capacity, English language ability and genuine student intent.Evidence Level 3 involves a higher level of scrutiny. Applicants may be asked to provide more detailed financial records, additional academic documents and stronger proof that their primary purpose is study.

In practice, the change means Indian students applying for Australian study visas could face closer examination and more extensive documentation requirements than before.

Government confirms change in Parliament

The development was confirmed in Parliament on Thursday. Responding to a question in the Rajya Sabha, Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh said the reclassification took effect earlier this year.“Yes, from January 8, 2026, Australian authorities have revised the evidence requirement level for Indian applicants from EL2 to EL3, effectively reverting arrangements to those in place before September 2025,” Singh said in a written reply, according to PTI.The reply came after questions were raised on whether the government was aware that Australia had placed India in what was described as the “highest-risk” category for student visa applications.

The visa system behind the decision

Australia’s Department of Home Affairs introduced the Simplified Student Visa Framework to streamline visa processing while maintaining checks on immigration compliance.According to information available on the department’s website, the SSVF is designed to simplify the visa process for genuine students while enabling authorities to take a targeted approach to immigration integrity.The framework links visa evidence requirements to both the student’s country of origin and the risk profile of education institutions.In effect, students from countries placed in higher evidence levels are expected to provide stronger documentation to demonstrate financial stability and genuine study intentions.

Diplomatic engagement continues

The issue has also raised questions about its implications for student mobility and educational cooperation between the two countries.Members of the Rajya Sabha asked whether the move could affect bilateral educational ties and India’s broader ambitions in international higher education.Responding to the concerns, Singh said India continues to remain in contact with the Australian government on education matters.“In view of the growing and mutually beneficial educational partnership between India and Australia, which includes several Australian universities opening campuses in India, the government of India remains engaged in a constructive dialogue with the Australian government,” Singh said, PTI reports.He added that the government remains committed to supporting students seeking opportunities abroad.“The government is committed to facilitating to the fullest extent possible Indian students going to Australia for higher education and research in pursuit of those objectives,” Singh said.For now, the shift to Evidence Level 3 does not change the availability of Australian university places for Indian students. What it changes is the administrative threshold they must cross to reach them.

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