What is an Electrical Engineer (ANZSCO 233311)?
Designs, develops and supervises electrical systems for power generation, transmission, distribution, buildings, controls and industrial installations. The occupation sits within Unit Group 2333 and should be selected only when the applicant's education, projects and professional duties clearly match this ANZSCO direction.
For Australian migration purposes, Engineers Australia is the assessing authority for this engineering pathway. A positive skills assessment is normally required before lodging skilled migration visa applications that rely on this occupation.
Designs, develops and supervises electrical systems for power generation, transmission, distribution, buildings, controls and industrial installations. Registration or licensing may be required depending on the Australian state, territory and nature of work.
Specialisations
Your CDR should reflect the specialisation or project stream that most closely matches your actual experience. Do not choose a stream only because it sounds strong; Engineers Australia looks for evidence in your Career Episodes and Summary Statement.
- Power Systems Engineer — generation, transmission, distribution and protection systems
- Building Services Electrical Engineer — lighting, power, earthing and emergency systems
- Renewable Energy Engineer — solar, wind, storage and grid integration projects
- Control and Protection Engineer — relays, control logic, fault studies and commissioning
- Industrial Electrical Engineer — motors, drives, instrumentation and plant electrical systems
If your experience overlaps more than one stream, choose the three projects that show the widest spread of Stage 1 competency evidence and the clearest match with ANZSCO 233311.
Skill Level and Qualification Requirements
ANZSCO 233311 generally falls under Skill Level 1. In practice, most applicants need a bachelor degree or higher qualification in the relevant engineering discipline, or a closely related field, supported by project and employment evidence.
Applicants with non-accredited or overseas qualifications may use the CDR pathway to demonstrate engineering knowledge and application. Relevant work experience, project documentation, calculations, drawings, reports and professional development records all help strengthen the assessment file.
Typical Tasks and Duties
When writing your CDR Career Episodes, your Personal Engineering Activity sections must describe tasks you personally carried out. For Electrical Engineer, strong evidence may include:
Australian Visa Options for Electrical Engineer ANZSCO 233311
Electrical Engineer applicants may be able to use several Australian skilled migration pathways, subject to the current skilled occupation lists, points score, English level, work experience and nomination or sponsorship requirements. Always verify current eligibility before lodging an EOI or visa application.
| Visa | Type | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subclass 189 | Skilled Independent (Permanent) | Check list | Points-tested pathway. Invitation depends on occupation list status, points score and current invitation rounds. |
| Subclass 190 | Skilled Nominated (Permanent) | Check state criteria | Requires nomination by an Australian state or territory and may add 5 points to the EOI. |
| Subclass 491 | Skilled Work Regional (Provisional) | Check state/family criteria | Regional pathway that may add 15 points and can lead to permanent residency through the 191 pathway if conditions are met. |
| Subclass 186 | Employer Nomination Scheme (Permanent) | Employer-based | Requires an eligible Australian employer nomination and relevant occupation/skills requirements. |
| Subclass 482 | Skills in Demand / Temporary Skill Shortage pathway | Employer-based | Temporary employer-sponsored route. Requirements depend on occupation, sponsor, stream and current rules. |
State and Territory Nomination (Subclass 190 / 491)
State and territory nomination can be useful for Electrical Engineer applicants because each jurisdiction may open or close occupations according to labour demand, regional priorities and annual allocation limits. Requirements can include English scores, points thresholds, work experience, local study, job offers, registration, or evidence of employability.
- Victoria (VIC) — often prioritises strong employment prospects, skilled work experience and occupations aligned with Victorian demand.
- New South Wales (NSW) — uses invitation rounds and occupation-sector priorities that can change across the program year.
- Queensland (QLD) — may require relevant experience, English scores, offshore/onshore conditions and evidence of employability.
- Western Australia (WA) — frequently separates graduate and general streams, with occupation availability reviewed by program period.
- South Australia (SA) — may consider SA graduates, skilled employment, high points, offshore streams or family links depending on the intake.
- Northern Territory (NT) — often looks for genuine commitment, employability, work experience and financial capacity.
- Tasmania (TAS) — may prioritise Tasmanian study, skilled employment, job offers and long-term settlement prospects.
- Australian Capital Territory (ACT) — uses a matrix-based system and may prioritise Canberra ties, employment and occupation demand.
Because nomination rules change regularly, applicants should verify the latest criteria on the official state or territory migration website before making a decision.
CDR Requirements for Electrical Engineer ANZSCO 233311
To have your skills assessed through Engineers Australia's CDR pathway, you need a complete Competency Demonstration Report. The report should be original, first-person, project-based and mapped to the required competency elements.
1. Three Career Episodes
Each Career Episode should describe one project, design task, investigation, work placement or professional engineering activity. The writing should be in first person and numbered paragraph style. Strong episode choices for Electrical Engineer include projects related to Power Systems Engineer, Building Services Electrical Engineer, Renewable Energy Engineer and any substantial work where you made clear engineering decisions.
2. Summary Statement
The Summary Statement is the competency-mapping table. It links each Stage 1 competency element to the exact numbered paragraphs in your Career Episodes. Every reference must point to real evidence of your personal engineering activity, not background information or team achievements.
3. Continuing Professional Development (CPD) List
The CPD list records your ongoing learning, including courses, workshops, software training, safety training, seminars, technical reading, webinars and professional development activities. It should be recent, relevant and presented in a clear dated format.
Common Mistakes in Electrical Engineer CDRs
- Using generic project descriptions. Assessors need to see your personal engineering role, not only the company's project background.
- Weak ANZSCO alignment. Your duties must match Electrical Engineer rather than a neighbouring occupation with a similar title.
- Too much “we” language. Career Episodes should show what you personally designed, calculated, checked, tested, supervised or improved.
- Missing technical depth. Include methods, calculations, software, standards, drawings, tests, constraints and engineering judgement where relevant.
- Poor Summary Statement mapping. Avoid linking competency indicators to introduction/background paragraphs that do not prove the skill.
- Copied or template wording. Engineers Australia expects original content based on your own projects and professional experience.
How CDR Assist Can Help
CDR Assist prepares original, competency-mapped CDR reports for Electrical Engineer applicants. We help select suitable projects, structure three Career Episodes, write a clear Summary Statement, organise CPD evidence and refine the final report for professional presentation.