Unlawful to Lawful: No Substantive Visa → BVC with Full Work Rights → Schedule 3 Waiver → Subclass 820 Granted
We are regularly asked: my partner or I have been unlawfully in Australia without a visa for several years — can I still apply for partner migration? The answer is yes, but because the applicant no longer holds a substantive visa, there are two key constraints — the Schedule 3 onshore-lodgement restriction, and a Bridging visa C (BVC) that by default carries no work rights.
Through our tailored strategy, this client secured a BVC with full work rights to cover the 18-month processing wait. In February 2025 a Section 57 Natural Justice letter arrived demanding a Schedule 3 explanation; our rigorous, multi-factor submission successfully secured the waiver. The Subclass 820 (Onshore Partner) visa was formally granted in mid-November 2025.
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From no substantive visa to Subclass 820 grant: the full timeline
This case spans BVC work-rights advocacy, a Section 57 Natural Justice response, the Schedule 3 waiver, and the final 820 grant:
Relationship began
The client and sponsor formally commenced their relationship — the legal starting point for partner migration.
Child born + Subclass 820/801 lodged
Within the same year, the client and sponsor’s child was born in Australia, and the onshore partner migration 820/801 application was formally lodged.
BVC with work rights secured
With our assistance, the client secured a Bridging visa C (BVC) that included work rights. We provided the case officer with a detailed account of the family’s financial position and the urgency of restoring employment income, and ultimately obtained a BVC with full-time work rights.
Section 57 Natural Justice letter received
In February 2025 the Department issued an S57 Natural Justice letter requiring an explanation of Schedule 3. These can arrive within months or, as in this case, almost two years after lodgement.
Subclass 820 formally granted
After the Schedule 3 explanation was accepted and the remaining relationship documents / police checks were updated, the Subclass 820 (Onshore Partner) visa was granted in mid-November 2025.
Transitioning from unlawful to lawful via partner migration — feasible, but with two constraints
We are regularly asked: my partner or I have been unlawfully in Australia without a visa for several years — can I still apply to sponsor them for partner migration? This is what is colloquially known as transitioning from unlawful to lawful via partner migration.
The answer is yes — but because the applicant no longer holds a substantive visa, there are two key constraints to plan around.
Schedule 3 onshore-lodgement restriction + BVC with no work rights
Schedule 3 restriction: if the applicant does not hold a substantive visa and wishes to lodge an onshore application, certain visa subclasses impose Schedule 3 criteria — the application must be lodged within 28 days or 12 months of ceasing to hold a substantive visa, otherwise onshore lodgement is closed. Partner visas carry this restriction, and the relevant window is 28 days.
BVC with no work rights: because the applicant has no substantive visa at the time of lodging partner migration, the default Bridging visa C carries no work rights of any kind.
- Schedule 3: no substantive visa → onshore lodgement must occur within 28 days, otherwise it is closed
- Schedule 3: partner visas apply the 28-day ceiling (other subclasses may use the 12-month window)
- BVC default = No Work Rights — the family has no income through the 18-month processing period
BVC with no work rights + Schedule 3 waiver misconceptions — two simultaneous hurdles
Transitioning from unlawful to lawful via partner migration sounds like a recovery pathway, but in practice there are two parallel hurdles that must be cleared. If either one stalls, the entire strategy stalls.
Hurdle 1: BVC defaults to no work rights → 18 months of family income loss
Partner migration processing in Australia currently sits at around 18 months. For a family — particularly one with a young child as in this case — it is simply not viable for one partner to be out of work for that length of time. From the very first consultation the client asked us about the possibility of securing work rights, and after we understood the full circumstances we agreed the situation was sympathetic enough to be worth attempting.
If we had accepted the default
A default BVC with no work rights would have meant the family relying on the sponsor’s single income for 18 months while caring for a young child — financial pressure that would quickly translate into relationship pressure.
Hurdle 2: S57 Natural Justice letter on Schedule 3 — both the hard part and the misconception trap
After partner migration is lodged, the case officer will issue a Section 57 Natural Justice letter requiring an explanation of Schedule 3. This can arrive within months or, as in this client’s case, almost two years after lodgement.
Schedule 3 is generally waived on the basis of compelling reasons. Those two words sound simple but are far harder in practice. The biggest misconception we see from inexperienced agents and DIY applicants is: ‘We have a child, the child needs to be cared for onshore — surely that is the core compelling reason?’ In reality, that on its own is not sufficient to meet the Schedule 3 waiver threshold.
The most common DIY misconception
‘We have a child, the child needs to be cared for onshore’ is not, on its own, sufficient to constitute a compelling reason for a Schedule 3 waiver. The case officer does not weigh a single factor; they assess multiple dimensions together.
Two work streams: first secure BVC work rights, then directly resolve the Schedule 3 waiver
We provided the case officer with a detailed account of the family’s financial position and the urgency of restoring employment income, and ultimately secured a BVC with full-time work rights. This step preserved the family’s income through the 18-month processing wait, giving the client a stable base from which to prepare the Schedule 3 submission.
For these clients, we prepared a thorough, case-specific submission, working back-and-forth with the client to dig out every piece of supporting material and to demonstrate the necessity of the waiver from multiple angles.
We emphasised that the client had not deliberately remained unlawfully — the circumstances were driven by health and family responsibilities — and that they had consistently complied with their visa conditions, with every detail backed by rigorous documentary evidence.
Detailed, case-specific submission with iterative client interviews
- Tailored to each client’s actual circumstances — no template reuse
- Repeated client interviews to confirm the timeline, relationship history and reasons for remaining onshore
- Deep-dive on every category of supporting material — medical, financial, child welfare, relationship evidence
- Wove the individual facts into a single, logically coherent and readable submission
Multi-factor case for the waiver
- Family financial position — the sponsor’s single income would not sustain the family
- Sponsor’s physical and mental health — the client’s onshore presence was needed to provide care and support
- Best interests of Australian-citizen / PR children — born, schooled and receiving healthcare in Australia
- Whether returning offshore to lodge a Subclass 309 was even practically feasible — the objective conditions did not allow it
Demonstrate compliance, not deliberate overstay — with documentary evidence at every step
- Emphasised that the client had not deliberately remained unlawfully — the situation was driven by health and family responsibilities
- Consistent compliance with all visa conditions — no breaches
- Every fact was backed by rigorous documentary evidence — not ‘we say so’ but ‘the documents prove it’
- Schedule 3 was ultimately waived and the explanation accepted
DHA’s Multi-Factor Test for Schedule 3 Waiver
When assessing compelling reasons, the case officer does not weigh a single factor in isolation — they consider multiple dimensions together, including:
- Whether the applicant has breached visa conditions
- Whether the applicant has deliberately structured circumstances to meet the waiver
- Whether the applicant could, in principle, return offshore and lodge a Subclass 309 instead
On compelling reasons for Schedule 3, the biggest misconception we see from inexperienced agents and DIY applicants is: ‘We have a child, the child needs to be cared for onshore — surely that is the core compelling reason?’ In reality, that on its own is not sufficient to meet the Schedule 3 waiver threshold.
Schedule 3 successfully waived + Subclass 820 granted in mid-November 2025
The Schedule 3 explanation was accepted and the criteria were waived.
Once Schedule 3 was cleared, the Department then proceeded to request the standard partner-migration relationship evidence and updated police checks. The Subclass 820 was ultimately granted in mid-November 2025.
Unlawful → lawful + BVC full-time work rights + Schedule 3 waiver + Subclass 820 granted — this pathway is feasible, but it is not won by ‘sincerity’ alone. Every step requires rigorous legal reasoning and documentary evidence.
Unlawful-to-lawful / Schedule 3 waiver / BVC work rights — we have handled all of them
A final word of caution: partner migration is not a universal shortcut for restoring lawful status after a period of unlawful overstay. Scrutiny of Schedule 3 waivers has been tightening, and a single ‘sincere’ submission is not enough to persuade a case officer. The case must rest on both sympathy and legal reasoning.
It also requires long-term preparation — the earlier you start, the more solid the evidence and the more coherent the argument, the better the chance of demonstrating to the case officer that you meet the compelling-reasons threshold for a waiver.
- Unlawful-to-lawful via partner migration — whether it is feasible and how to start
- BVC with no work rights — how to secure full-time work rights
- Schedule 3 28-day / 12-month windows — whether you still have time
- Section 57 Natural Justice letter on Schedule 3 — how to draft the submission
- Having a child does not, alone, constitute a compelling reason — how to weave the multi-factor evidence together
Unlawful ≠ must depart — a Schedule 3 waiver + BVC work rights is a technical exercise, not a question of ‘sincerity’ or luck
If you or your partner is currently without a substantive visa, has already lodged or is preparing to lodge onshore partner migration, or has just received a Section 57 Natural Justice letter requiring a Schedule 3 explanation, contact our NewStars registered migration agents and lawyers for a free initial assessment. Long-term preparation matters — the earlier you start, the more solid the evidence and the more coherent the argument, the better your chances with the case officer.
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