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Bridging-visa

Bridging Visa in Australia: The Complete Guide for Applicants

By Nilesh Nandan — Australian Immigration Lawyer, MyVisa® Immigration Lawyers

This blog is intended for discussion purposes only and does not constitute advice. You should seek independent legal advice before relying on any information provided on this site.

Immigration policies, systems, and processes can change without notice. I’d like to know your own experience with the immigration challenges noted above — feel free to contact me.

Table of Contents

Introduction & Why This Matters

As an immigration lawyer, I often see clients become anxious when their current visa is nearing expiry, or when they must wait for a decision on a new visa application. In these critical moments, knowing how a **Bridging Visa** works—its types, conditions, rights and the strategic choices—can literally mean the difference between staying lawful or becoming unlawful.

In this guide, I’ll walk you through everything you need to know about Bridging Visas in Australia: how to choose the right subclass, preserve your work rights, travel safely, avoid mistakes, and use it as a bridge (not a trap).

This is general information in my voice as your adviser. For a personalised assessment, always consult directly with me or an immigration specialist.

What Is a Bridging Visa?

In simple terms, a **Bridging Visa** is a temporary visa granted to allow someone to stay lawfully in Australia while waiting for resolution of their immigration status — whether that be the grant of a new visa, an appeal decision, or arranging departure.

It is not a substantive visa (i.e. not your final student visa, partner visa, skilled visa). Rather, it “bridges” the gap between your existing visa (or no visa) and your next visa outcome.

The Australian Department of Home Affairs states that bridging visas “let you stay in Australia lawfully while your immigration status is resolved.”

A bridging visa typically comes into effect when your current substantive visa ends. Until then, you must abide by the conditions of your existing visa.

Be aware: **not every situation gives you automatic entitlement** to a bridging visa — sometimes you must apply, and sometimes your status may be restricted (e.g. work or travel).

Types & Comparison of Bridging Visas (A, B, C, E)

Australia currently offers several bridging visa subclasses. The most common are:

  • Bridging Visa A (Subclass 010)
  • Bridging Visa B (Subclass 020)
  • Bridging Visa C (Subclass 030)
  • Bridging Visa E (Subclasses 050 / 051)
  • Occasionally, Bridging Visa D is mentioned in migration commentary as a very short-term option; however, it’s rarely used in standard application pathways.

Here is a comparison table summarising the main features of each subclass:

Subclass When It’s Used Work Rights / Conditions Travel Rights Notes & Limitations
Bridging Visa A (010) When you apply for a substantive visa while holding a valid visa May inherit previous visa’s work rights; or “no work” condition may apply Leaving Australia cancels the BVA (unless you obtain a BVB) Common bridging visa; doesn’t permit travel unless changed to BVB
Bridging Visa B (020) When you want to travel overseas while your substantive visa is processing Typically inherits work rights (subject to conditions) Allows re-entry within a defined travel window You must apply for it before leaving Australia; limited travel period
Bridging Visa C (030) When you apply for a substantive visa after your previous visa has expired (i.e. you are technically unlawful) No automatic work rights; may apply for work if financial hardship is shown Leaving Australia cancels the BVC Often used for people who have overstayed; conditions stricter
Bridging Visa E (050 / 051) When you are unlawful, visa expired, or awaiting review/decision Usually no work rights; may apply in limited circumstances No travel rights — leaving cancels the visa Often a fallback or regularisation option; more restrictive

This table is a starting point — in each subclass, **conditions and entitlements may differ depending on your circumstances and the discretion of Home Affairs**. Always check your visa grant notice and VEVO for your exact conditions.

Eligibility & Key Conditions for Each Type

Bridging Visa A (010)

The BVA is the default bridging visa in many cases. To be eligible, you must:

  • Be in Australia at the time of application and at grant.
  • Have lodged a valid application for a substantive visa while your existing visa is still in effect (or very shortly after it expires).
  • Meet relevant health, character and other visa requirements if requested.

The visa may be granted with “no work” conditions. You may apply to have that condition lifted in certain situations such as financial hardship.

Note: From 1 August 2022, BVA (and BVB, BVC) applications must be lodged through ImmiAccount or via online form — paper or in-person forms are no longer accepted.

Bridging Visa B (020)

This subclass is used when you need to travel while your substantive visa is pending. Key points:

  • You must be in Australia when applying.
  • Generally, you already hold a BVA or substantive visa application in process.
  • You must submit your travel reasons and itinerary, and satisfy Home Affairs that travel is justified.
  • The visa will include a “travel period” during which you may depart and re-enter Australia.

If you leave after that travel window expires, your BVB will end, and your substantive visa application may be jeopardised.

Bridging Visa C (030)

BVC applies when your previous visa has expired and you lodge a new substantive visa. Conditions include:

  • You need to be in Australia at the time of grant.
  • No automatic work rights. You may apply for work permission by proving financial hardship or other compelling reasons.
  • Leaving Australia terminates the visa.

Bridging Visa E (050 / 051)

The BVE is for people who are out of status or awaiting review. Key eligibility criteria include:

  • You must be present in Australia when applying.
  • You may be applying because your visa expired, you’re unlawful, or pursuing judicial review or Ministerial intervention.
  • You must comply with all laws during the bridging visa period.

The BVE typically carries more restrictive conditions (no travel, restricted or no work) and is often used as a fallback while reorganising your legal status.

Other Notes & Special Conditions

– In rare commentary, a “Bridging Visa D” is mentioned as a short bridging visa (for technical issues) but this is seldom used in standard immigration practice.

– If your current substantive visa is **cancelled** before a bridging visa can take effect, then your bridging visa may not come into effect, and you may become unlawful.

– When applying for judicial review or appeal, a bridging visa may be extended to cover that period, depending on your circumstances.

– Always check your grant letter and VEVO to see which conditions apply (e.g. “no work”, “must stay at address”, “reporting obligations”).

Work Rights, Travel Rights & Other Entitlements on a Bridging Visa

Work Rights

Whether you can work on a bridging visa depends heavily on the subclass and the specific conditions imposed.

  • **Bridging Visa A / B**: If your previous substantive visa allowed work, often you inherit those work rights. But if your bridging visa has a “no work” condition, you may apply to have it lifted by demonstrating financial hardship or special circumstances.
  • **Bridging Visa C**: No automatic work rights. To gain work rights, you must apply and often must show financial hardship or compelling reasons.
  • **Bridging Visa E**: Generally no work rights. In rare cases, the Department may allow work if you can present a strong case (e.g. severe hardship) or when previously granted permission, but it is discretionary.

One important condition to note: if your bridging visa carries **condition 8547**, limiting work to six months with the same employer, you may need to apply for a new bridging visa to remove that condition.

To confirm your current work entitlements, always check VEVO and your visa grant notice.

Travel Rights

Travel rules are stricter than work rights — bridging visas generally do **not** allow you to leave and return to Australia, except for **Bridging Visa B** (BVB).

  • **BVB**: permits you to depart and re-enter within the “travel period” granted. If you travel outside that window, your BVB will cease and your substantive visa application may be affected.
  • **BVA, BVC, BVE**: leaving Australia typically cancels the bridging visa (and might void your visa application).

Always apply for a BVB **before** you depart — leaving first may mean you lose the ability to return.

Other Entitlements & Conditions

– Some bridging visas may have reporting requirements (you must notify Home Affairs of changes in address, contact details).

– You must obey all Australian laws while your bridging visa is active. Non-compliance can lead to cancellation.

– In certain cases (e.g. subclass 051 BVE), special rules may apply for asylum or protection visa applicants.

– Medicare and access to social support generally do *not* extend to bridging visa holders. Recent regulatory changes may apply in special humanitarian contexts (e.g. for visa holders from Gaza/Israel) but these are exceptional.

How to Apply: Steps, Checklist & Practical Tips

General Application Steps

  1. Determine which bridging visa subclass fits your situation (A, B, C, E).
  2. Gather required documents: identity, previous visa, proof of substantive visa application, evidence of hardship or travel reasons if needed.
  3. Log into your ImmiAccount or use the online webform (for BVA, BVB, BVC).
  4. Complete the relevant application form (e.g. Form 1005 for A/B/C, 1006 for B, or use departmental instructions for E).
  5. Attach supporting evidence (financial documents, travel itinerary, appeal documents, etc.).
  6. Submit the application online or via webform, pay any fee (if applicable).
  7. Wait for the grant decision (no published processing times).
  8. Once granted, comply with all conditions while your bridging visa is in force.

Checklist: Documents & Evidence You Should Prepare

  • Current passport or identity document
  • Details of your last visa (visa grant letter, visa status)
  • Proof of substantive visa application (application number, receipt, confirmation)
  • Evidence of financial hardship (bank statements, expenses, debts)
  • Travel itinerary, reason for travel (if applying for BVB)
  • Any appeal, review or judicial review documents (if relevant)
  • Residential address and contact details in Australia
  • Police checks or character documents if required
  • Any forms (Form 1005, 1006 or departmental E forms) completed and signed

Specific Forms & Technical Notes

– **Form 1005** is used to apply for or vary Bridging Visa A, B or C.

– **Form 1006** is used for Bridging Visa B (travel) applications.

– For BVE, there is no standard online form in some cases; require departmental instructions.

– Note: from August 2022, in-person or paper applications for BVA, BVB, BVC are no longer accepted — you must apply online.

Processing Times & What to Expect

The Department does not publish fixed processing times for bridging visas.

The decision timeframe depends on:

  • The complexity of your case
  • The completeness and quality of your supporting documents
  • Workload at the Department of Home Affairs
  • Whether additional health, character or security checks are needed

After submission, you can monitor progress via ImmiAccount or contact your case officer if delays are excessive.

Tips to Improve Success & Speed

  • Double-check all identity and substantive visa details to avoid mismatches.
  • Include a cover letter explaining the purpose, especially for travel or hardship requests.
  • Provide clear and organised supporting evidence (labelled, dated, translated if needed).
  • Avoid submitting multiple bridging visa applications — this can delay processing.
  • Respond promptly to departmental requests for further information.
  • Keep copies of all documents and submissions.

Common Pitfalls & Mistakes to Avoid

Even a small oversight can jeopardise your bridging visa or later visa outcomes. Here are some traps I see frequently:

  • Leaving Australia before getting a BVB or while holding BVA, BVC or BVE — this often cancels your bridging visa.
  • Assuming work rights just because the previous visa had them — always check conditions on the bridging visa grant.
  • Submitting incomplete or contradictory documents (e.g. wrong name spelling, missing address proof).
  • Delaying lodging your substantive visa application until your visa expires — this forces you into BVC or BVE with more restrictions.
  • Applying multiple bridging visas or re-submissions — delaying process.
  • Overstaying travel windows or ignoring travel conditions on BVB.
  • Failing to keep Home Affairs updated about changes in address, contact or circumstances.
  • Missing deadlines for lodging appeals or judicial review while under bridging visa status.
  • Ignoring any “no work” condition without applying for its removal if you need to work.

Always err on the side of caution: check your bridging visa conditions, act before deadlines, and if in doubt, consult me.

Client Scenarios & Illustrative Examples

Example 1: From Student to Partner Visa

Asha was on a student visa, and prior to its expiry she lodged a partner visa application. A Bridging Visa A was granted automatically. While waiting, she continued study and part-time work under inherited conditions. She did not seek travel, so she did not apply for BVB. Eventually her partner visa was granted, at which point her bridging visa ceased.

Example 2: Needing to Travel Mid-Process

Ravi held a Bridging Visa A but needed to visit family overseas. He applied for a Bridging Visa B ahead of travel, specifying purpose and travel dates. Then was given a travel window of eight weeks. He departed and returned within that window, and resumed waiting for his substantive visa outcome.

Example 3: Overstayed & Regularising with BVC + Work Permission

Chen’s visitor visa expired, but he lodged a skilled visa application late. He was granted a Bridging Visa C (with no work rights). He then applied to remove the “no work” condition, presenting financial hardship evidence, and was granted permission to work while the application proceeded.

Example 4: Protection / Asylum Claim with BVE

Miriam arrived without proper clearance and applied for a protection visa. She was granted a Bridging Visa E subclass 051 while her claim was under review. She could not travel or work but remained lawful in Australia until the protection decision was made.

Example 5: Visa Refusal & Maintaining Legal Status

Ahmed’s application for a skilled visa was refused. He held a Bridging Visa at the time, and he lodged a review at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT). His bridging visa remained valid during the appeal period, allowing him to stay while the review proceeded.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I work on a Bridging Visa? 
It depends on your subclass and visa conditions. Some bridging visas inherit work rights from your prior visa; others carry a “no work” condition. You may apply to remove that condition if you can show financial hardship.
Can I travel on a Bridging Visa? 
Only Bridging Visa B (BVB) explicitly permits travel and return to Australia within a defined travel window. Other subclasses will generally cease if you leave Australia.
What happens if my substantive visa application is refused? 
Your bridging visa usually continues (if granted) while you appeal or seek judicial review, subject to its conditions. But you must act within the time limits.
Does leaving Australia cancel my bridging visa?
Yes — for most bridging visa subclasses (A, C, E), leaving Australia will cancel that visa. Only BVB is designed to allow travel.
How long is a Bridging Visa valid?
Your bridging visa stays valid until the Department decides your substantive visa, finalises your appeal or review, or you depart Australia (if allowed).
Can I change conditions (e.g. add work rights)?
In many cases, yes. You may apply to vary conditions (remove “no work”, adjust travel permission) if you can show hardship or a compelling reason.
What does it cost to apply?
Most bridging visas are **free** to apply for. Fees may apply in some cases (e.g. BVB travel applications).

Conclusion & What You Should Do Next

A Bridging Visa can be a lifeline in your visa journey — helping you remain lawful, preserving work entitlements (in many cases), and, in certain subclasses, allowing limited travel. But it’s not foolproof: incorrect subclass selection, breach of conditions, or failing to act in time can ruin your immigration pathway.

As your immigration lawyer, I can help you review your options, choose the correct bridging subclass, prepare strong supporting evidence, and ensure you remain lawful throughout the process.

If you’d like personalised advice or help lodging or reviewing your bridging visa (or dealing with complications), book a consultation with me today to discuss your visa situation.

Immigration policies, systems, and processes can change without notice. I’d like to know your own experience with the immigration challenges noted above — feel free to contact me.

Legal Disclaimer

This blog is intended for discussion purposes only and does not constitute advice. You should seek independent legal advice before relying on any information provided on this site. Immigration policies, systems, and processes can change without notice. I’d like to know your own experience with the immigration challenges noted above — feel free to contact me.

MyVisa: Nilesh Nandan, Attorney at Law
BBus(Accy) LLB(QUT) GDLP MBA(IntBus)
Head of Practice

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Nilesh Nandan

Nilesh Nandan is Australia's most sought after immigration lawyer for visa refusals and visa cancellations. Appeal your visa or get help to relodge your Australian visa application or citizenship application.

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704 Responses

  1. hi , i’m holding 866 bridging visa A, i want to enroll my self to further study. i wondering do i able to change my visa from 866 to student visa?

  2. Hello, I had a student visa that expired on 18/02 now I am current on BVA waiting for another student visa decision. I am currently working since my last visa, and in the BVA now active states that I cannot engage work until I start the course, do I have to resign my current work while on holidays? Thank u

  3. Hi
    I applied for Protection visa on Jan 2016 but I got bridging visa C instead.. I have been in Australia for 3 years without seeing my parents.My mother is sick now I need to see her but I know once I leave Australia I can’t return back.. Is there any possibilities to return back to Australia.. Can I get Bridging visa B??
    Please help me..

  4. Hi,
    I am currently on a Bridging Visa A that came into effect on 02 Jan 2019. I was previously on a 482 TSS Visa. I am currently employed with same employer that sponsored the TSS visa, however I will be starting new employement on the 04 Feb 2019. My bridging visa says that I have unlimited work rights.
    I have called immigration and they have informed with that all I need to do is update my job chnage situation once i start new employment. My future employers are querying this and I would like to know if there anything else that needs to be done

    Please advice
    Thank you

  5. Hi, can i travel while my student visa is on process? i was issued Bridging Visa A but still not active. My tourist visa will expire on Feb 2019. Appreciate your reply. cheers.

  6. My 485 visa expiring on 9th December and I applied for a new student visa on 7th December. I received the application received acknowledgment letter and money receipt of payment but did not received the bridging visa A. What can I do now ?

  7. Hi,myvisa
    My friend get a permanent temporary visa 866 but still briging visa a. He come back his country bcoz emergency situation.
    So can he return australia? What solution u can give him?
    Please answer us. Thankyou

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