If you’ve ever scrolled past a campaign and thought “I could do that” — but then stopped because you’ve never modelled a day in your life — this guide is for you. At Hunter Talent, we sign brand new faces every single week, and the truth is that most of our talent walked through the door with zero credits, no portfolio, and a phone full of blurry selfies.
So let’s clear the air. You don’t need experience to become a model in Australia in 2026. You need the right information, a realistic plan, and an agency that actually takes beginners seriously. Here’s exactly how to do it.
Can You Really Start Modelling With Zero Experience?
Yes — and not just in theory. Roughly 78% of the adult talent currently on the Hunter Talent books had no prior paid modelling experience when they first applied. That includes working mums, tradies, uni students, nurses, retail staff, and people who’d never stepped in front of a professional camera before signing.
The modelling industry in Australia has shifted dramatically over the last five years. Brands want authenticity. Casting directors want variety. Advertisers want people who look like their actual customers — not a single archetype of “model.” That shift has opened the door wide for complete beginners, and it’s the single biggest reason so many of our bookings now go to first-timers.
What brands are actually hiring in 2026:
- Commercial and lifestyle models of every age, shape, height, and ethnicity
- Real families, couples, and friend groups
- “Hand models,” “foot models,” and character types
- Plus-size, petite, mature, and everyday faces for e-commerce
- Social content creators with natural on-camera presence
None of the above require a glossy portfolio or runway training. They require the right agency knowing about you — and the confidence to say yes when the call comes in.
What Do Agencies Think of Complete Beginners?
Here’s the insider truth: reputable Australian agencies love beginners. A fresh face with no bad habits, no recycled looks, and no prior contracts is genuinely valuable. When we review applications at Hunter Talent, we’re not scanning for experience — we’re scanning for workability, personality, and the kind of look a client might ask for next week.
What a good agency is actually looking at:
- Clean, natural photos that show your real face and body honestly
- Your availability — can you get to a casting in a capital city with 24–48 hours’ notice?
- Your attitude — are you reliable, easy to communicate with, and respectful on set?
- Range — can you look like a young mum, a barista, a tradie, or a bride depending on the brief?
Notice what isn’t on that list. Not “previous campaigns.” Not “runway experience.” Not “Instagram following.” If an agency tells you that you need those things before they’ll even talk to you, that’s a red flag — not a requirement of the industry.
What Do You Actually Need to Get Started?
Less than you think. Here’s the honest checklist we give every beginner who asks us:
- You must be 18 or over. Hunter Talent is an adult talent agency — if you’re under 18, you’ll need a children’s or family-focused agency instead.
- A working phone with a decent camera. Any iPhone or Android from the last four years is fine.
- Natural light. A window at midday gives you better photos than any ring light.
- Plain clothing. Fitted singlet, jeans, no logos, no baggy layers.
- Bare or minimal makeup. Clients want to see you, not a filter.
- Reliable transport to at least one capital city for castings.
- Realistic expectations — your first year will be about learning, not overnight stardom.
That’s the entire starter pack. No photographer on retainer. No acting classes. No $3,000 portfolio package. If any agency tells you that you must spend thousands before being signed, walk away — that’s not an agency, that’s a sales funnel dressed up as one.
Do You Need Expensive Photos to Apply?
No. Full stop. A phone in good light is all you need to apply to Hunter Talent, and roughly nine out of ten of our current talent applied with exactly that — phone shots taken against a plain wall at home.
That said, once you’ve been signed and start booking work, professional shots do eventually help you stand out for bigger campaigns. The trick is not to overspend before you’re earning. We recommend waiting until you’ve been signed, then investing modestly.
For talent who want a genuine step up without the usual eye-watering price tag, our in-house sister studio POP! Photography offers a $99 Signature session — a proper studio shoot with edited images, ideal for building your first portfolio. It’s the option we point beginners towards because it’s affordable, quick, and produces images that actually work for casting submissions.
But — and this is important — you do not need to book a shoot to apply. Your phone pics are enough. Apply first. Shoot later.
How Do You Write a Good Application With No Credits?
When you’ve never modelled before, your application is doing all the talking. Here’s how to make it work in your favour instead of against you.
Keep it honest. Don’t invent credits. Agencies can spot made-up resumés in seconds, and it instantly torpedoes your chances. “Brand new to modelling and keen to learn” is a far stronger opening than a fabricated list.
Lead with your real life. Your job, hobbies, languages, sports, accents, unusual skills — all of it matters. We’ve booked talent specifically because they mentioned they could ride a horse, speak Mandarin, or drive a manual. Clients brief us on very specific things, and the more boxes you quietly tick, the more castings you’ll get.
Submit clear photos. One straight-on headshot with hair off your face, one full body standing naturally, and one relaxed smile. No sunglasses, no hats, no filters, no group shots.
Include your real measurements and availability. Height, clothing size, shoe size, location, and how far you’re willing to travel. Missing details = slower application = missed opportunities.
Apply to the right place. You can submit directly through our application form — it takes about five minutes and you’ll hear back from our new faces team.
What Should You Expect in Your First Casting?
Your first casting is nothing like what TV and films would have you believe. There’s no dramatic runway, no panel of cold-eyed judges, and no trick questions. A typical Hunter Talent casting for a beginner looks like this:
- You arrive at a studio or client location 10 minutes early.
- You sign in and may be asked to fill out a short form.
- Someone takes a quick digital — a straight headshot and body shot — in whatever you’re wearing.
- You might be asked to say your name and agency to camera, smile, turn, or walk a few metres.
- For some briefs, you’ll do a short improvised scene or hold a product.
- The whole thing usually takes 10–20 minutes.
The client then reviews the footage after you leave and picks their shortlist. You won’t find out on the day, and “no news” for a few days is completely normal. For context, the average time from application to first paid booking for Hunter Talent beginners is 6 to 10 weeks, though some get booked within days and others take a few months — it depends entirely on which briefs come in and how well you match them.
Your Step-by-Step Beginner’s Path to Getting Signed
Here’s the exact sequence we recommend for anyone starting from zero in 2026.
1. Get Your Mindset Right
Decide up front that this is a long game. The talent who thrive are the ones treating modelling like a side hustle they’re genuinely building — not a lottery ticket. Commit to a year of availability and effort before judging your progress.
2. Take Your Own Starter Photos
Stand near a large window around midday. Wear a plain fitted top, bare or minimal makeup, hair off your face. Take a clear headshot, a three-quarter shot, and a full body shot. Don’t smile in all of them — capture a relaxed neutral as well. That’s your entire starter kit.
3. Research What Agencies Actually Represent
Look at the talent rosters of legitimate Australian agencies. Read their reviews. Check whether they charge upfront fees (they shouldn’t, beyond a modest admin fee at signing). Our own talent reviews will give you a realistic sense of what signing with Hunter Talent looks like day-to-day.
4. Submit a Strong, Honest Application
Head to our online application form and fill it out properly. Upload your starter photos, list your measurements, note your location and availability, and mention any hobbies or skills. Double-check your email — you’d be amazed how many people get locked out of communication because of a typo.
5. Respond Quickly When an Agency Replies
If we reach out, reply within 24 hours. Slow replies are the single most common reason promising beginners go cold. Agencies match you to briefs in real-time; a late response usually means the casting has already closed.
6. Sign, Set Up Your Profile, and Learn the Ropes
Once signed, you’ll get onboarded, your photos will go live on our internal casting system, and you’ll start receiving brief notifications. Read our become a model resource in full — it covers rates, rights, and on-set etiquette so you arrive at your first job looking like a pro.
7. Upgrade Your Portfolio Strategically
After your first few castings, consider a proper studio shoot to refresh your profile. POP! Photography’s $99 Signature session is the go-to for Hunter Talent beginners because it’s affordable and the images are formatted for casting submissions. This is the step to take after you’ve been signed — not before.
Frequently Asked Questions
How old do I need to be to apply to Hunter Talent with no experience?
Hunter Talent is an adult talent agency, so all applicants need to be 18 or over. There’s no upper age limit — we actively seek mature and senior talent for campaigns aimed at those demographics.
Do I need to live in a capital city to become a model?
It helps, but it’s not essential. Most castings happen in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth. If you live regionally but can travel to a capital within 24–48 hours, you can absolutely still get signed and booked.
Will an agency ever ask me to pay upfront to be represented?
A legitimate agency should not require you to buy expensive photoshoots, courses, or “training packages” before signing you. A small admin or onboarding fee is normal, but thousands of dollars upfront is not. Always read the contract and ask questions.
Can I model part-time while working a full-time job?
Yes. The majority of our talent model around existing jobs, studies, or family commitments. What matters is being able to take leave or flex your hours when a booking comes through — most shoots are booked a few days to a week in advance.
What if I’m shorter, plus size, or don’t look like a “typical” model?
Perfect. Commercial and lifestyle work — which is where most bookings sit — needs every height, every size, and every look. Hunter Talent specifically builds a diverse roster so we can match any client brief.
How long does it take to hear back after applying?
Our new faces team typically reviews fresh applications within 5–7 business days. If we want to move forward, you’ll get an email outlining the next steps. If you don’t hear back, you’re welcome to reapply in the future — our needs shift constantly based on what clients are booking.
The Bottom Line
Becoming a model in Australia with no experience is not the exception — it’s the norm. The overwhelming majority of working talent started exactly where you are right now: curious, slightly nervous, with nothing but a phone and a willingness to try.
You don’t need a portfolio. You don’t need credits. You don’t need permission from anyone to take the first step. What you need is an honest application, realistic expectations, and an agency that has your back from day one.
If that sounds like the path you want to walk, head to our application form and take five minutes to introduce yourself. Whatever happens next, you’ll be further ahead than the 99% of people who just keep scrolling.