11 In-Demand Courses in Australia for Indian Students (2026)

In-Demand Courses in Australia for Indian Students
In-Demand Courses in Australia for Indian Students

The in-demand courses in Australia for Indian students cluster around 11 high-employment fields: information technology, data science and AI, cybersecurity, nursing, engineering, business analytics, accounting, teaching, social work, skilled trades, and hospitality or commercial cookery. In 2025, according to ICEF Monitor, 139,720 Indian students were enrolled in Australian institutions across all sectors from January to September, up 4 percent over 2024 (ICEF Monitor, The number of Indian students abroad fell in 2025). In the year to February 2026, according to the Department of Education, 622,043 international students were studying in Australia, down 7.7 percent year-on-year, with India among the largest source markets. As overall numbers cool, picking a field with genuine hiring demand matters more than ever, which is exactly what this guide helps you do. What makes it different is the master comparison table below: you can scan 11 courses side by side, then read tight profiles of each.

INR conversions are indicative and use an exchange rate captured on 31 May 2026 (A$1 ≈ ₹68.27); check your bank or forex provider before paying.

Key Takeaways

  • This guide compares 11 in-demand fields in one table, then profiles each by fit, level, duration, fees and migration relevance.
  • Information technology splits into three visible options: Master of IT, Data Science and AI, and Cybersecurity.
  • Every course you take on a student visa must be CRICOS-registered, whether it is a degree or a trade certificate.
  • Each skilled occupation has its own migration assessing authority: ACS, Engineers Australia, ANMAC (nursing), AITSL, AASW and Trades Recognition Australia.
  • You must show financial-capacity evidence of about A$29,710 (about Rs 20.3 lakh) in living costs for the primary applicant, separate from tuition and travel.
  • National full-time pay averaged A$2,051 a week in November 2025 (ABS); no course guarantees permanent residency.

In-demand courses in Australia are programmes whose fields feed skilled-migration pathways and active graduate hiring. According to Jobs and Skills Australia in 2026, such fields span IT, healthcare and nursing, engineering, construction and education (Jobs and Skills Australia, Core Skills Occupations List (CSOL)). That demand signal shapes both hiring and migration outcomes for graduates.

Here is the nuance most listicles skip. According to Jobs and Skills Australia, many occupations connected to these fields appear on skilled occupation lists, but eligibility depends on the exact ANZSCO occupation, qualification, work experience and visa subclass. So a whole field is never simply “on the skilled list” – the specific role is. Each role carries an ANZSCO (Australian and New Zealand Standard Classification of Occupations) code, and the CSOL (Core Skills Occupation List) feeds the Skills in Demand visa for employer-sponsored migration. You can read the wider picture in our study in Australia guide.

Underneath every option sits one rule. Any course you take on a student visa must be registered on CRICOS (Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students). Scan the table, then read the profiles that follow.

CourseExample jobsAQF levelTypical durationIndicative fee levelMigration relevance
Master of ITSoftware developer, systems analyst, cloud specialistAQF 91.5-2 yrsHigherStrong; check exact ANZSCO
Data Science & AIData scientist, ML analyst, BI analystAQF 8-91-2 yrsHigherStrong; check exact ANZSCO
CybersecurityCybersecurity analyst, security consultant, risk analystAQF 8-91-2 yrsHigherStrong; check exact ANZSCO
NursingRegistered nurse, aged-care nurse, mental-health nurseAQF 7-92-4 yrsMid-highStrong; ANMAC skills assessment
EngineeringCivil engineer, mechanical engineer, electrical engineerAQF 7-92-4 yrsHigherStrong; Engineers Australia assessment
Business AnalyticsBusiness analyst, data analyst, operations analystAQF 91.5-2 yrsMid-highModerate; role-dependent
AccountingAccountant, auditor, financial analystAQF 7-92-3 yrsMid-highModerate; CPA/CA assessment
Teaching & Early ChildhoodSchool teacher, early-childhood educatorAQF 7-92-4 yrsMidSteady; AITSL + state registration
Social WorkSocial worker, community services worker, case managerAQF 7-92-4 yrsMidSteady; AASW assessment
Trades (TAFE)Electrician, plumber, carpenterAQF 3-6 (Cert III to Adv Diploma)1-2 yrsLowerUseful; Trades Recognition Australia
Hospitality / Commercial CookeryChef, cook, hospitality managerAQF 3-6 (Cert III to Adv Diploma)1-2 yrsLowerUseful vocational pathway

Pay varies sharply by role. As a benchmark, the national full-time average was A$2,051.10 a week (about Rs 1.40 lakh) in November 2025 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, Average Weekly Earnings, November 2025); check Jobs and Skills Australia for the exact figure per occupation.

Need help choosing between these 11 options? The student-profile section further down narrows the list by your background and budget, and you can book a free counselling chat at the end of this guide.

Information technology: IT, data science, AI and cybersecurity

Information technology is consistently among Australia's strongest fields for graduate hiring and skilled migration. For 2026 entry, at the University of Sydney IT and computer science undergraduate fees reach A$60,600 a year, about Rs 41.4 lakh (University of Sydney, International student tuition fees). High demand pairs with significant tuition, so budget planning matters.

This field is now best understood as three visible options, not one. If your child enjoys logic, maths or building things on a screen, each route rewards that differently:

  • Master of Information Technology: the broad route into software development, cloud and systems careers, at AQF level 9.
  • Data Science and AI: analytics, machine learning and modelling, sitting at AQF level 8-9 depending on the programme.
  • Cybersecurity: security, risk and defensive engineering, also AQF level 8-9, with strong shortage signals.

For 2026 entry at the University of Sydney, international undergraduate fees run from A$49,200 (about Rs 33.6 lakh) for nursing and music to A$60,600 (about Rs 41.4 lakh) for engineering and computer science, dentistry and pharmacy, while postgraduate coursework runs from A$47,500 (about Rs 32.4 lakh) for music to A$83,500 (about Rs 57.0 lakh) for dentistry. So IT sits near the top of the fee band, which is worth raising when you and your family map the education-loan math with lenders like HDFC Credila, Avanse or SBI. Strong universities here include the Group of Eight (Melbourne, UNSW, Sydney, Monash, ANU), plus RMIT and UTS for applied IT.

As of 2026, according to the Department of Home Affairs, for migration the ACS (Australian Computer Society) runs the skills assessment for ICT roles. Many ICT occupations appear on skilled lists, but you must check the exact ANZSCO code for your target role. On pay, IT graduates typically sit above the A$2,051 a week national average. These pathways are AQF level 8-9.

Why is nursing and healthcare so in-demand?

Nursing and healthcare is a high-demand field with consistent graduate hiring across Australia, and it carries higher English expectations. As of 2026, the Student-visa minimum rose to IELTS 6.0, while nursing registration usually demands a higher band (Study Australia, English Language Requirements changes). Planning English scores early protects your timeline.

Healthcare is where steady, recession-resistant demand meets real responsibility. As of 2026, the minimum English score for an Australian student visa rose from IELTS 5.5 to IELTS 6.0 (or equivalent), and many universities ask for a higher band such as 6.5 to 7.0 for specific courses. For nursing, expect the higher end, because registration English is stricter than the visa floor. Parents reading this: the English target is the single thing students most often underestimate here.

  • Specialisations: registered nursing, allied health, public health and aged care.
  • Entry background: a biology or science background helps, and most programmes include supervised clinical placements.
  • Top universities: Sydney, Melbourne, Monash, Deakin and QUT all run well-regarded nursing schools.
  • Demand: consistent, with healthcare and aged care featuring on skilled lists.

For migration, ANMAC (Australian Nursing and Midwifery Accreditation Council) is the skills-assessing authority, while AHPRA and the NMBA (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia) handle the registration you need to practise, according to the Department of Home Affairs. On pay, nursing roles tend to sit around or above the national average. Most nursing study sits at AQF level 7 to 9. Have you and your family checked whether your shortlisted course includes guaranteed placement hours?

How does engineering compare across AQF levels?

Engineering is a core in-demand field in Australia, spanning civil, mechanical and electrical disciplines that feed infrastructure and energy projects. Under the Australian Qualifications Framework, an engineering Bachelor sits at AQF level 7 and a Master's at level 9 (Australian Qualifications Framework, AQF levels). Knowing the level helps you compare programmes accurately.

Under the Australian Qualifications Framework in 2026, a Diploma sits at AQF level 5, an Advanced Diploma or Associate Degree at level 6, a Bachelor degree at level 7, a Bachelor Honours degree, Graduate Certificate or Graduate Diploma at level 8, a Master’s degree at level 9, and a Doctoral degree at level 10. So when you compare an engineering Bachelor with a Master’s, you are comparing level 7 with level 9, which changes both depth and duration.

  • Specialisations: civil, mechanical, electrical, mining and software engineering.
  • Entry background: a solid maths and physics foundation from Class 12 is the usual starting point.
  • Top universities: Melbourne, UNSW, Monash, Sydney, UWA and RMIT.
  • Accreditation: Engineers Australia handles accreditation and the skills-assessment pathway.

As of 2026, according to the Department of Home Affairs, Engineers Australia is the assessing authority for engineering, checking your degree against professional standards. Demand is strong in civil, mechanical and electrical streams that support construction and energy. Many programmes build in Work-Integrated Learning (industry placements woven into the degree), which sharpens your CV. Engineering pay typically sits above the national benchmark. These programmes are AQF level 7 to 9.

What about business analytics, accounting and management?

Business analytics, accounting and management offer broad intake and flexible entry, making them among the most accessible in-demand fields. As of 2026, a Master, including an MBA or analytics degree, runs 1 to 4 years full time (Study Australia, Understanding Australian qualifications). That range lets you match duration to budget and goals.

As of 2026, a Diploma takes 1 to 2 years full time, a Bachelor degree 3 to 5 years, a Bachelor Honours year is one extra year, a Graduate Certificate or Graduate Diploma 6 months to 2 years, and a Master degree 1 to 4 years. That spread matters here, because an MBA, a one-year analytics Master and a two-year accounting Master all cost very differently. When you and your family sit down to discuss the budget, duration drives the total bill as much as the annual fee does.

  • Specialisations: business analytics, accounting, finance, management and the MBA.
  • Entry background: a commerce or any-stream Bachelor; an MBA often wants a few years of work experience.
  • Top universities: Melbourne, UNSW, Monash, Sydney and UTS.
  • Assessment: for accounting, professional-body assessment generally applies through pathways such as CPA Australia or CA ANZ.

Demand across analytics and management is broad, and accounting features on skilled occupation lists in many cycles, though entries are revised. Employability is good, but pay varies more widely by role and seniority than in tightly regulated fields. Against the A$2,051 a week national average, outcomes range from below to well above depending on the role and seniority. These coursework Master’s programmes sit at AQF level 9.

Teaching, social work and care professions

Teaching, social work and care professions show steady demand, especially outside the big metro centres. In 2026, higher-education graduates can earn 2 to 3 years of post-study work on the Subclass 485 visa, which supports a career start in these fields (Study Australia, Temporary Graduate visa (subclass 485)). Regional demand is a real advantage.

In 2026, the Subclass 485 (Temporary Graduate visa) gives higher-education graduates post-study work of between 2 and 3 years, depending on your qualification. For teaching and social work, that is a useful window to gain registered, supervised experience. If you are the parent researching this for your child, note that demand in these care professions is often strongest in regional towns, which can also bring longer post-study work rights at regional institutions.

  • Teaching and early childhood: a Master of Teaching after any Bachelor, needing AITSL assessment plus state registration.
  • Social work: community, health and family services, with assessment through the AASW.
  • Top universities: Melbourne, Monash, Sydney, QUT and Deakin.
  • Demand: steady and notably strong outside the big cities.

As of 2026, according to the Department of Home Affairs, AITSL (Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership) assesses teaching qualifications, and the AASW (Australian Association of Social Workers) assesses social work, after which you register with the relevant authority. Pay in these professions tends to sit around the national average, with public pay scales setting the detail. These pathways are AQF level 7 to 9.

Trades, hospitality and vocational (TAFE) pathways

Trades, hospitality and vocational pathways are a genuine, lower-cost route into in-demand skilled work. As of 2026, vocational and trades courses must be CRICOS-registered like any other student-visa course, because providers can only enrol overseas students into registered courses (Department of Education, Registration on CRICOS). Registration protects you.

Not every strong career needs a degree, and that surprises many families. As of 2026, any course an Indian student takes on a student visa must be registered on CRICOS, because institutions can only enrol overseas student-visa holders into CRICOS-registered courses, and that includes trades and commercial cookery. So whether you pick a degree or a cookery certificate, the same CRICOS rule keeps the course visa-valid and quality-assured.

  • Specialisations: construction, automotive, commercial cookery and hospitality.
  • Entry background: Class 12 plus a genuine hands-on aptitude; many providers recognise prior skills through RPL (Recognition of Prior Learning).
  • Providers: TAFE institutes and registered private providers, each known as an RTO (Registered Training Organisation).
  • Assessment: Trades Recognition Australia assesses trade qualifications for migration.

In 2026, Study Australia confirms vocational graduates can earn up to 18 months of post-study work on the Post-Vocational Education Work stream of the Subclass 485 visa. As of 2026, according to the Department of Home Affairs, Trades Recognition Australia is the assessing authority for trades. Cost is the lowest of all the options here, which helps when you and your family weigh fees against the loan. Skilled trades can sit around the national average. These pathways commonly range from AQF level 3 to 6, from Certificate III to Advanced Diploma, depending on the course.

Which course suits your student profile?

The best course depends on your stage of education and budget, not on demand alone. As of 2026, to study on a Subclass 500 student visa you must first enrol in a CRICOS course, receive a Confirmation of Enrolment, then apply for the visa (Study Australia, Student visa (subclass 500)). Your starting point shapes the right shortlist.

As of 2026, to study on a Subclass 500 student visa you must first enrol in a course at an Australian provider and be issued a Confirmation of Enrolment (CoE), then apply for the visa, and you must remain enrolled with satisfactory course progression. So your current qualification decides what you can apply for now. Here is a quick map for the most common Indian-student starting points:

Bachelor of Engineering, IT or Nursing
 
A direct degree route from CBSE or state board into a four-year career foundation.
Master of Business Analytics, Accounting or MBA
 
Build on a commerce base; the MBA usually wants a few years of work experience first.
Master of IT, Data Science or Engineering
 
Specialise and add Australian credentials on top of your existing degree.
Diploma-to-degree or TAFE / VET
 
Lower fees and a pathway in; a strong fit when the family budget is tight.
A listed occupation plus regional study
 
Tie the field to a listed occupation and consider regional study, but choose genuine interest first.

One honest word to families: do not let a skilled list pick the course for a student who has no interest in it. We have watched motivated students outperform a “strategic” choice every time. Choose the field your child will actually finish, then optimise the rest.

What are the eligibility, English and money rules?

Eligibility for an Australian student visa combines academic documents, an approved English test and proof of funds. As of 2026, applicants must show financial-capacity evidence of about A$29,710, roughly Rs 20.3 lakh, in living costs for the primary applicant, separate from tuition and travel (Study Australia, Change to evidence of financial capacity). Budget for this early.

That A$29,710 (about Rs 20.3 lakh) is the minimum living-cost amount for the primary applicant used as financial-capacity evidence, not a tuition figure, so it sits on top of your course fees and travel. This is proof of funds, and lenders such as HDFC Credila, Avanse and SBI commonly fund it alongside tuition. After 12th you will submit Class 10 and 12 marksheets, an SOP and references; after a bachelor’s you add transcripts, LORs and any work proof. International students must also hold Overseas Student Health Cover, usually arranged before applying.

On English, the latest Study Australia update confirms that for tests taken on or after 7 August 2025, the Department of Home Affairs accepts nine English tests for Student visa applications, including IELTS Academic, PTE Academic, TOEFL iBT and OET. So you are not locked into IELTS; pick the test that suits you, and remember nursing and teaching ask for higher bands.

On intakes, Study Australia notes the academic year has two main entries, Semester 1 (February or March) and Semester 2 (July), with some providers offering trimester or term-based starts, and mid-year applications usually opening around April. Plan your test and documents at least one intake ahead. Our Australia entry requirements guide lists documents in detail, and the year-one budget sits in our cost of studying in Australia guide.

Which courses are PR-relevant, without guarantees?

No Australian course guarantees permanent residency; PR relevance depends on the exact occupation and visa subclass. Since 23 March 2024, the Genuine Student requirement asks applicants why they chose their course and how they will benefit (Study Australia, The new Genuine Student requirement). Your course must fit a credible career story.

Since 23 March 2024, the Genuine Student (GS) requirement replaced the Genuine Temporary Entrant requirement, and now asks applicants why they chose their course and how they will benefit from it. So your course choice has to make sense for your career, not just for a list. Many occupations connected to these fields appear on skilled occupation lists, but eligibility depends on the exact ANZSCO occupation, qualification, work experience and visa subclass.

FieldAssessing authorityMigration relevance
IT and ICTACSStrong; check exact ANZSCO
EngineeringEngineers AustraliaStrong; check exact ANZSCO
NursingANMAC for migration skills assessment; AHPRA/NMBA for registrationStrong; check exact ANZSCO
TeachingAITSL + stateSteady; check exact ANZSCO
Social workAASWSteady; check exact ANZSCO
TradesTrades Recognition AustraliaUseful; check exact ANZSCO

This is education guidance, not migration advice. Confirm any visa or permanent-residency pathway with a registered migration agent (MARA-registered) before deciding based on a skilled list.

The steer is simple: pick a course you will finish and enjoy, confirm its assessing authority, then test the migration angle with a professional. Read graduate options in our post-study work visa guide and the full decision framework in our guide to courses in Australia.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Information technology, nursing and engineering rank among the strongest for graduate hiring and skilled migration. There is no single best course; the right pick depends on your background, budget and the exact ANZSCO occupation you want to qualify for after you graduate.

No. A field appearing on a skilled list is only one factor, and lists change. Eligibility depends on the exact ANZSCO occupation, your qualification, work experience and visa subclass. Treat course choice as education planning and confirm any PR pathway with a registered migration agent.

Yes, an approved English test is required. The Student-visa minimum rose to IELTS 6.0 or equivalent, and PTE Academic, TOEFL iBT and OET are accepted too. Nursing and teaching courses often ask for a higher band, such as 6.5 to 7.0, for registration.

As of 2026 you must show about A$29,710, roughly Rs 20.3 lakh, for the first 12 months of living costs, on top of tuition and travel. Education loans from HDFC Credila, Avanse or SBI commonly cover this alongside fees, so plan the paperwork early.

Yes, as long as the course is CRICOS-registered. Commercial cookery, hospitality and trade certificates at TAFE and registered training organisations support a student visa just like a degree, usually cost less, and may support up to 18 months of post-study work if the qualification and nominated occupation meet the Post-Vocational Education Work stream requirements.

In our 2026 counselling sessions across Hyderabad and Tirupati, the families who chose well matched a student’s genuine aptitude to a field first, then checked the assessing authority and budget. When we have placed students into engineering and IT programmes, the ones who used Work-Integrated Learning placements tended to land graduate roles quickest. Ardent Overseas supports Indian students from offices in Hyderabad and Tirupati with university shortlisting, visa documentation and intake planning, and our counsellors work only from verified, current official sources rather than aggregator listings. You can read how we research and review our content on our about AOEC India page.