Australian Bridging Visas: A Guide to Understanding Differences Between Different Bridging Visas & BV Conditions

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Bridging Visa Australia

A Bridging Visa is a temporary visa that allows you to stay in Australia after your “current” substantive visa ceases and while your “new substantive” visa application is processed.

It “bridges” your stay in Australia from the cease date of your current visa usually until 35 days after a final decision is made on your application.

How to apply for a bridging visa?

Most of the time you don’t need to make a formal application for a bridging visa. This is because it is granted to you by operation of law. 

Is the application necessary?

A formal bridging visa application is usually not needed if you apply for a further visa while you are in Australia and you already hold a substantive visa at the time of making your further visa application.

Automatic grant

The reason why a formal visa application for a bridging visa might not be required is that by operation of law, the valid application for a further visa in Australia is typically (but not always) deemed to be an application for a bridging visa as well. The Department usually always grants that application, either manually or automatically.

Purpose

The purpose of a bridging visa is to bridge the gap, if any, between the time at which your current substantive visa expires and the point in time when the Department grants your new substantive visa.

The bridging visa is a mechanism for keeping you lawfully present in Australia.

Otherwise…

If a bridging visa were not to be granted, then it would mean that you would be an unlawful non-citizen, present in Australia for that period between when your substantive visa expires and your further visa is decided.

Types of bridging visas

The three most common types of bridging visas are a, b, and e.

Which do you have?

The most important thing to check is that you always have a visa whilst you are in Australia (if you’re not the holder of an Australian passport).

You can check the visa that you hold at any time by completing a VEVO check. It’s online and free.

Know this…

Bridging visa checklist Nilesh Nandan Immigration Lawyer

BVB limitation

Be careful with a bridging visa b (BVB). Its purpose is to allow you to leave and return to Australia whilst you wait for the grant of a further substantive; you may exit Australia for a very finite travel period and must re-enter Australia by a specified date.

BVB disaster

The biggest risk with a BVB is that you forget the period of your BVB grant, and you then fail to re-enter Australia before the date specified. Take very careful note to start returning to Australia several days before your BVB expires, so that you have ample time to re-enter Australia when you return.

Bridging visa after re-entry

When you re-enter Australia your bridging visa b does not change back to a BVA but will show as a BVB, allowing you to continue to stay in Australia but importantly does not then have any exit and return facility.

Second BVB

You will need to take care to lodge a further BVB if you wish to again exit Australia during the period in which you are waiting for the grant of your further substantive visa.

If you hold a BVA or a BVB you can apply for a further BVB.

Only one chance!

Unfortunately, if you hold a BVC, a BVD, or a BVE then you can’t apply for a BVB. It’s like losing your virginity.

Think of it this way – if you hold a BVC or BVD or BVE, you can never go back to get a BVB. At least until after your further substantive visa application has been granted.

As explained above, bridging visas “bridge” you from the time an existing visa ceases to be “in effect” until the time a decision is made on any new visa you may have applied for.

Bridging visa lifespan after a decision on substantive application

Usually, the bridging visa will run for a period of up to 28 days (and possibly 35 days, depending on when you lodge your application and when your bridging visa is granted) after the decision of the Department to refuse your visa application, allowing you or your migration agent or immigration lawyer enough time to file an appeal.

Bridging visa lawyer Nilesh Nandan

Bridging visa to travel overseas

The Department of Home Affairs can issue you with a bridging visa if you intend to exit Australia. This is known as a “bridging visa on departure grounds”. These visas are for a fixed period.

Extension of BVE

There may be some scope to have these extended if, for some reason, you can’t depart. This is subject to negotiation between you and the compliance officer at the Department of Home Affairs.

For example, you might be without a visa and need a week or so to get things in order before you can exit Australia.

Immigration will often grant you this type of visa for a fixed term which will allow you time to exit the country or lodge another application.

Depart on BVE – consequences

There are serious consequences that follow after you exit Australia on a BVE. This is known as “special return criteria” where you may suffer a period of exclusion from Australia or a ban from a further visa grant for Australia.

BVE ban duration

The duration of this ban will depend on the sort of visa you are applying for and your circumstances. This is something that I advise on regularly and you should get independent immigration legal advice if you wish to make an application for Australia after exiting on a BVE.

Bridging visa “in effect”

Although your bridging visa may be granted (and you may have received a letter from Immigration saying that you have been granted this visa) take care. This visa usually only comes “into effect” when your existing visa expires and remains in place while the Department considers your new visa application. For example, suppose you are a holder of a subclass 600 Visitor visa. And you apply for a subclass 482 Temporary Skills Shortage visa while onshore.

Check your precise visa status regularly on the Department’s site.

When your bridging visa kicks in

You will not automatically become the holder of a bridging visa as soon as you make that 482 visa application. You will still be on your subclass 600 until it expires. Your bridging visa will usually kick in, if at all, immediately upon the expiry of your subclass 600 Visitor visa.

Bridging visa might never activate

The Department may grant your 482 visa application while your subclass 600 visa is still in effect. This means your bridging visa in association with your subclass 482 visa application will be extinguished and never come into effect.

Bridging visa not automatically granted

Don’t stress. Be vigilant with your follow-up as to why it could be that the Department didn’t consider your application valid.

Consider making a separate application for a bridging visa if your recent substantive visa application was valid but the Department hasn’t yet granted your bridging visa – this usually wakes up case officers!

Practice tip!

Stay onshore (inside Australia) if your bridging visa is not yet in effect.

Exiting Australia will usually extinguish this visa and you may well find yourself stuck offshore. This can be tricky and I would recommend you get advice if you plan to exit from Australia. Book a call with me!

Your experience?

Please share your comments with me.

I’d love to know more about your experience with applying for this visa subclass!

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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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676 Responses

  1. Hi, I am currently on a bridging visa A (For Protection Visa). and I wish to apply for a 491 visa. Is it possible to apply fo the 491 visa whilst still on a Bridging Visa A? thx

  2. Hi Nilesh can you please provide me suggestion.
    My parents Bridging visa E refused and they are going back to home country in a month time. My question is in future if they want to come back to Australia they can apply ofshore application ? do they have any waiting period before new application? chance of getting visa?

  3. Hello , Just want to know if Bridging B visas are granted more than 6 months due to current pandemic. As there are travel restrictions in place and if i want to get Briding B visa for more than 6 months is there any possibility?
    Kindly let me know

  4. Hello Sir, just a quick question.

    I’m applying for visa 190, my partner (dependent) is on bridging visa E and was refused a carers visa before because he didn’t meet the criteria, not because of character problems. I went to a migration lawyer and I was advised that my partner should leave Australia and apply the visa 190 while he’s offshore. Is that the best thing to do? Is there anyway he can just stay here while waiting for the decision of my visa 190?

    1. Your partner is very limited in making any fresh application in Australia after a visa refusal or being the holder of a bridging visa E class.

      The advice if you have seems rational.

      I assume that you have explored other pathways to stay lawfully in Australia. These include fully exhausting appeal rights if there are any and lodging further applications for bridging visas in limited circumstances.

      I hope this helps. It is a difficult situation to be in and the idea of being separated is a problematic one. Good luck!

    2. Hi

      Me and my kid (4 years old) both have visa 485, expired in 2022. I applied partner visa including my daughter on Oct 2020. Can my daughter go back to home country during the time bridging visa for partner not actives? Can they granted visa 820 when my daughter is offshore? Can she come to Australia multiple time when we hold both 485 and bridging visa?

      Many thanks

  5. Hello sir, thank you for such an amazing post.

    My wife’s partner 309/100 is pending decision and she is currently on-shore on a visitor visa. We filed her 309/100 application via a MARA agent.

    Since she is on-shore, her application has an option to apply for a bridging visa. I want to apply for her bridging visa from my immi account and not via the agent this time.
    Is it possible to apply for a bridging visa on her 309/100 from a different immi account (mine), than the account from which the main application was lodged (agent’s)?
    Thank you!

  6. Hi Nilesh
    I am from Hong Kong, currently holding 485 bridging visa which will expire on Aug 13. Recently Australia Government announced that they will offer 5-year visa extension for people from Hong Kong effective July 9, 2020. But they have not announced how to apply. Should I apply for a bridging visa while awaiting for their announcement on how to apply the 5-year extension? What kind of bridging visa I should apply? Also, when Morrison announced the scheme, he said that this will be offered to Hong Kong citizen and residents, but in their official announcement, it said “HK passport holders”. I was born and lived in Hong Kong before I came to Australia for study 5 years ago. I hold British passport. I am eligible for applying a HK passport, but I had not applied for it before before I did not see the needs. In such case, is it possible for me to appeal if they do not offer the extension to me?
    Thank you very much.

  7. Hi Nilesh.

    Please kindly give me the suggestion for below inquiry.

    I have applied for my 485 post study graduate visa and currently holding bridging visa A. Due to some circumstance I had to change my Australian address. However My home country address are same as my passport and there was no change.

    So should i need to change my Australian address in immiaccount or need to submit 956 form ?

    1. You are required to notify the Department of the change of your circumstances. The form you should use is form 929, or simply update your details in your ImmiAccount application.

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