Immigration Law — Australia-Wide

Immigration Lawyers — Visas, Appeals & Character Matters.

Australian immigration law is among the most complex in the world — with strict merits review timeframes, character obligations, and a Minister with almost unlimited discretionary power. Whether you face a visa refusal, a section 501 cancellation, a partner visa delay, or a detention matter, the difference between the right legal advice and the wrong advice can be a deportation order. Get connected with a registered migration agent or immigration lawyer for a free confidential assessment.

Registered migration agents Free assessment Strict time limits apply All visa classes

⚠ AAT merits review deadlines are strict — typically 28 days from visa refusal for onshore applicants. Section 501 cancellation reviews can be as short as 9 days from notification in immigration detention. Missing the deadline extinguishes review rights. Get advice immediately.

Immigration Practice Areas

Every immigration matter — assessed for free by a specialist.

Select the immigration issue that matches your situation. Each page explains the visa class, the review pathway, the time limits, and what a lawyer can do at each stage.

01

Visa Refusal & AAT Appeals

Visa refused by the Department? Most refusals can be reviewed by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) — but the application must be lodged within a strict deadline. A lawyer assesses grounds for review and manages the AAT process.

Get refusal appeal help →
02

Partner & Spouse Visas

Subclass 820/801 (onshore) and 309/100 (offshore) partner visas — for spouses and de facto partners of Australian citizens, permanent residents, and eligible New Zealand citizens. Complex evidentiary requirements and lengthy processing times.

Get partner visa help →
03

Section 501 — Character Cancellation

Visa cancelled or refused on character grounds under s501 of the Migration Act? This is one of the most serious immigration matters — leading directly to mandatory detention and deportation if not challenged. Urgent legal action required.

Get s501 help →
04

Student Visas

Subclass 500 student visa applications, condition breaches (8202, 8105), cancellations, and appeals. International students face unique vulnerabilities — visa conditions are strict and cancellation can happen without warning.

Get student visa help →
05

Work Visas & Employer Sponsorship

Temporary Skill Shortage (subclass 482), Employer Nomination Scheme (subclass 186), Regional Sponsored Migration Scheme (subclass 187), and other employer-sponsored pathways. Sponsorship obligations for employers and visa conditions for workers.

Get work visa help →
06

Skilled Migration

Points-tested skilled migration — Skilled Independent (subclass 189), Skilled Nominated (subclass 190), and Skilled Work Regional (subclass 491). Skills assessments, Expression of Interest (EOI), and state nomination.

Get skilled migration help →
07

Citizenship & Naturalisation

Australian citizenship by conferral (naturalisation), citizenship by descent, citizenship refusals, and good character assessments. A lawyer advises on eligibility, resolves character issues, and reviews refusal decisions.

Get citizenship help →
08

Deportation & Immigration Detention

Unlawful non-citizens are subject to mandatory immigration detention. Options include bridging visa applications, ministerial intervention (s195A, s197AB), Federal Court judicial review, and community detention. Urgent action is critical.

Get deportation help →

Why Deadlines Are Absolute in Immigration Law

Australian immigration — the strict time limits you cannot miss.

Unlike most areas of law where courts can grant extensions for good reason, immigration review deadlines under the Migration Act are jurisdictional — miss the deadline and the AAT has no power to hear the case, regardless of the merits.

AAT merits review — 28 days for most onshore refusals

Most visa refusals that attract AAT merits review give the applicant 28 days from the date of the refusal decision to lodge the review application. The 28-day period is calculated from the date the decision is made — not from when the applicant receives the letter. In practice, postal delay means applicants often have fewer than 28 days from receipt. An applicant who misses this deadline loses the right to AAT review permanently — no extension, no discretion, no exception.

Section 501 cancellation — as short as 9 days in detention

Where a visa is cancelled on character grounds under s501 and the holder is in immigration detention, the review application must be lodged within 9 days. This is one of the shortest mandatory review deadlines in Australian law. For persons not in detention, the period is 28 days. Given the gravity of these matters — mandatory detention and deportation if the review fails — obtaining legal representation from the moment of cancellation is critical.

Bridging visas — status while awaiting review

An applicant who lodges an AAT review application within the merits review timeframe typically remains in Australia on a Bridging Visa A (BVA) while the review is pending. The bridging visa allows the applicant to stay lawfully while their case is assessed. An applicant who misses the AAT deadline becomes an unlawful non-citizen, subject to mandatory detention if detected. Understanding the bridging visa status in each scenario is critical to avoiding unlawful status.

Federal Court judicial review — 35 days from AAT decision

Where an AAT decision is adverse, judicial review in the Federal Court of Australia must be lodged within 35 days of the AAT decision. Federal Court judicial review is not a merits review — the Court can only intervene where the AAT made a jurisdictional error or legal error. This is a specialist area requiring experienced immigration lawyers and, often, counsel. Where a genuine legal error is identified, a successful judicial review remits the matter back to the AAT for fresh consideration.

Ministerial intervention — a last resort, not a right

The Minister for Home Affairs has the power to intervene in immigration matters outside the usual review pathways — granting a visa or revoking a cancellation on public interest grounds. Ministerial intervention is entirely discretionary — there is no right to have the Minister consider the request, and the Minister's decision not to intervene is not reviewable by a court. However, a well-prepared ministerial intervention request — particularly in cases involving long-term residents, Australian citizen family members, or compelling hardship — can be effective where other pathways have been exhausted.

Who can provide immigration advice — MARA registration required

Only Australian lawyers and registered migration agents (registered with the Migration Agents Registration Authority — MARA) are legally permitted to provide immigration advice and assistance for a fee. Unregistered migration advice is a criminal offence. When engaging immigration help, always verify the person is either a registered Australian legal practitioner or a current MARA-registered migration agent. The MARA register is publicly searchable at mara.gov.au. Unlicensed advice providers are common and can cause serious, irreversible harm to visa applications.

How It Works

One request. A free immigration assessment.

Tell us your visa situation, any deadlines you are aware of, and your state. A registered migration agent or immigration lawyer will contact you promptly.

Submit Your Request
1

Describe your immigration situation

Tell us your current visa status, what decision has been made (or what visa you are applying for), any deadlines you are aware of, and your state or territory.

2

Matched to an immigration specialist

Your request is matched to a registered migration agent or immigration lawyer with experience in your specific visa class or matter type.

3

Free assessment arranged

An immigration specialist contacts you for a free assessment — advising on your options, the applicable deadlines, and the likely outcome in your specific circumstances.

About Australian Immigration Law

The Migration Act 1958 — how Australia's immigration system works.

Australian immigration is governed primarily by the Migration Act 1958 (Cth) and the Migration Regulations 1994 (Cth). The Act establishes the visa framework — there are over 100 visa subclasses — and sets out the powers of the Minister for Home Affairs, the Department of Home Affairs, and the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) in relation to visa decisions.

The Minister holds extraordinary powers under the Migration Act — including the power to cancel visas on character grounds (s501), to personally decide visa matters (s65), and to intervene in AAT decisions (s351, s417). These ministerial powers are largely unreviewable by courts, making the initial decision and any AAT review the most critical stages of any contested immigration matter.

The character test under s501 is one of the broadest disqualification provisions in Australian law — a single sentence of 12 months or more (whether served concurrently or cumulatively) triggers a mandatory failure of the character test, leaving the visa holder subject to cancellation with limited defences available.

The AAT's Migration and Refugee Division reviews most visa refusal and cancellation decisions. It conducts a full merits review — reconsidering the decision on the facts and the law — and can substitute a more favourable decision, affirm the original decision, or remit the matter to the Department. The AAT is not bound by the Department's reasons for refusal and can consider new evidence and submissions.

Points-tested skilled migration operates through the SkillSelect system — applicants submit an Expression of Interest (EOI) and are invited to apply based on their points score. Points are awarded for age, English language ability, qualifications, and work experience. State and territory nomination adds additional points. The points required for an invitation fluctuates with demand and the Department's migration programme settings.

Partner visa processing times are among the longest in Australia's visa system — regularly exceeding 24 months for the temporary (820/309) stage and significantly longer for the permanent (801/100) stage. During this period, the applicant holds a bridging visa or is offshore. A lawyer advises on ways to strengthen the application and respond to requests for further information from the Department.

Ready to Take the First Step?

Submit your request and a legal representative will be in touch to discuss your matter.

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