Refugee Visa 200: resettlement for people referred by the UNHCR.
The subclass 200 is Australia's primary offshore refugee visa. It is for people outside their home country who face persecution and are referred for resettlement - most often through the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. It is a permanent visa from the date of grant.
Who the Refugee visa is for.
The subclass 200 is for people who are outside their home country, cannot return because of a well-founded fear of persecution, and are referred to Australia for resettlement. In practice, the overwhelming majority of 200 visa holders are identified and referred by the UNHCR or are certified as locally engaged employees (LEEs) - people who worked for Australia or Australian organisations in conflict zones and whose safety is at risk as a result.
A well-founded fear of persecution means more than general danger. The fear must be based on a specific Convention ground: race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion. The situation must be serious enough that return to the home country is genuinely impossible.
One application, five subclasses. When you lodge a Class XB application, the Department assesses you against all five offshore humanitarian subclasses simultaneously (200, 201, 202, 203 and 204). If you meet the criteria for the 200, that is what you will be granted - but if your circumstances better fit another subclass, you may be granted that instead. You do not need to specify a subclass when applying.
What you need to qualify.
Rights and entitlements.
The subclass 200 is a permanent visa. On grant, you can:
Places are limited and demand is high. Australia sets an annual ceiling for the humanitarian programme. Demand far exceeds the available places, and most applicants wait years from referral to decision. Processing is not sequential - urgency and compelling circumstances determine priority. We cannot speed up the process, but we can make sure your application presents the strongest possible case.
The application process.
Class XB applications (including the Subclass 200) are generally lodged online via ImmiAccount, and the Department has been moving away from paper lodgement. Lodgement requirements can change, so we confirm the current process with you before you apply.
The single application covers all five offshore subclasses. You do not choose a subclass - the Department determines the most appropriate one based on your circumstances. If you have an Australian proposer (an immediate family member already in Australia holding a qualifying visa), a split family application can be lodged under the same framework.
No visa application charge. There is generally no visa application charge for the offshore humanitarian programme, including the subclass 200. You may still face other costs - for example medical examinations, police certificates, document translations and travel - and if you engage us, our professional fees are separate. We do not promise an outcome, and we quote our fees in writing before any work begins. See how we quote.
How the 200 compares to onshore protection.
The subclass 200 is part of the offshore humanitarian programme - it is for people who are outside Australia. If you are already in Australia and seeking protection, a different framework applies. The comparison below is general information to help you understand which side of the system fits your situation. It is not advice about your case.
Where you are: outside Australia, and outside your home country.
How you are identified: usually referred by the UNHCR, or certified as a locally engaged employee.
Visa type: permanent from the date of grant.
Application charge: generally no visa application charge.
Processing: times vary widely and can run to several months or, depending on your circumstances and the annual programme, considerably longer.
Where you are: already in Australia when you seek protection.
How you are assessed: against Australia's protection obligations, not through UNHCR referral.
Visa type: the permanent Protection visa 866 for lawful arrivals; temporary streams apply to some unauthorised arrivals.
Charges and processing: these differ from the offshore programme - see the relevant onshore page for current detail.
You cannot switch between the two by choice. Whether the offshore or onshore framework applies depends on where you are and how your situation arose, not on which you would prefer. If you are unsure which pathway fits you, a registered migration agent can help you understand your options before you lodge anything. Compare every route on our humanitarian visas overview.
Refugee visa questions answered.
Where to from here.
Written and reviewed by Brian Chan, Registered Migration Agent (MARN 2217857)
Visa Store Australia, Perth · Last reviewed June 2026 · Verify on the MARA register · General information only, not personal migration advice.
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