Macquarie University
Travel guide for Indian students — Sydney, Australia. Nearest international gateway: SYD (Sydney).
Macquarie University is a popular choice for Indian students in Sydney.
Getting around Sydney
Sydney's trains, buses, ferries and light rail (all on the Opal card, with a student concession if your provider makes you eligible) cover the metro area. Macquarie has its own Metro station in the northwest of the city. Few students need a car.
From the airport to campus
From Sydney Airport (SYD), the Airport Link train reaches the city centre in about 15 minutes (it carries an extra station-access fee), then a train/bus to campus; a taxi/rideshare is roughly AUD 45-60.
When to book flights
Australian universities mainly intake in late February (Semester 1) and July (Semester 2) - book 6-10 weeks ahead from your nearest Indian metro and compare live carriers above.
Visiting your child at Macquarie University means flying into Sydney Airport (SYD); the Airport Link train reaches the centre in about 15 minutes. Plan the subclass 600 visitor visa well ahead.
Getting from SYD to campus
Visitor visa for parents
Indian parents need an Australian Visitor visa (subclass 600), usually the Tourist stream. It is applied for online through ImmiAccount and is fully digital - there is no visa stamp, and status is checked via VEVO. It allows stays of 3, 6 or 12 months; parents of a student in Australia often qualify for a longer 6 or 12-month stay, and in some cases a multi-year (up to 3-year) multiple-entry visitor visa is granted.
- Apply online via ImmiAccount; the visa is digital (no passport stamp) and verified through VEVO.
- Build a strong file: proof of funds, an invitation letter from your child, and clear ties to home for the 'genuine visitor' test.
- Parents of a student already in Australia have a strong reason for a longer 6 or 12-month stay - state it clearly.
- A health-insurance condition (8501) may be attached, and the visitor visa cannot be used to work or converted to a work visa.
Just admitted to Macquarie University? Here's your arrival checklist.
Arrival checklist
- Book your flight into Sydney (SYD) early for the best semester-intake fares.
- Airport Link train from SYD to the centre (~15 min), then train/bus to campus.
- Sort first-week housing before you land; western suburbs (Harris Park, Parramatta) are far cheaper than the inner city.
- Arrange Overseas Student Health Cover (OSHC) for your whole stay and show ~AUD 24,505 in living funds for the subclass 500 visa.
Sydney is Australia's most expensive student city - about AUD 2,000-2,900 a month all-in sharing and cooking, driven by high rents. Rents are quoted weekly here: a room in a shared flat typically runs AUD 250-400/week. The upside is the strongest job market in the country, a huge Indian community centred on Harris Park, and the Opal card covering trains, buses and ferries.
Monthly cost of living in Sydney (a student estimate)
That's roughly A$24,000-35,000 a year for living costs, on top of tuition.
Finding accommodation
Sydney rents are the highest in Australia and quoted weekly; nearly all students share. Western suburbs are far cheaper than the inner city.
- Rents are quoted weekly - multiply by about 4.3 for the monthly figure.
- Western suburbs (Parramatta, Harris Park, Auburn) cut rent sharply and sit in the heart of the Indian community.
- Get the transport concession on your Opal card if your provider makes you eligible.
Working part-time
On a Student visa (subclass 500) you can work up to 48 hours per fortnight (a rolling two-week period) while your course is in session, and unlimited hours during scheduled course breaks - this is visa condition 8105. Master's-by-research and PhD students have no hour limit. The cap counts all jobs combined and is enforced through tax-office data-matching, so staying within it protects your visa. After graduating you can apply for the Temporary Graduate visa (subclass 485): full, unrestricted work rights for two to four years depending on your qualification and study location (regional areas give more time), with a pathway toward permanent residency. You must generally be under 35 and apply while in Australia.
Safety & student support
Sydney's universities sits in a generally safe Australian city; use normal city awareness at night.
- Sydney's universities has campus security and student-safety escort services - save the campus number.
- Australian cities are generally safe, with reliable public transport.
- Use normal big-city awareness around Kings Cross and nightlife districts late at night.
Indian community & food
Sydney has one of Australia's largest Indian communities, centred on Harris Park ('Little India') in the west.
Indian grocery stores
- Harris Park 'Little India' (Marion St / Wigram St): Patel Brothers, Sabzee Supermarket, Taj Indian Spices - groceries, sweets and restaurants.
- Burwood and Parramatta also have major Indian grocers; mainstream Woolworths and Coles carry growing world-food aisles.
- Aldi is the budget option for staples; desi stores cover spices, atta, lentils and frozen items.
Student community
- Sydney's universities have large, active Indian and South Asian societies with major Diwali and Holi events.
- Sydney has Hindu temples (including the large Helensburgh temple) and a busy desi cultural calendar.
- Harris Park is a destination in itself for Indian dining; desi restaurants are city-wide.
Cost & living figures for Sydney last verified Jun 2026. Figures are estimates and change over time.
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