in-demand jobs in Australia 2025
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In-Demand Jobs in Australia 2025: What the Latest Shortage List Reveals for Skilled Migrants

  • skylarkmigrationma
  • 3 hours ago
  • 5 min read
Diverse professionals smiling in front of a city skyline, highlighting Australia's top jobs for 2025. Includes text: "Australia’s Top Jobs 2025."
Australia's Top Jobs 2025: Exploring the Most In-Demand Professions with a Focus on Healthcare, Engineering, and Business.

Australia’s Workforce Crunch: Understanding the Demand for Skilled Workers in 2025

Jobs and Skills Australia has just published the Occupation Shortage List for 2025, and while the headlines might sound encouraging, the story beneath the surface is more complex.

Yes, the percentage of occupations in shortage has dropped slightly - from 33 percent in 2024 to 29 percent in 2025. But that improvement hides a deeper truth: Australia’s key industries are still struggling to find qualified workers.

Construction, healthcare, and education remain at the top of the list, and regional employers are finding it harder than ever to fill positions. The new data shows that even as the economy stabilises, Australia’s labour market continues to rely heavily on skilled migration.



The Big Picture: Insights from the In-Demand Jobs in Australia 2025 Data

Here’s what stands out in the 2025 data:

  • 29 percent of occupations are still in national shortage.

  • Nearly half of all trade roles remain difficult to fill.

  • Around two in five professional occupations are still under pressure.

  • Regional fill rates continue to lag behind metropolitan areas.

  • The health, education, and construction sectors remain the most affected.

  • Skill Level 3 occupations (such as chefs, electricians, and enrolled nurses) are still the hardest to fill across the country.

In short, the shortage list is shrinking on paper but not in practice. Many critical industries are still hiring faster than they can train.


Visual Summary: Shortage Rate by Year

Shortage Rate Comparison (2024 vs 2025)

Year

Percentage

Trend

2024

🔴 33%

Higher shortage

2025

🔵 29%

Slight improvement

The overall pattern remains steady. Shortages in essential roles have barely shifted, and demand for practical, trade-based skills remains extremely high.

(Tip: If you’re reading this on our site, check out the visual chart version below — it’s easier to grasp the trend at a glance!)


Bar chart comparing shortage rates: 2024 in red at 33%, 2025 in blue at 29%. Title: Shortage Rate Comparison (2024 vs 2025).
Shortage Rate Comparison: The graph illustrates a slight improvement in shortage rates, decreasing from 33% in 2024 to 29% in 2025.

The Sectors Still Struggling to Hire

1. Construction and Trades

Australia’s housing and infrastructure goals continue to stretch the labour market. Electricians, carpenters, plumbers, bricklayers, tilers, and construction supervisors remain some of the most in-demand jobs in Australia for 2025.

Interestingly, this sector was also one of the biggest winners in the last GSM invitation round. Many trade occupations were invited with some of the lowest points thresholds, across the highest number of occupations. This clearly shows that trades continue to be the backbone of Australia’s skilled migration program.

Government-backed housing projects and large-scale developments mean every state and territory is competing for the same limited pool of skilled tradespeople.



2. Healthcare and Aged Care

Registered nurses, aged care workers, and allied health professionals remain consistently short nationwide. The combination of an ageing population and ongoing demand in public hospitals keeps this sector high on every state nomination list.

And just like trades, healthcare professionals were also heavily invited in the last GSM round, reflecting their ongoing critical role. Occupations like registered nurses, midwives, physiotherapists, and occupational therapists were among the top categories for invitations, many receiving offers at lower points thresholds.



3. Education and Childcare

Teachers and early childhood educators continue to face chronic shortages. Several regional education departments report vacancies remaining open for months, particularly in STEM and special education. This pattern has barely changed over the past few years, especially in regional and remote areas where schools are under persistent pressure to attract qualified staff.



4. Engineering and IT

While the tech sector has cooled slightly compared to the 2022–2023 boom, engineers and cybersecurity specialists remain critical. The data also shows a growing need for infrastructure engineers linked to renewable energy and national development projects.

This sector has also seen consistent demand across multiple GSM invitation rounds, with engineers, ICT business analysts, and software developers repeatedly appearing in the invitation lists. It’s clear that the Engineering and IT industries remain steady contributors to Australia’s migration intake, with skilled professionals still very much needed.



Regional Reality: Where Shortages Hit Hardest

One of the biggest insights from the 2025 report is the urban-rural divide. Employers in cities like Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane are filling vacancies faster, while regional areas continue to struggle.

This explains why regional skilled migration programs (subclass 491 and 190) are still such strong pathways for visa applicants. States are eager to nominate candidates willing to live and work outside the major hubs.

Key takeaway: If you’re open to regional opportunities, you have a much stronger chance of nomination.



What the Data Means for Skilled Migrants

The 2025 shortage data directly shapes Australia’s migration strategy. Here’s how:

  • Trades and Skill Level 3 roles will continue to dominate invitations across multiple visa subclasses.

  • Healthcare and education professionals remain priority occupations for state nomination.

  • Regional commitment is still rewarded through additional invitation points and faster processing.

  • Employer sponsorships (subclass 482 and 186) remain vital for filling immediate gaps.

For visa seekers, this means 2025 could be a window of opportunity - especially for applicants in hands-on, practical roles.



A Closer Look at the Numbers

Even though the overall shortage percentage dropped to 29 percent, the nature of the shortage has shifted:

Skill Category

Observation

What It Means

Skill Level 1 (Managers, Professionals)

Slightly improved fill rates

Domestic graduates filling some roles

Skill Level 2–3 (Technicians, Trades, Practical Roles)

Remain in shortage

Migration remains essential

Skill Level 4–5 (Support roles)

Mixed improvement

Some local recovery, but regional areas still rely on migrants

This pattern tells a clear story - Australia’s skill gap has become more practical than academic. The country still needs people who can build, fix, and care.



How to Use This Information

If your job appears on the 2025 Occupation Shortage List, here’s how you can use that data strategically:

  • Check state occupation lists to see where your skills are most in demand.

  • Prepare your skills assessment early, especially if your occupation requires licensing.

  • Consider regional migration options for faster nomination chances.

  • Strengthen your English test results to boost your points ranking.

  • Stay updated - the shortage list is reviewed regularly, and small changes can impact your eligibility.



The Skylark Perspective

From our daily work with clients, the data feels accurate. The shortage may have eased slightly, but Australia’s long-term dependency on skilled migrants remains unchanged.

Every week, we see employers across multiple states actively seeking electricians, nurses, teachers, and construction managers. The 2025 shortage list simply confirms what’s already happening on the ground.

At Skylark Migration, we help skilled professionals navigate these changes - from identifying which visa fits their goals, to preparing complete, evidence-backed applications that reflect current demand.

For more immigration insights, visit our blog: Skylark Migration Blog



Conclusion: A Year of Steady Demand and Smart Opportunity

Australia’s 2025 job market is still running hot in the same core industries that have defined the last few years. The demand has not disappeared; it has simply shifted toward roles that build, teach, heal, and maintain.

For migrants, that’s good news. The Occupation Shortage List shows not just where jobs exist, but where real, long-term visa opportunities are waiting.

If your skills fall under these high-demand categories, this is the time to prepare your next move - strategically, with the right guidance.


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