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Key Points
- The ABS estimates more than 200,000 international students arrived in Australia in February 2025, the highest number ever.
- Opposition leader Peter Dutton says a limit on the number of international students would allow Australians to ‘afford homes again’.
- Some experts say that instead of capping arrivals, focus should be on ousting those who have reached their visa limits.
He also cited the country’s weather and “stable” economic and political conditions as reasons for his choice.

The Australian government has toughened its entry rules for international students to damper demand. Credit: Pexels
Langeh is not alone in sticking with Australia as a study destination, despite multiple visa changes and application fee hikes announced by the Australian government.
He said a reduction in foreign students would help Australians “afford homes again” by bringing down the cost of living.
Tightened rules for international students
Student arrivals surpass pre-pandemic levels
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, 201,490 international students arrived in Australia in February 2025.

This is significantly higher than in the same month last year, when 175,950 students arrived in Australia.
The Department of Home Affairs also had 113,188 student primary visa applications on hand by the end of June 2024 — a 187.4 per cent increase when compared with 30 June 2023.
‘Need to limit prolonged stays’
Ravi Lochan Singh, the director of Global Reach, one of the largest education agencies in South Asia, claimed that introducing artificial caps is “not a great strategy” to limiting migration.

Ravi Lochan Singh. Credit: Facebook/Ravi Lochan Singh/AMOL
“To reduce net migration, students who finish the course and are unable to find further migration pathways should be encouraged to return to their home country.”
“I am expecting that for the full calendar year it will be fewer student visas, but there will be more quality students and there will be a higher visa grant rate.”
‘Put nation first, not universities’
“That’s why we have flagged a tougher, more effective cap on international students — one that will rein in excessive numbers in our overburdened capital cities, particularly Melbourne and Sydney, where two-thirds of foreign students live and study.”
Listen to more on this topic via this SBS Punjabi podcast:
