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- Home
- About VDC
- Move to Australia
- Types of Visas
- Our Sucess Stories
- Qualifications Australia
- Contact Us
8503 (no further stay)
Visa condition 8503 (no further stay) or additional ban is a condition that prevents a visa holder from applying for multiple temporary and permanent visas while in Australia. The term “section 48 bar” refers to a situation where a person is either unlawful (i.e., does not have a visa) or has a bridging visa and has had a visa cancelled or refused since last entering Australia.
Most other visa applications cannot be submitted while a person is in Australia if they are “section 48 prohibited” (there are some very limited exceptions). This implies that you should depart Australia normally.
Overstaying a visa or being ineligible for citizenship in Australia might have a severe impact on your ability to apply for future visas.
If your visa is subject to condition 8534, you cannot apply for an additional visa in Australia other than the.
Condition 8535 is a mandatory condition of the Student visa (subclass 500) for Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade or Department of Defense-sponsored students.
How to check whether no further stay is applicable?
The visa application contains details about the conditions that apply to the visa.
You can also view this information using the free Visa Entitlement Verification Online (VEVO) service.
Can this decision be reviewed?
The tribunal (previously AAT) and other Department offices are not permitted to evaluate the choice not to waive conditions 8503, 8534, or 8535. In the event that condition(s) 8503, 8534, or 8535 are not waived, the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection is incapable to take any action.
After having a waiver request denied due to a material change in circumstances, you may submit another request. You must describe how the new circumstances change materially from those taken into account in your earlier waiver request.
For the purposes of the waiver provisions, the following situations are not regarded as being “beyond the control” of the visa holder:
For more details, visit here (FBP website)
Health waiver
Most visa applicants must comply with Public Interest Criteria(PIC), according to the Australian Migration Act (1958) and Regulations (1994). The health requirements that must be satisfied prior to the issue of a visa are outlined in the health-related PICs (4005-4007).
A visa applicant’s immigration medical examination findings must be evaluated and they must be given a health clearance in order to satisfy the health requirement to be granted a visa. The applicant has not met the health criteria if the health clearance is marked as “Does Not Meet,” therefore a visa cannot be issued unless a health waiver is available and used.
Where PIC 4005 is in effect, there is no provision for a health waiver to be taken into account if an applicant (or a non-migrating family member) does not satisfy the health criterion for a visa.
Only visa applicants (and any non-migrating family members) may use a health waiver for some visas to which PIC 4007 is applicable. This comprises:
Considering a Health waiver
All health waiver decisions must be made using the health waiver submission form, which can be found on Bordernet’s internal health waiver website and attached to the Health Assessment Portal (HAP).
Part A of the Health Care Waiver Application must be filled out by the visa applicant or immigration officer, and Part B must be filled out by the visa officer. Prior to sending a request for a health waiver to the visa application or immigration representative there, notice s57 should provide applicants the chance to respond to the MOC’s assessment. This is required because the requestor’s new medical information may lead the MOC’s opinion to change.
For more details, visit here (FBP website)
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