Anonymous notes on an application for NIV. Not immigration advice.

I’m publishing this anonymously to help others navigate NSW’s Innovative Investor pathway with real dates and artefacts, not guesses. I’ve struggled to find clear, lived-experience timelines outside of scattered Reddit and Facebook posts. This blog exists to be useful: real dates, concise checklists and redacted templates, so the next person spends less time guessing.

I'll caveat from the get up: this is not immigration advice. It is not a substitute for it, either.

On 17 August 2025 (London) / 18 August 2025 (NSW) I submitted my Registration of Interest (ROI) for the National Innovation Visa (subclass 858). I’ll log what I filed, when I filed it, and how long each step actually took.

By way of background: in 2024 I started down the Business Innovation and Investment route (Investor stream leading to subclass 888). That programme then closed to new applicants; candidly, I can see why – it didn’t seem to deliver the value Australia wanted. I had already made a handful of Australia-focused investments before the door shut, which only reinforced my interest in a higher-bar, outcomes-driven pathway. The National Innovation Visa was introduced at the end of 2024 to refocus on exceptional talent.

My first order of business was choosing between Innovative Investor and Entrepreneur. I wrestled with it and ultimately landed on Innovative Investor. The way the ROI and public material are framed suggests the pathway is prepared to look at the bigger picture – i.e., evidence across track record, value-add and intended NSW impact, rather than forcing people into narrow labels. This is unlike other schemes out there.

How the NIV “priorities” work

NIV is invitation-only and focuses on exceptionally talented people. Invitations are triaged by priority and sector tier. In order of priority:
Priority 1: elite global award winners (top-of-field).
Priority 2: candidates supported by Australian government agencies.
Priority 3: exceptional candidates in Tier One sectors.
Priority 4: exceptional candidates in Tier Two sectors.

Tier One covers areas such as critical technologies, health industries, and renewables/low-emission technologies. Tier Two includes, for example, agri-food and AgTech, defence and space, education, financial services and FinTech, infrastructure and transport, and resources. These tiers guide focus; they don’t replace the need to show exceptional, evidenced achievement.

This blog starts at the very beginning. There’s no certainty I’ll be invited to apply or succeed; if I don’t, I’ll say so plainly (it may be a short blog). Either way, I’ll record timelines from ROI submission to any reply and share the headings, checklists and redacted templates I actually used (if I can).

I’ll post only when there’s a concrete milestone. It may be an acknowledgement received, request for information, invitation to apply, interview or decision. I’ll attach the headings or redacted templates I used at that step (if I can). Each entry will be date-stamped in both London and NSW time. If guidance changes, I’ll note it and correct earlier posts so this stays accurate and useful.

As for why Australia: I’ve spent time in Sydney, Brisbane, Newcastle and Melbourne. My time in Australia broadened my horizons. Australia feels like a country of promise with liberal values and a strong sense of equality; I can see why many people want to live there. I’m highly mobile – if relocation is an option, I’ll do it. If it is not Sydney, who knows where I will be next.

Practical, not promotional — definitely not immigration advice