Stop whatever you're doing right now. The Australian Government's latest Skills Priority List confirms physiotherapy as a nationally shortage occupation. The employment is projected to grow 33.6% between 2025 and 2035. It is among the fastest growth rates across any regulated healthcare profession. The Australian Physiotherapy Association has placed physiotherapy in the top 20 most-demanded occupations nationally.
While Australia remains the most popular destination for Indian physiotherapists, New Zealand has also emerged as a strong migration pathway due to its growing healthcare shortages, simpler lifestyle and an easy registration process.
Both countries recognise Indian physiotherapy qualifications through competency-based assessment systems, though their registration authorities, migration structures, and salary dynamics differ slightly.
The door is held ajar. The only confusion is, does your BPT or MPT degree change how you walk through it? Let's get informed.
BPT & MPT: What They Are and Who They Suit
Many students think MPT is the “required next step” after BPT. In reality, both qualifications serve different goals. Understanding that difference can save you years of confusion.
Bachelor of Physiotherapy (BPT)
A 4.5-year undergraduate programme (including 6 months of internship) that provides complete clinical training across musculoskeletal, neurological, cardiopulmonary, and paediatric domains. It is a terminal professional degree. The BPT syllabus of India and neighbouring countries fully qualifies you to practise independently as a physiotherapist in India and in most international jurisdictions, including Australia and New Zealand.
- Duration: 4 + 0.5 years (internship)
- Suits: Those who want to enter the workforce quickly
- Pathway to Australia: Direct via APC / APEP
- Australia PR eligibility: Yes, on the MLTSSL
Master of Physiotherapy (MPT)
A 2-year postgraduate programme that deepens clinical knowledge in a chosen specialisation. They range from Orthopaedics, Neurology, Cardiopulmonary, Sports, or Paediatrics. It involves research, advanced clinical practicum, and thesis or project work. MPT does not replace BPT but instead builds on it. Entry typically requires a BPT with at least 55% aggregate.
- Duration: 2 years after BPT
- Suits: Those seeking specialisation, academic roles, or migration edge
- Pathway to Australia: Direct via APC / APEP (same as BPT)
- Australia PR eligibility: Yes and adds 5 bonus visa points
The most important thing to understand is whether MPT is needed for international licensure exams. Both degrees get you to Australia. What differs is how faster you get through, a modest salary and the Visa points.
APEP Pathway by APC: Does Your BPT/MPTDegree Matter?
The Australian Physiotherapy Council (APC) is the skills assessing body for internationally qualified physiotherapists seeking registration with AHPRA (Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency). Since 2022, the APC pathway has operated under a revised framework known as the Assessment Pathway for Eligible Physiotherapists (APEP).
Here is the APEP process at a glance:
| Stage | What happens | BPT eligible? | MPT eligible? |
| Eligibility Assessment | APC reviews your transcript, curriculum, and clinical hours against Australian standards | Yes | Yes |
| Cultural Safety Training | Mandatory online module on Australian healthcare context and First Nations considerations | Yes | Yes |
| APEP Written Assessment | Multiple-choice exam testing clinical reasoning in the Australian practice context | Yes | Yes |
| AHPRA Registration | Full registration as a physiotherapist in Australia upon passing all stages | Yes | Yes |
Note: Your degree type be it, BPT or MPT, does not exempt you from any stage of the APEP assessment. The APC tests competency, not credentials. An MPT from a top Indian institution will not fast-track you through the written exam. What matters is how well you understand clinical reasoning within the Australian healthcare context and how thoroughly you have prepared.
Australia vs New Zealand for Physiotherapists
We have learnt about Australia's process of onboarding overseas physiotherapists. Is New Zealand's any different? Let's see.
| Factor | Australia | New Zealand |
| Registration Authority | APC + AHPRA | PBNZ |
| Main Assessment Pathway | APEP | NZ Physio Board Assessment |
| PR Pathway Strength | Very strong | Strong |
| Average Salary | AUD 95K–150K | NZD 75K–110K |
| Demand Areas | NDIS, MSK, Neuro | Aged care, rural rehab, MSK |
| Visa Options | 189, 190, 491 | Skilled Migrant Category |
| Competition Level | Higher | Moderate |
| Work-Life Balance | Strong | Excellent |
Salary Impact: Does MPT actually pay more in Australia?
The average salary for physiotherapists in Australia is now closer to AUD 95,000 annually, with significantly higher packages available in rural, NDIS, sports, and specialist roles.
Graduate physiotherapists commonly begin between AUD 95,000 and AUD 105,000, while experienced clinicians, especially in rural health, NDIS, sports rehabilitation, or leadership roles, can cross AUD 130,000–150,000 annually.
| Career Stage | BPT Graduate (Estimated) | MPT Graduate (Estimated) |
| Entry level (0-2 years) | AUD 95,000 | AUD 78,000-90,000 |
| Mid-career (3-6 years) | AUD 100,000-110,000 | AUD 120,000-130,000 |
| Senior/Specialist | AUD 100,000-125,000 | AUD 105,000-135,000 |
| Private Practice (NDIS/Sports) | AUD 120-220/hour-degree level has limited impact | Negligible |
The salary factors that genuinely influence earnings in Australia are your clinical niche, Australian work experience, regional demand, patient load, communication skills, and the sector you work in.
A physiotherapist with a BPT and two years of Australian-context experience in NDIS, sports rehab, or community care will often out-earn an MPT graduate working in a standard outpatient setting.
An MPT can improve positioning for specialist, academic, research, or leadership-oriented roles, but in day-to-day clinical hiring, Australian employers generally prioritise practical experience and local exposure over the additional postgraduate title.
In New Zealand, physiotherapists generally earn between NZD 75,000 and NZD 110,000 annually depending on experience, specialisation, and location. While salaries are slightly lower than Australia on paper, many physiotherapists report better work-life balance, lower competition, and smoother regional employment opportunities.
Time + Money Math: 2 Extra Years of MPT vs 2 Years Earning in Australia
This is the calculation almost no one does honestly. Let's do it here. Assume a BPT graduate and an MPT aspirant both complete their BPT at age 22. The MPT candidate spends 2 more years in India studying. The BPT candidate begins the APEP pathway immediately.
MPT Cost (2 years)
₹4–12L+
Tuition at a reputed Indian institution. Private college fees can reach ₹15–20L. Add living costs and 2 years of foregone income.
BPT Candidate: 2 Years Earning in Australia
AUD 140,000–160,000
Two years of full-time physio income post-AHPRA registration. Taxes aside, this builds Australian experience, PR points, and local networks.
By the time the MPT graduate arrives in Australia at 26–27, the BPT graduate at 24–25 has already accumulated:
- 2 years of Australian clinical experience (worth 5–10 extra migration points)
- AUD 140,000–160,000 in gross earnings
- Australian professional networks and potential employer sponsorship
- A stronger track record for permanent residency applications
The counterargument for MPT
If you intend to pursue an academic or research career, or if your MPT specialisation is in a high-demand niche (Neuro, NDIS, Paeds), the 2-year investment can pay back meaningfully, both in specialist hiring preference and the 5 bonus visa points. The calculation genuinely depends on your specific career goals, not a one-size-fits-all answer.
Preparing for the APEP Written Assessment?
Academically's APEP Written Exam Preparation Course is built around the APC's competency framework , covering clinical reasoning, Australian practice context, and exam technique. BPT and MPT graduates both use it. You can also benefit from the AI-based mock tests that simulate real time exam conditions to make you acquainted.
Visa Points Impact: Where MPT Genuinely Helps
Australia's General Skilled Migration points system (Subclasses 189, 190, and 491) requires a minimum score of 65 points to submit an Expression of Interest (EOI). In practice, competitive invitations in popular occupations require 80–90+ points. Every point matters.
| Points Category | BPT Graduate | MPT Graduate |
| Education qualification | 10 points (Bachelor's) | 15 points (Master's by coursework) |
| MPT points uplift | — | +5 points |
| Australian study (if MPT done in Australia, 2+ years) | — | +5 additional points |
| Overseas skilled work experience (5+ years) | 10 points | 10 points |
| Australian skilled work (1 year) | 5 points | 5 points |
| Superior English (IELTS 8+ / PTE 79+) | 20 points | 20 points |
| Age 25–32 | 30 points | 30 points |
| Illustrative Total (strong profile) | ~75–80 points | ~80–90 points |
Unlike Australia’s points-heavy migration framework, New Zealand’s Skilled Migrant pathways are often viewed as more occupation-shortage driven. Physiotherapy remains on New Zealand’s Green List, making it a favourable profession for long-term residency pathways.
Key insight on points
The 5-point MPT advantage can be the decisive difference in a competitive SkillSelect round. In several recent invitation rounds for physiotherapy, the cutoff score has hovered around 80–85 points. For candidates sitting at 79 points, an MPT is not just nice to have. It is the margin between an invitation and a wait.
It is worth noting that the Australian Government is actively revising its points test framework, with proposed changes signalling higher weighting for Master's and PhD holders in occupations identified as "Core Skills" by Jobs and Skills Australia. Physiotherapy, as a nationally shortage profession, is well-positioned to benefit from this direction-making MPT an increasingly strategic asset.
MPT Specialisations That Work the Best to Australia & New Zealand
Not all MPT specialisations are equally valued by the Australian labour market. If you are considering an MPT specifically to strengthen your migration positioning, your choice of specialisation matters considerably.
- Orthopaedic & Musculoskeletal
- Neurological Rehabilitation
- Cardiopulmonary
- Paediatric Physiotherapy
- Sports Physiotherapy
- NDIS / Disability Rehab
Orthopaedic and musculoskeletal physiotherapy is the workhorse of the Australian private sector. The bulk of job advertisements, particularly in private practice, seek clinicians with strong MSK assessment and manual therapy skills. An MPT in Orthopaedics signals specialist-level clinical reasoning that private clinics actively seek.
Neurological rehabilitation is the fastest-growing demand segment, driven by an ageing population and an expanding NDIS funding envelope. Neuro physios, particularly those with experience in stroke, acquired brain injury, or MS are in genuine shortage in both metropolitan and regional Australia.
Sports physiotherapy commands some of the highest hourly rates in the private sector (AUD 120–200 per session) and carries strong prestige within clinical teams attached to sporting organisations. With Australia gearing up for international sporting events, this is a growing niche. Note that Australia's Sports Physiotherapy Australia (SPA) has its own fellowship pathway, and an MPT in Sports provides a solid foundation.
Paediatric physiotherapy is consistently underserved across Australia, particularly in regional areas and within NDIS-funded disability services. An MPT in Paediatrics is among the most distinctive credentials a migrant physio can carry into the Australian job market.
New Zealand also shows strong demand for musculoskeletal, community rehabilitation, sports physiotherapy, and aged-care-focused clinicians, particularly outside Auckland and Wellington where workforce shortages remain significant.
Note: If your MPT is in a general or non-clinical specialisation (Sports Management, Hospital Administration, Research without a clear clinical link), its practical value in the Australian labour market diminishes considerably. Employers hire for clinical competency match your specialisation to what Australian practices actually need.
BPT vs MPT: What should you choose?
Did you know... Academically has consistently secured 90%+ success rate across all licensure exams including APEP. Let's hear it from these candidates who were onboarded with us for APEP preparation. This will definitely help you make an informed decision:
Case 1: Priya, BPT Graduate
In this case: Strong academic record · IELTS 7.5 · No postgraduate plans · Wants to move to Australia ASAP
Priya has enough on paper to pass the APC eligibility threshold. Two years of Australian work experience will give her more visa points than an MPT would, and she'll start earning in AUD years earlier. She should focus all energy on APEP preparation and building her English score to Superior level.
Case 2: Rahul, BPT + 3 Years Experience
Considers MPT in Orthopaedics · Points score currently ~77 · Wants 189 visa · Target: 82+ points
In this case: MPT in India makes sense
Rahul is 5 points short of a competitive 189 invitation. An MPT in Orthopaedics from a recognised institution adds exactly 5 points, pushes his education score from 10 to 15, and gives him a marketable specialism. The 2-year cost is justifiable if he chooses the right institution and specialisation.
Case 3: Deepa, 28, BPT + Considering MPT in Australia
Aims for AHPRA registration first · Then MPT by research in Australia · Long-term PR goal
In this case: Do MPT in Australia after registration
Deepa's plan is strategically optimal. She registers via APEP, works for 1–2 years (building Australian experience points), then pursues an MPT by research at an Australian university. This unlocks: the 5-point education uplift, 5-point Australian study requirement points, and potentially 10 additional specialist research points, a total gain of up to 20 points from education alone.
Case 4: Arjun, 30, MPT Neuro, 2 Years Experience
MPT completed · Points score ~83 · Wants to work in neuro-rehab in Sydney or Melbourne
In this case: Apply now, strong position
Arjun is well-positioned. His MPT in Neurology is genuinely marketable in Australian hospitals and NDIS settings, his points score is competitive for a 189 or 190 visa, and his clinical background aligns with a documented shortage area. His priority should be passing the APEP written assessment on the first attempt. It requires Australia-specific preparation, not just clinical knowledge.
Common Myths Busted about MPT Being More Important than BPT for International License
Myth: "MPT is mandatory to work as a physiotherapist in Australia."
Truth: The APC assesses clinical competency, not degree level. Thousands of BPT graduates practise legally in Australia. MPT is an advantage in specific contexts, not a requirement for any of them.
Myth: "BPT salary is half of MPT salary in Australia."
Truth: Both degree levels are hired under the same Allied Health pay scales in the public sector. In private practice, pay reflects caseload and specialisation. The actual entry-level salary gap is 5–8%, not 50%.
Myth: "MPT holders skip the APEP written assessment."
Truth: No pathway skips the written assessment. Every internationally trained physiotherapist, regardless of degree level, must pass the APEP exam to register with AHPRA. Preparation is non-negotiable for both groups.
Myth: "Doing MPT in India has no value compared to Australian study."
Truth: An MPT from a recognised Indian institution is accepted by the APC and adds 5 visa points. Australian study adds bonus points on top, but Indian MPT is far from worthless. Choose a well-accredited institution and a relevant specialisation.
Myth: "You don't need to prepare for APEP if you have an MPT."
Truth: MPT candidates fail the APEP exam at similar rates to BPT candidates when they are unprepared. The exam tests Australia-specific clinical reasoning, a domain that most Indian curricula, at both BPT and MPT level, do not specifically cover.
Career Trajectories of BPT and MPT Graduates: Let's Take Some Inspo from these Candidate's Success Stories
Anika Krishnamurthy (BPT · 2019 graduate · Now practising in Melbourne)
Anika graduated from BPT in 2019 and spent two years working in a large private hospital in Chennai. She sat the APEP written exam in 2022 after six months of structured preparation. She cleared it on her first attempt and received AHPRA registration within three months. By 24, she was working in a busy sports and MSK clinic in Melbourne's eastern suburbs at AUD 72,000. By 2025, with two years of Australian experience and a Superior English result, her points score crossed 85, and she lodged a 189 visa application. She's 26, fully registered, and on track for PR. The MPT never felt necessary.
Rohan Varma {BPT + MPT (Neuro) · 2020/2022 graduate · Now in Brisbane}
Rohan completed his MPT in Neurological Physiotherapy in 2022 with a clear goal: a research or academic-clinical hybrid career in Australia. His specialisation got him shortlisted for a neuroscience rehabilitation role at a Brisbane hospital that explicitly asked for postgraduate qualifications. His 5 extra points put his EOI score at 86, enough for a 189 invitation in his first round. He arrived in Australia in late 2023. The MPT mattered for him, not because it was required, but because his career goals made it the right investment. He still had to pass the APEP written exam, which he cleared with two months of targeted preparation.
Whether you hold a BPT or an MPT, the APEP written assessment requires the same thing. Australia-specific clinical reasoning, structured preparation, and exam-ready confidence. Have further questions? Our friendly team will always help you get through.
Should You Choose Australia or New Zealand as a Physiotherapist?
Both Australia and New Zealand offer strong long-term career opportunities, excellent healthcare infrastructure, and clear migration pathways for internationally qualified physiotherapists. However, the better destination often depends on your career goals, lifestyle expectations, financial priorities, and timeline for permanent residency.
Australia remains the larger and more lucrative market overall. The country has a significantly bigger healthcare system, higher patient volumes, stronger private-sector demand, and broader opportunities across NDIS, sports rehabilitation, neurological care, aged care, and musculoskeletal physiotherapy. Salaries are generally higher as well, with experienced physiotherapists in Australia often earning AUD 100,000–150,000 annually, especially in regional and specialist settings. However, this also comes with greater competition, stricter migration cut-offs, and a faster-paced work environment in major cities like Sydney and Melbourne.
New Zealand, meanwhile, appeals to physiotherapists looking for a more balanced and lifestyle-oriented experience. The healthcare system is smaller, but physiotherapists remain in demand across both public and community healthcare settings, particularly in rural and semi-regional areas. Many migrant physios describe New Zealand as easier to settle into socially and professionally, with a calmer pace of life, shorter commutes, and less aggressive competition for roles compared to Australia.
Importantly, both countries follow competency-based registration systems. That means employers and registration bodies care more about your clinical skills, communication ability, and patient management approach than whether you hold a BPT or MPT alone.
For many physiotherapists, New Zealand becomes an excellent first international destination before eventually transitioning to Australia later through trans-Tasman mobility agreements and accumulated overseas experience.