Ministerial Intervention
When all other avenues are exhausted.
Overview
Ministerial intervention is a last-resort option available in some immigration cases. Under sections 351, 417, and 501J of the Migration Act, the Minister for Immigration has the personal, non-compellable power to substitute a more favourable decision. This is a discretionary power — the Minister is not obliged to consider any request — but a compelling submission can make a significant difference.
Ministerial intervention requests are assessed against published guidelines that set out the types of circumstances the Minister considers 'unique or exceptional.' These include: strong compassionate circumstances, significant hardship to Australian citizens or permanent residents (particularly children), Australia's international obligations, and cases where the applicant has strong ties to the Australian community.
The new 2026 ministerial intervention guidelines introduced changes to how s351, s417, and s501J requests are assessed. I stay current with these guidelines and tailor every submission to address the specific criteria the Minister considers. A well-prepared submission that clearly articulates why your case is unique or exceptional is essential.
I have prepared hundreds of ministerial intervention requests over my career. While the success rate is modest (the Minister intervenes in a relatively small percentage of cases), a professionally prepared submission that identifies the strongest compassionate grounds significantly improves your prospects.
Key Facts
How I Work — Step by Step
Eligibility Assessment
I assess whether your case has the characteristics the Minister considers 'unique or exceptional.'
Submission Preparation
I prepare a detailed submission addressing the ministerial guidelines and highlighting your strongest grounds.
Evidence Compilation
I gather character references, community ties evidence, family impact statements, and country information.
Lodgement
I lodge the submission with the Minister's office and confirm receipt.
Follow-up
I monitor the progress of your request and respond to any queries from the Minister's office.
What I Do
- Assess whether your case meets the criteria for ministerial intervention under the current guidelines
- Identify the strongest compassionate and unique circumstances in your case
- Prepare a compelling submission addressing the ministerial guidelines point by point
- Gather supporting evidence including character references, community ties, and family impact statements
- Lodge the submission and manage any follow-up correspondence with the Minister's office
- Advise on timing and strategy, including whether to request intervention before or after other appeal options
Who Is This For?
- ›Applicants who have exhausted all other appeal options (ART and Federal Court)
- ›Applicants in compelling or compassionate circumstances
- ›Applicants whose cases raise significant humanitarian concerns
- ›Applicants with strong ties to the Australian community, particularly Australian citizen children
- ›Applicants who have been in Australia for a long time and face significant hardship if removed
Recent Case Outcome
I recently assisted a client whose partner visa was refused, a decision upheld by the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART), due to complex dependency issues. We prepared a detailed submission for Ministerial Intervention under s351 of the Migration Act, highlighting the significant, long-term emotional and financial ties the couple had to Australia and the unique compassionate circumstances involved. The Minister agreed that it was in the public interest to substitute the ART's decision, and my client was granted the visa, allowing the family to remain together in Australia.
* Details anonymized to protect client confidentiality.
Common questions about
How likely is ministerial intervention to succeed?+
When should I request ministerial intervention?+
What are the 2026 ministerial intervention guidelines?+
The Administrative Review Tribunal (ART) just affirmed my visa refusal. Is a Ministerial Intervention my last chance to stay in Australia?+
What are the 'unique or exceptional circumstances' the Minister considers for intervention?+
Your Visa Was Refused — What Now?
I wrote a free guide covering the 5 most common refusal reasons, your appeal options, and the deadlines you cannot miss. It is the same advice I give clients in their first meeting.
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The information on this page is general in nature and does not constitute legal advice. Thoughts only — not legal advice.