Assess your ICT expertise

ACS (Australian Computer Society) is the government-authorised assessing body for IT, Data Science, and Cyber Security professionals. Four distinct assessment pathways serve different qualification levels, with a complimentary 12-month ACS membership included with every successful assessment.

ACS skills assessment it professionals

ACS Assessment & Why ACS Matters

Understanding how ACS evaluates your IT qualifications and experience against Australian standards.

Why ACS Is Critical

  • Mandatory for skilled migration for all IT occupations on the occupation list
  • Validates ICT qualifications and professional-level competency in Australia
  • Calculates actual skilled experience (may reduce claimed experience if degree is non-ICT)
  • ACS Assessment Guidelines are strict but transparent published online with clear criteria
  • Assessment is based on evidence review only (no interviews, no exams required)
  • Complimentary ACS membership (12 months) adds professional networking and CPD benefits
  • Assessment valid 2 years for visa applications
  • Priority processing is available only as a courtesy for applicants with urgent visa deadlines (less than 12 weeks). ACS automatically considers these cases upon submission no additional fee applies.

ACS Assessment Scope

  • Assesses 10+ IT occupations (Software Engineer, System Analyst, Developer, Database Admin, Security Specialist, Data Scientist, Network Engineer, Solutions Architect, IT Manager, Tech Lead)
  • Evaluates qualifications against the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF). ACS accepts relevant qualifications from AQF Level 5 (Diploma) upwards, with the required amount of relevant work experience varying by qualification level and ICT content.
  • Reviews the ICT content of the degree (calculates ICT major vs. minor vs. insufficient content)
  • Assesses work experience: professional full-time (20+ hours/week) post-qualification employment
  • Determines relevant experience deductions (non-ICT degree = experience reduction)
  • Uses SFIA (Skills Framework for the Information Age) professional standards
  • Provides membership benefits: 12-month complimentary ACS membership post-approval
  • Supports multiple visa pathways: 189, 190, 491, 186, 485

ACS assesses both your ICT qualifications and relevant work experience, comparing them against Australian professional standards. Unlike some assessment bodies, ACS is transparent about how it evaluates degree relevance the ICT content must be clearly documented in your course. Work experience is heavily weighted in ACS assessments, especially for non-ICT degree holders.

ACS Assessment Pathways

Four distinct pathways serve different ICT qualification and experience combinations.

1. Post Australian Study Pathway

Eligibility: International students who completed an Australian Bachelor’s degree or higher with an IT, Data Science, or Cyber Security major.

Work Experience: At least 1 year (365 days) of relevant Australian IT work experience, or completion of the ACS Professional Year.

Fee: Approximately AUD $1,136 (2026)

Processing: 8–12 weeks standard

Advantage: Ideal for recent Australian ICT graduates.

Documents: Australian degree certificate, transcripts, and evidence of 1 year of Australian work experience or Professional Year completion.

2. General Skills Pathway

Eligibility: Experienced IT, Data Science, or Cyber Security professionals with recognised tertiary qualifications and substantial relevant work experience. (Most common pathway)

Work Experience: Substantial background (typically 2+ years for ICT major degrees; more for non-ICT or minor degrees). All experience must be at least 20 hours per week.

Fee: Approximately AUD $1,498 (2026)

Processing: 8–12 weeks standard

Advantage: Suitable for professionals with strong ICT qualifications and experience.

Documents: Degree certificate & transcripts, detailed employment references, payslips, job descriptions mapping to SFIA standards.

 3. Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) Pathway

Eligibility: Seasoned IT, Data Science, or Cyber Security professionals with ample practical experience but lacking formal ICT tertiary qualifications.

Work Experience: At least 6 years of relevant ICT employment (20+ hours per week).

Fee: Approximately AUD $625 AUD (includes RPL)

Processing: 8–12 weeks standard

Advantage: Allows migration based on extensive practical experience.

Documents: Two RPL project reports, employment evidence, and professional currency evidence (e.g, recent projects or certifications).

4.Temporary Graduate 485 (Post-Vocational Education Work Stream) Pathway

Eligibility: International students who completed an Australian Diploma or Associate Degree with an IT, Data Science, or Cyber Security major and wish to apply for a Subclass 485 visa.

Work Experience: Not mandatory (qualification-focused).

Fee: Approximately AUD $625 (2026)

Processing: 8–12 weeks standard

Advantage: Supports temporary stay and work rights via Subclass 485 visa.

Documents: Australian diploma/associate degree certificate, transcripts, and proof of identity.

ACS Assessment Process & Steps

Navigate the four-step ACS assessment process from pathway selection to skilled employment recognition.

Step 1: Pathway Selection & Preliminary Review

Determine Your Eligible Pathway. Visit the ACS website and access the ACS Migration Skills Assessment Guidelines document. Review your degree: identify your major field of study and calculate the percentage of units in the ICT discipline. Determine which pathway matches: ICT Major (if 33%+ ICT for a 3-year degree), Non-ICT or ICT Minor (if you have a degree with lower ICT content plus additional experience), Professional Certification (if you hold current ACS-recognised certifications such as Microsoft or Cisco), or Post Australian Study (for recent graduates of Australian institutions). Confirm your nominated occupation (ANZSCO code) is eligible for ACS assessment. Calculate your work experience: count post-qualification, full-time (20+ hours/week) ICT employment. Identify documentation you'll need: degree certificate (certified), transcripts (official), job descriptions (aligned with SFIA levels), reference letters, payment evidence (e.g., payslips and tax records), and a passport.

Step 2: Document Preparation & Application Submission (2-3 Weeks)

Gather Evidence & Submit Online. Prepare all required evidence and submit your decision-ready application through the ACS Migration Skills Assessment portal. Gather high-quality certified colour scans of your passport, degree certificates, and official academic transcripts. Collect detailed employment reference letters on company letterhead describing your duties, along with payslips or tax documents to verify employment dates and hours (minimum 20 hours per week). Non-English documents must include certified translations. Create or log into your ACS applicant account, get the verification of identity documents done, pay the assessment fee, select the skills that relate to your occupation, complete the online application form, upload all documents and finalise submission. ACS recommends submitting a complete application to avoid delays or requests for further information.

Step 3: Degree Assessment & Experience Verification (8-10 Weeks)

ACS Reviews Qualifications & Work Experience. ACS receives the application and conducts a completeness check. Qualified ICT assessor reviews degree certificate and transcripts: identifies your major field of study, counts ICT units vs. total units, determines AQF Level comparability (typically Bachelor AQF Level 7 or higher required). Assessor evaluates the ICT content of the degree (major in ICT, minor in ICT, or insufficient content designation). For employment: assessor reviews job descriptions line-by-line against the SFIA framework (Australian IT professional standards); verifies each role includes professional-level ICT duties (not just IT support or routine work). Assessor may issue a Request for Further Information (RFI) with a deadline, asking for clarification on job duties, additional employment verification, or expanded job descriptions. Assessor calculates skilled experience: subtracts non-relevant period if degree is non-ICT (typically 2–3 years deducted from claimed experience). Final assessment determines whether you meet professional ICT standards, how much of your experience counts as "skilled," and whether you're eligible for your nominated occupation.

Step 4: Assessment Outcome & Membership

Receive Positive Assessment & ACS Membership. ACS issues an official Assessment Outcome Letter documenting: Positive (you meet Australian standards for the nominated occupation) or Unsuccessful (you do not meet standards). Positive letter includes: unique assessment reference number, assessment date, validity period (2 years for visa applications), nominated occupation (ANZSCO code), summary of findings (degree level, ICT content, skilled experience calculation). Upon positive assessment: 12-month complimentary ACS membership activated automatically (includes networking events, professional development, CPD points, industry publications, job board access). You receive an ACS membership welcome package with your membership number and benefits guide. With a positive assessment, you can: submit an Expression of Interest (EOI) for skilled migration visas (189, 190, 491, 186); apply for state sponsorship; pursue employer sponsorship; use the assessment for visa applications (valid 2 years from issue date).

Documentation & Requirements Checklist

Prepare comprehensive ICT-focused documentation meeting ACS’s SFIA professional standards.

1: Proof of Identity Documents

  • Current valid physical passport (bio-data page with photo) – must be original, not expired, cancelled, or damaged
  • Second form of photo ID (e.g., national ID card or driving licence)
  • Marriage certificate or name change document (certified copy, if your name has changed)
  • Statutory Declaration (if required to explain any gaps or discrepancies)

2: Qualifications Evidence

  • Degree or Award Certificate (showing title of degree, name of awarding institution, and date of completion)
  • Official Academic Transcript listing all units/subjects studied, grades/marks achieved, and major field of study
  • For postgraduate qualifications: Provide both undergraduate and postgraduate documents
  • For research degrees: Include the abstract of the thesis or research project (endorsed by supervisor where possible)
  • Certified English translations for all non-English documents (NAATI-accredited translator required in Australia)
  • Completion letter from the university (if the graduation certificate has not yet been issued)

3: Employment & Work Experience Evidence

  • Detailed employment reference letters from each supervisor/manager (on official company letterhead, signed and dated)
  • Statement of Service from HR/employer confirming employment dates, position title, hours per week, and duties
  • Payslips or salary statements covering the full employment period
  • Employment contracts or offer letters (showing position, duties, and full-time status)
  • Tax documents or income statements (to verify employment and salary)
  • For self-employed or contractors: Business registration documents, invoices, bank statements, and statutory declaration

4: IT-Specific & Competency Evidence

  • Detailed job descriptions for each ICT role (must clearly map duties to SFIA competencies)
  • Vendor certifications (AWS, Azure, Cisco, Oracle, etc) accepted as supporting evidence, especially for DevOps and Cyber Security occupations
  • Professional memberships or certifications (if relevant)
  • Portfolio or project evidence (GitHub links, project reports, or technical samples where applicable)
  • Continuing Professional Development (CPD) records (recent courses, workshops, or conferences)
 

5: Additional / Supporting Documents

  • Curriculum Vitae (CV) with complete employment and education history
  • SFIA competency mapping (optional but highly recommended – map your duties to SFIA Level 3-4 standards)
  • Proof of Australian address (utility bill, lease agreement – only if currently residing in Australia)
  • Any additional evidence requested by ACS during assessment (e.g., further clarification on job duties)

A successful ACS assessment requires meticulous documentation of your ICT qualifications and professional-level work experience aligned with SFIA (Skills Framework for the Information Age) standards. Start your assessment 3–4 months before your target visa lodgement, as ACS processing typically takes 8–12 weeks plus potential time for Requests for Further Information (RFI). The most critical factor is demonstrating "professional ICT employment" which means at least 20 hours per week in roles where your primary duties involve technical ICT work (analysis, design, development, or problem-solving), not routine IT support or help desk tasks. Use detailed job descriptions that clearly map your responsibilities to SFIA skill levels for your nominated occupation. If your degree is non-ICT, expect experience deductions (typically 2–3 years), so plan accordingly and provide strong evidence of your ICT contributions.

Success Strategy & 2026 ACS Pathways

ACS skills assessment it professionals