A Designated Area Migration Agreement (DAMA) isn’t a visa subclass in itself — it’s a special labour agreement between the Australian Government and a designated region (a state, territory or regional body) that gives eligible local employers access to a wider range of occupations and negotiated concessions than the standard skilled migration program allows.
DAMAs are especially valuable in regions and occupations where the standard occupation lists and salary requirements don’t reflect genuine local labour shortages.
Employers in an approved DAMA region who cannot find a suitably skilled Australian worker can be endorsed to sponsor overseas workers under the agreement, using one of these visa subclasses:
DAMA regions can access occupations, including many semi-skilled roles, not available under the standard national lists
depending on the region and occupation, DAMAs may offer reduced salary thresholds, relaxed English requirements, or reduced work experience requirements
many DAMA regions allow eligible 482 visa holders to transition to the permanent Subclass 186 visa (commonly after 2 years of employment), even in occupations that wouldn’t normally qualify
Employers must:
Workers must:
Because a DAMA is a regional agreement, not something an individual can apply for directly, the process always starts with an eligible employer:
🔗 Department of Home Affairs — official visa page: https://immi.homeaffairs.gov.au/visas/working-in-australia/regional-migration/dama
DAMA rules differ significantly from region to region, and each agreement has its own occupation list and concessions. Our migration agents can help you work out whether a DAMA pathway applies to your situation — whether you’re an employer trying to fill a genuine skills gap, or a skilled worker exploring your options.
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