Heads up: Onshore PR Parents’ Visitor-Visa Renewals Are Tightening Again — After Just 12 Months

Over the past couple of months, Australian visitor visas are now being processed with some easing. Some are skilled-migration applicants who have already been invited and want to enter to lodge; some simply want to visit family and friends; and the largest group, of course, is visitor visas for the parents of PRs and citizens.

Throughout the pandemic and up to now, visitor visas for offshore parents of PRs/citizens have been relatively stable and easy to obtain — provided the circumstances are not too weak, a well-prepared application is generally granted.What has been comparatively volatile is the visitor visa for onshore parents of PRs/citizens.

Most people assume that renewing onshore should be simpler — so why is it more volatile?

Because the Department of Home Affairs does not want
applicants to treat a visitor visa as a long-term visa
and use it to stay onshore indefinitely




1

After the pandemic began in 2020

After the pandemic began in 2020, many PR parents — finding travel in and out of the country difficult — stayed in Australia long term on visitor visas. Many of the visas granted at that time carried no 8503 condition. Even with a three-year visitor visa for PR parents, the total stay permitted under any single visa is a maximum of 12 months, so they had to keep renewing.


But in fact, under clause 600.215 of the visitor visa: if you have held one or more Subclass 600 visas onshore, or a 417 or 462 visa or a bridging visa, then if a further Subclass 600 renewal would cause the applicant to stay onshore beyond 12 months, you must demonstrate that exceptional circumstances exist

 


During the pandemic, the “exceptional circumstances” cited in many applications were that border closures made travel in and out difficult, along with health considerations, and so on, and these were accepted, which is how parents were able to remain onshore continuously.




2

Mid-2022, just after the borders reopened

But from mid-2022 — that is, a few months after Australia fully lifted its border restrictions — we had clients who, on trying to renew once again, were told this reason was no longer acceptable.Reason one: the applicant had already stayed onshore for 2–3 years; a visitor visa is not meant for long-term stays. Reason two: travel in and out had returned to normal — the implication being that it was time to depart and lodge offshore.




3

Mid-2023 — a refusal received just today

A year on, today we suddenly received a refusal letter for a PR parent. What is more striking is that the applicant had not stayed onshore for years — they only entered Australia last year, having remained offshore throughout COVID, and this was their first onshore Subclass 600 renewal, which was refused.The case officer stated plainly: relying on the pandemic (for example, the recent rise in reinfections back home) is no longer acceptable.




Conclusion

Continually renewing parents’ visitor visas onshore is not a long-term solution


In short, COVID could previously serve as the exceptional circumstances under 600.215, but that no longer holds — at least this application signals where things are heading.


It really comes back to the point made earlier: the Department of Home Affairs does not want applicants to treat a visitor visa as a long-term visa. The pandemic was an extraordinary period, but that extraordinary period is now over.


Given the fundamental purpose for which the visitor visa exists, it will only become stricter.













Next

If you are about to renew your parents’ visa

Option one: have your parents depart first and then lodge the visitor visa offshore. With complete documentation there is usually no major issue; just be careful not to lodge immediately upon departing — it is best to wait 4–6 months


Option two: applying for a Subclass 870 visa solves the problem once and for all

Its biggest advantage over a visitor visa is that it allows a single continuous onshore stay of 3 or 5 years, during which you can of course freely travel in and out of Australia. It can then be renewed once more. The two visas combined can total up to 10 years.


Basic eligibility requirements
– There must be an Australian PR or citizen sponsor (aged 18 or over). The applicant may be the sponsor’s biological parent, legal parent (including adoptive parent), step-parent or parent-in-law.
– The sponsor has lived in Australia for at least 4 years (including time held before becoming a PR)
– The sponsor’s income in the previous financial year must be at least AUD 83,454.80, which may be household income
– A family may hold only one sponsorship at any one time, and can sponsor a maximum of two parents.

Applying for the 870 does not require passing the family balance test, so it also suits families who cannot lodge parent migration because they fail the family balance test, yet want to keep their parents close for the long term to care for them.


The most central requirement for the 870 is that the sponsor meets the income threshold. Some people may not have met it in the 21–22 financial year but do meet it this 22–23 financial year — and with this financial year almost over, now is a good time to start preparing.


The 870 could previously be lodged onshore after first obtaining Permission, but this is no longer allowed — all lodgements must now be made offshore, so you can see the trend here.


You can start preparing before departure and as soon as you depart:

In addition, the 870 requires the sponsor to first obtain sponsorship approval, which currently takes about 1–2 months, after which lodging the visa takes a further 2–3 months. The processing period itself provides a built-in buffer, so if your onshore parents’ visitor visa is about to expire, you can begin preparing now or start as soon as they depart.


The long-term temporary Subclass 870 for parents of PRs/citizens

Grant gallery




Next

If you have already lodged a similar case and are awaiting the outcome


We recommend being prepared for a possible refusal.


If you are fortunate enough to get through this time, we would not recommend renewing onshore again next time.





Next

If you have unfortunately already been refused

depart within 35 days of the refusal, then lodge a further Subclass 600

Remember to wait at least 4–6 months and prepare the documentation carefully


– lodge offshore: the 870 — you can begin preparing before departure or as soon as you depart — the 870’s processing period is itself a buffer


– you may choose to appeal to the AAT within 21 days of the refusal, but several factors need to be considered

* First, the appeal fee is AUD 3,000+

* Among AAT appeals, visitor visas are processed relatively quickly — we have previously had outcomes within just a few months

* You also need to bear in mind that success is not guaranteed

If there is a pressing need and your parents cannot depart, this may be worth weighing up





/ The visitor visa allowing a maximum 3-month stay within a one-year period/

Some PR parents may opt for the one-year visa with a total stay of 3 months

This has not been very volatile and has consistently been granted smoothly.


Parents of holders of temporary visas such as Subclass 500/485/491/482

also apply for this type of visitor visa allowing a total 3-month stay within one year. We have had a number of grants recently — you are welcome to have us assess your circumstances and advise whether lodging is recommended.

We will continue to monitor whether more similar cases are refused and whether this really is a clear trend.

If you need help with the trend affecting parents, get in touch with our consultants below. We have a wealth of success stories with parents’ visitor visas, the Subclass 870 visa, and parent migration!


Grant gallery

Parents’ visitor visas



Catch up on past features

By the end of May, state nominations issued have already topped 57,000! Has Victoria over-issued?

What has become of those new policies said to start on 1 July?

On a budget of RMB 70,000–80,000 a year, a comeback into a top university on par with the 985s!

Migration News Sharing Group


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