Moving To Australia Checklist: Things To Do Before You Fly and Immediately Upon Landing

You are finally going to make that move. You are moving to Australia. Something you’ve been dreaming for a long time now.

I know you are excited to start this new life, but also overwhelmed with questions, concerns and things-to-do before you move.

I know how overwhelmed I was weeks before taking my flight to this wonderland.

I was totally unprepared before moving to Australia. I had no job, no place to stay, no bank account, and I didn’t even know anyone here.

I was even anxious about what will happen at the airport with this visa document that I have (hint: nothing happens at all. It’s smooth).

I remember getting in panic mode often times and frantically searching online for part-time jobs, full-time jobs, places to stay, and things to buy.

I tested it all. From Facebook groups to blogs to web forums.

From my experiences before coming to Australia, and then learning from the mistakes I made in the first month after coming to Australia, I’ve compiled a list of answers that might save you some (or a lot) of trouble.

In this, I answer these questions of yours:

What should I take care of before moving to Australia?

Rent a room for 1-3 months

1) Your best friend when it comes to renting a room is Facebook.

Use Facebook search bar to search groups of south asian communities.

Indians in Australia, Melbourne, Sydney, etc

Pakistanis in Australia, Melbourne, Sydney, etc

Bangladeshis in Australia, Melbourne, Sydney, etc

I totally understand if you do not want to stay within south asian community, and I strongly advocate multi-cultural multi-racial living, but you can change houses once you are in Australia and have made some friends.

Owners here looking for tenants are generally 10 times more receptive to renting rooms and houses to members of their own communities. So to save you time and effort, I’d advise first renting a room within your own community.

In the top Facebook groups, there are thousands of members. Everyday people are posting ‘rooms to rent’. You should be able to secure one within a week or two.

Owner will ask for 1-4 weeks of bond (you can either bank transfer or assure him that you will pay the moment you land).

For most houses, you can leave by giving 1-month notice in advance so there isn’t any long-term binding.

2) Your second best friend is Gumtree Australia. For everything.

Gumtree is Australia’s everything for peer-to-peer. Room rental, furniture, cars, you name it.

For room rentals, most people will require you to visit and inspect the house so they can know you and you can know them. So it’s generally a bit difficult to secure a room before entering Australia.

Nonetheless, you can use Gumtree to find a place to stay once you’ve landed.

3) Facebook Marketplace

Over the past few months, Facebook Marketplace feature has grown tremendously. It probably has almost as much listings as Gumtree.

Same rule applies as Gumtree. You will have to inspect house as owners will be less likely to commit until they have met you.

4) Lastly, if you do not need any commitment for a room before coming to Australia, just book a hotel or a hostel bed for a few days.

Best hotel comparison site: HotelsCombined.com.au

Best hostel booking site: Hostelworld.com

Prepare your documents and check legal limits

What should I do immediately after reaching Australia?

Moving Around

Groceries

Mobile

Bank

Food

Shopping

How should I look for jobs after coming to Australia?

Consider it impossible to get a job offer (or even an interview) without first being in Australia. So I will strongly recommend bringing cash for first 2-3 months to sustain yourself.

For full-time jobs (in order of preference)

1) Network in a structured way.

2) Same Facebook Groups that you used to find your room

3) Visit these 4 websites: AngelList , Seek , Indeed , and Gumtree

For part-time jobs (in order of preference)

1) Same Facebook groups that you used to find your room

2) Gumtree Australia

3) Jobs related Facebook groups (e.g. Jobs in Melbourne, Jobs in Sydney, etc.)

Part-time jobs come and go very fast. You need to call and ask for a meet-up the same day.

Even for part-time jobs, you will only get best offers by asking people you know to recommend you in companies that they are working in.

So invest in reaching out to people and meeting them in your first 1-2 months. Again, my article on networking has tips for this.

For part-time, these jobs are available in abundance and usually do not require any certificates:

P.S. If you haven’t gotten your Australian PR yet, in this FREE Ultimate Guide I’ve detailed Step-by-Step process in easy words that I did to apply and get my Australian PR