Visa Cancellations Australia | Migration Republic

Visa Cancellations — Migration Act 1958

Visa Cancellations Australia

Understanding Visa Cancellation Powers What Can Be Cancelled and Why


The Department of Home Affairs has broad powers under the Migration Act 1958 to cancel visas. Cancellation can occur both onshore and offshore, and can affect almost any visa subclass. Understanding these powers — and your rights when faced with cancellation — is critical.

If you have received a Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation (NOICC), you still have an opportunity to prevent the cancellation from occurring. The NOICC response stage is your most important opportunity — and in many cases, it is your best and only chance to preserve your visa.

At Migration Republic, our MARA-registered agents specialise in preparing comprehensive NOICC responses and managing visa cancellation proceedings from the earliest possible stage. Acting quickly and correctly at the NOICC stage can make the difference between keeping your visa and losing it.

Visa cancellation Australia immigration law
Migration Republic — Expert MARA-registered guidance for visa cancellation matters, NOICC responses, and review proceedings
s109
False Information
Most common ground
s116
General Powers
Breach of conditions
s501
Character Grounds
Mandatory cancellation
28 days
NOICC Response
Typical timeframe

Cancellation Powers

Overview of Visa Cancellation Powers

The Migration Act 1958 provides the Department of Home Affairs with multiple distinct powers to cancel visas. Each power applies to different circumstances and has its own procedural requirements. The most commonly invoked powers are:

Section 109

False or Misleading Information

Cancellation where false or misleading information was provided in the visa application — whether intentionally or otherwise. One of the most frequently invoked cancellation powers.

Section 116

General Cancellation Powers

Broad power to cancel where the visa holder has breached a visa condition, has ceased to meet the criteria for the visa, or where grounds prescribed in the regulations exist.

Section 128

Offshore Cancellation

Allows the Department to cancel a visa while the holder is outside Australia — for example, at a border point or while the holder is overseas and attempts to return.

Section 133A / 133C

Mandatory Character Cancellation

Mandatory cancellation where the visa holder has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 12 months or more — or where they do not pass the character test under Section 501. No discretion exists in mandatory cases.

Section 134

Business Visa Cancellation

Specific power to cancel business-related visas where the holder has failed to maintain the required business activity, investment, or meet the conditions attached to their visa.

Section 501

Character Test Failure

Discretionary or mandatory cancellation where the visa holder fails the character test — including criminal history, association with criminal groups, or conduct that raises character concerns.

Consequences of Cancellation

What Happens When a Visa Is Cancelled?

Consequences Are Severe and Long-LastingVisa cancellation is not merely a bureaucratic matter. The consequences can be immediate, severe, and can follow a person for years or even permanently. Understanding what is at stake underscores why acting quickly and comprehensively at every stage is so critical.
01

Immediate Unlawful Status in Australia

If a visa is cancelled while the holder is onshore, they immediately become an unlawful non-citizen. This means they have no legal right to remain in Australia from the moment of cancellation, unless they hold or are granted another valid visa or bridging visa.

02

Liability for Detention and Removal

As an unlawful non-citizen, the person becomes liable for immigration detention and removal from Australia. Detention can occur at any time. The speed with which the Department moves to remove a person varies — but the legal liability is immediate upon cancellation.

03

Mandatory or Discretionary Re-Entry Bans

Cancellation frequently triggers re-entry bans (exclusion periods) that prevent the person from being granted most Australian visas for a specified period — or in some character cases, permanently. PIC 4020 bans of 3 or 10 years commonly apply in fraud-based cancellations.

04

Impact on Future Visa Applications

A cancelled visa — particularly where cancellation was based on character grounds or fraud — significantly impacts future visa applications. The cancellation must be disclosed. It may render the person ineligible for certain visa subclasses or trigger additional scrutiny and conditions.

05

Section 48 Bar — Cannot Apply Onshore

After a visa is cancelled, Section 48 of the Migration Act may apply — preventing the person from applying for most substantive visas while remaining in Australia. This can force departure before any new application can be made, adding significant disruption and cost.

Before Cancellation — Your Most Important Window

The NOICC Stage — Your Best Opportunity to Prevent Cancellation

Critical Stage

If You Have Received a NOICC — Act Immediately

A Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation (NOICC) is not a cancellation — it is a warning and an opportunity. The Department is required to give you a chance to respond before making a final decision. This response is your single most important opportunity to prevent cancellation from occurring. Do not ignore it. Do not delay.

28 days
Typical NOICC response timeframe — often less
Address all
Every ground must be addressed directly
Evidence
Documents are critical — not just written submissions

What a Strong NOICC Response Includes

  • A direct and specific response to every ground raised in the NOICC — do not leave any ground unaddressed
  • Police clearances from all relevant countries
  • Medical reports and evidence of health conditions if relevant
  • Evidence of rehabilitation — completion of programs, professional assessments
  • Character references from credible sources — community leaders, employers, family members
  • Evidence of compelling and compassionate circumstances — particularly the impact on Australian citizen or permanent resident family members
  • Evidence of long-term residence, community ties, and contributions to Australia
  • Evidence of future compliance and changed circumstances
  • Statutory declarations from the applicant and key supporting persons
  • Prepared by or with the assistance of a registered migration agent or lawyer

After Cancellation — Review Options

If Your Visa Is Cancelled — What Are Your Options?

If cancellation proceeds despite your NOICC response, your options depend on the type of cancellation and the visa subclass involved. Not all cancellation decisions carry review rights.

Option 1

AAT Merits Review

Many cancellation decisions can be reviewed by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). The AAT examines the decision afresh and can substitute a more favourable outcome. Strict time limits apply — usually 7–21 days from notification.

Option 2

Federal Court Review

If AAT review is unavailable or the AAT affirms the cancellation, judicial review in the Federal Circuit Court may be available on legal error grounds. 35-day time limit applies. Legal representation required.

Option 3

Ministerial Intervention

As a last resort, Ministerial Intervention under Section 351 or 501J may be requested — particularly in character cancellation matters. This is not an automatic right and requires a compelling, well-structured submission.

Character Cancellations — Mandatory vs DiscretionaryUnder Section 501, some cancellations are mandatory (no discretion) and others are discretionary. Mandatory cancellations cannot be undone at the delegate level — only Ministerial Intervention under Section 501J can provide relief. The distinction between mandatory and discretionary cancellation matters enormously to your options.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Q
Can my visa be cancelled if I provided false information by mistake?
Yes — Section 109 of the Migration Act applies even where the false or misleading information was provided without intent to deceive. The Department does not need to prove deliberate fraud. However, the absence of intent is a relevant factor in the NOICC response and in any subsequent review or waiver application. A carefully prepared response that addresses the circumstances of the error is essential.
Q
What happens to my family members if my visa is cancelled?
If your visa is cancelled, family members who are included as secondary applicants on your visa may also have their visas cancelled. This is an important consideration in preparing a NOICC response — the impact on Australian citizen or permanent resident family members is a compelling and compassionate circumstance that must be highlighted.
Q
Can I apply for another visa if my current visa is cancelled?
This depends on the circumstances of the cancellation and which visa subclass was cancelled. Section 48 of the Migration Act may prevent you from applying for most substantive visas while in Australia. Re-entry bans under PIC 4020 may prevent you from being granted visas for 3 or 10 years. Professional advice is essential before lodging any new application.
Q
Is there a time limit to appeal a visa cancellation decision?
Yes — strict time limits apply. Most AAT review applications in cancellation matters must be lodged within 7 to 21 days of the cancellation decision notice. The exact time limit depends on the section of the Act under which the cancellation was made and where the person is located. Missing the deadline is almost always fatal to the review. Seek advice immediately on receiving a cancellation decision.

Facing a Visa Cancellation or NOICC?

Time is critical. If you have received a NOICC or a visa cancellation decision, every day matters. Our MARA-registered agents are experienced in preparing comprehensive NOICC responses and managing visa cancellation proceedings — from the earliest warning through to AAT review and Ministerial Intervention.

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