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Study in Australia from the Philippines: Complete Guide 2026

June 2, 20268 min read
Study in Australia from the Philippines: Complete Guide 2026

Quick Answer: To study in Australia from the Philippines in 2026 you need a Subclass 500 Student Visa, which costs around AUD 2,000 to apply for, and you must show access to at least AUD 29,710 for 12 months of living costs plus tuition and travel. Filipinos are a large student community there. After graduating, the Temporary Graduate Visa (Subclass 485) lets you stay and work. Costs, visa rules, and fees are approximate 2026 estimates — always verify with the official immigration authority and the university before you act.

Introduction

Australia is one of the most popular study-abroad destinations for Filipinos, and the appeal is easy to see: globally ranked universities, a similar time zone to home, a sizeable Filipino community, and a clear post-study work pathway through the Subclass 485 visa. The trade-off is cost — Australia is not cheap, and both the visa fee and the proof-of-funds requirement have risen for 2026.

This guide covers the practical essentials from a Filipino applicant's perspective: the Subclass 500 student visa and its fee, exactly how much money you need to show, tuition and living costs in pesos, the English-test requirement, and the Temporary Graduate Visa that lets you work after you finish. If budget is your main concern, also read our cost of studying abroad for Filipinos breakdown and compare against cheaper destinations.

The Subclass 500 Student Visa

The Subclass 500 is the single student visa that covers all study sectors — university, VET, English language courses, and more. You apply online after receiving a Confirmation of Enrolment (CoE) from your institution. Key points for 2026:

  • Application fee: around AUD 2,000 (the charge increased; some sources cite figures from AUD 1,600 depending on timing — confirm the current amount on the Department of Home Affairs site).
  • Financial requirement: you must demonstrate access to at least AUD 29,710 for 12 months of living costs, on top of tuition and travel. Add roughly AUD 10,000 per accompanying dependent.
  • Genuine Student requirement: you must show you intend to study, not just migrate, supported by a credible study plan and documents.

Acceptable proof of funds includes bank statements, education loans, scholarships, or government funding. Immediate family — parents, guardians, or a spouse — can sponsor you by providing proof of relationship plus evidence of genuine access to funds, such as income tax returns, bank statements, or employment letters. (Source: Department of Home Affairs, IDP Philippines, AECC.)

Cost breakdown: tuition and living

Here is an approximate 2026 picture. PHP figures use a rough AUD 1 = PHP 37 conversion and will move with exchange rates.

ExpenseApproximate range (AUD/year)PHP equivalent (approx.)
Tuition — public university undergrad25,000 - 45,000PHP 925,000 - 1.7M
Tuition — VET / diploma8,000 - 22,000PHP 296,000 - 814,000
Tuition — postgraduate28,000 - 50,000PHP 1.0M - 1.85M
Living costs (proof-of-funds minimum)29,710~PHP 1.1M
Subclass 500 visa application fee~2,000 (one-time)~PHP 74,000
Overseas Student Health Cover (OSHC)600 - 800PHP 22,000 - 30,000

Tuition depends heavily on the program — medicine, dentistry, and engineering sit at the top end, while general arts and many VET diplomas are far cheaper. Living costs in Sydney and Melbourne run well above the minimum; regional cities like Adelaide, Perth, or Hobart are easier on the budget and sometimes carry migration incentives.

Top universities for Filipinos

Australia's "Group of Eight" research universities are the most prestigious: the University of Melbourne, Australian National University (ANU), University of Sydney, University of New South Wales (UNSW), Monash, University of Queensland, University of Western Australia, and University of Adelaide. Beyond them, universities like RMIT, UTS, Macquarie, and QUT are popular for career-focused programs, and the VET sector (TAFE and private colleges) offers practical diplomas at a lower price point.

English requirements

Most Australian universities accept IELTS Academic, TOEFL iBT, or PTE Academic. Typical undergraduate entry is IELTS 6.0-6.5 overall; some programs and the student visa context may require higher. Note that the Subclass 500 itself has English evidence requirements, and the 485 graduate visa later requires proof of English too — so a solid score pays off twice. Prepare through an IELTS review center and decide between tests with our IELTS vs TOEFL for Filipinos guide.

Post-study work: the Subclass 485

The Temporary Graduate Visa (Subclass 485) lets you live and work in Australia after you finish an eligible qualification. Key 2026 points:

  • You must have held a Subclass 500 student visa within the last six months and provide proof of the required English level.
  • The Post-Study Work stream allows a stay of roughly 2 to 4 years depending on your qualification level.
  • The Graduate Work stream offers up to about 18 months.
  • The 485 application fee rose to around AUD 4,600 from March 2026, so budget for it.

For many Filipinos this visa is the real prize — it turns an Australian degree into local work experience, which can support future skilled-migration applications. Just remember PR is a separate process with its own criteria.

Step-by-step: applying from the Philippines

The Australian process is fairly linear once you know the order:

  1. Choose your course and provider. Confirm the institution and course are CRICOS-registered (required for student visas).
  2. Sit IELTS, TOEFL, or PTE. You will need the score for both admission and the visa.
  3. Apply and receive your offer, then accept it and pay the deposit to get your Confirmation of Enrolment (CoE).
  4. Arrange OSHC. Overseas Student Health Cover is mandatory for the duration of your visa.
  5. Assemble your financial evidence. Gather bank statements, sponsor documents, tax returns, and employment letters proving genuine access to at least AUD 29,710 plus tuition and travel.
  6. Lodge the Subclass 500 online with your CoE, OSHC, English results, financial documents, and Genuine Student statement.
  7. Complete health checks and biometrics if requested, then await the decision.

Give yourself a few months of lead time. A thin or last-minute financial trail is one of the most common reasons applications stumble, so build your documentation early. Australian universities run two main intakes — February (Semester 1) and July (Semester 2) — plus some November starts, so pick your intake first and count back at least six months to leave room for your test, offer, and visa processing.

Tips for a strong Australia application

  • Budget realistically. Between the ~AUD 2,000 visa fee, AUD 29,710 living-cost proof, tuition, and OSHC, the first-year outlay is large. Plan early.
  • Document genuine access to funds. Sponsors should show tax returns, employment letters, and a clear money trail — not just a large balance that appeared overnight.
  • Consider regional study. Adelaide, Perth, and other regional areas lower living costs and can offer migration advantages.
  • Choose VET or TAFE for a cheaper route. Practical diplomas cost far less than university degrees and still lead to the 485 in eligible cases.
  • Aim high on IELTS. You need it for admission, the Subclass 500, and the 485 — one strong score serves all three.
  • Chase scholarships. Look at Australia Awards for Filipinos, fully funded scholarships abroad, and scholarships for Filipino college students.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do I need to study in Australia from the Philippines?

For 2026, you must show access to at least AUD 29,710 for living costs plus tuition (often AUD 25,000-45,000/year for university) and travel. The Subclass 500 visa fee alone is around AUD 2,000. Total first-year costs commonly run well over AUD 50,000.

How much is the Australian student visa?

The Subclass 500 application charge is around AUD 2,000 for 2026, up from earlier years. Confirm the exact current fee on the Department of Home Affairs website before applying, as it can change.

Can I work while studying in Australia?

Student visa holders are generally allowed to work a capped number of hours during study periods and more during breaks, subject to current Home Affairs rules. Check the conditions on your visa grant. See working while studying abroad for Filipinos for context.

What is the Subclass 485 visa?

It is the Temporary Graduate Visa that lets you stay and work after graduating from an eligible course. The Post-Study Work stream grants roughly 2-4 years; the Graduate Work stream up to about 18 months. The application fee rose to around AUD 4,600 in March 2026.

Do I need IELTS for Australia?

Most universities require IELTS 6.0-6.5 (or equivalent TOEFL/PTE) for undergraduate entry, and the Subclass 500 and 485 visas have their own English requirements. A strong score serves admission and both visas.

Is Australia cheaper than the UK or US for Filipinos?

Australia is broadly comparable to the UK and US — not a budget option. If cost is your priority, compare it with our cheapest countries to study abroad and study in Germany guides, where tuition can be far lower.

Can studying in Australia lead to permanent residence?

It can be a step toward it — a 485 visa builds local work experience that supports skilled-migration pathways — but PR is a separate application with its own points test and criteria. Do not treat a study visa as a guaranteed PR route.

Costs, visa rules, and fees are approximate 2026 estimates — always verify with the official immigration authority (Department of Home Affairs) and the university before you act.


Still comparing destinations? Before you commit, weigh your options at home too — compare Philippine universities, courses, and tuition on SchoolFinderPH, or read our guide to studying abroad from the Philippines.