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Section 501

Character Cancellation: This Can Be Fought.

A visa refused or cancelled on character grounds is one of the most serious things in migration - and it's frightening. But it is not the end of the road. There are clear steps to challenge it, and people win these cases. The deadlines are tight, so start now.

Revocation deadlines are shortSerious, but far from hopelessWe take these cases on
What a Section 501 Cancellation Is

The power is real. So is the fight back.

Section 501 of the Migration Act lets the Department refuse or cancel a visa if a person doesn't pass the character test. That test can be failed for a number of reasons, most commonly a criminal record. In some cases it's a decision someone makes after weighing your situation. In others, where you've been sentenced to a term of imprisonment, the cancellation can be mandatory.

Whatever kind it is, the consequences are heavy. It can separate you from family, undo years of life built here, and lead to detention and removal. That's exactly why these decisions can be challenged, and why the process gives you a way to put your side.

The clock is already running. The time to ask for the decision to be revoked is short and strictly enforced. Don't wait to gather every document first - call us now and we'll start protecting your position straight away.

Mandatory vs Discretionary

Two different powers - and the difference shapes your whole response.

Not every character decision works the same way. Which subsection of section 501 was used changes what you have to argue, so it's worth understanding the distinction before you respond.

  1. Mandatory cancellation. Where a person is serving a full-time custodial sentence and has a substantial criminal record (broadly, a sentence of 12 months or more), the cancellation can be mandatory - the decision-maker has little choice but to cancel. Here the real fight is the revocation request, where you ask for the cancellation to be set aside and put forward your reasons and evidence.
  2. Discretionary cancellation. In other cases the decision-maker weighs your circumstances and decides whether to refuse or cancel. Because it's a discretion, your response can speak directly to the factors that count - your ties here, the best interests of any children, rehabilitation and the hardship removal would cause.

Working out which power applies to you is the first thing we do, because it tells us where the argument has to be aimed. Send us your notice and we'll confirm it. For the bigger picture of how these sit alongside other refusal and review options, see our all appeal pathways overview and visa refused options.

The Deadlines

Character deadlines are among the shortest in migration.

The exact period is set out in your notice and runs from the date on your decision letter - check your letter, because the deadline written on it is what counts. As a guide to how tight these windows can be:

Your situation Indicative window What it's for
Some character-cancellation decisions as little as ~9 days To lodge a revocation request
If you're in immigration detention 14 days To respond from notification
Standard merits review, where the decision can go to the tribunal ~21-28 days To apply to the ART (if available)

Don't measure your own deadline off this table. These windows are indicative only - the period that binds you is the one on your letter, and it can be shorter again. Get us the notice and we'll confirm the exact date and start work the same day.

Your Options

Three paths, depending on where things are.

Request that the decision be revoked

Where a visa has been cancelled, you're usually given an opportunity to ask for that cancellation to be revoked, and to provide reasons and evidence in support. This is often your most important chance - a rushed or thin response is a wasted opportunity you may not get again.

Apply to the Tribunal

Depending on who made the decision and how, you may also be able to take the matter to the Administrative Review Tribunal for review. Not every section 501 decision can go to the ART - we'll tell you clearly whether yours can.

About appeals →

Ministerial Intervention

If other avenues are exhausted, the Minister has a personal power to intervene in some character cases. It's a last resort, not a first option.

How it works →
What Makes a Strong Case

Character cases are decided by weighing a range of factors.

The more of these you can speak to with real evidence, the stronger your position.

  1. The best interests of any children affected - especially Australian children whose lives would be disrupted
  2. The strength, length and nature of your ties to Australia and your community here
  3. Evidence of rehabilitation and the time that has passed since any offending
  4. The hardship that removal would cause to you and the family members who depend on you
  5. Your overall contribution and conduct over your time in Australia

These are hard cases, and we won't pretend otherwise. But they are winnable - and we'll give you a straight assessment of where yours stands, not false hope.

Common Questions

Section 501 character questions.

Possibly - and you need to act quickly. The window to request revocation is short and firmly enforced, running from when you're notified. Because the consequences of missing it are so serious, treat the notice as urgent the moment it arrives. Send it to us and we'll confirm your exact deadline and get moving on your response.
The deadline is set out in your notice, and it can be very short. Character cancellation timelines are among the tightest in migration - sometimes just days, and in some circumstances even shorter if you're in detention. Don't guess or assume. Get us the notice and we'll confirm the deadline and start work immediately.
A lot can. The best interests of children, your ties to Australia, evidence you've turned a corner, the hardship removal would cause your family, and the time since any offending all carry weight. The key is backing each point with real evidence rather than just saying it. That's the part we help you get right in the response.
No - and nobody honestly can. The decision rests with the decision-maker. What we can promise is a straight assessment of your prospects and the strongest, most thorough case we can build. If we think your case has a real chance, we'll throw everything at it. If we don't, we'll tell you that too. Be very wary of anyone who promises a "guaranteed" result or a "free" character case - no honest agent can guarantee an outcome that sits with the decision-maker.
The character test can be failed on a number of grounds. The most common is a substantial criminal record - broadly, a sentence of 12 months or more, or certain combinations of sentences. It can also be failed for things like convictions involving violence, sexual offences or fraud, association with people involved in criminal conduct, or a risk the person would engage in particular conduct in Australia. The grounds are set out in the Migration Act, and which one applies to you affects how your response should be framed. Send us the notice and we'll identify exactly which ground is in play.
It can be either, and the difference matters. Under section 501(2) the cancellation can be mandatory - typically where someone is serving a full-time custodial sentence and has a substantial criminal record. In that situation the cancellation itself is largely automatic, and your effort goes into the revocation request. Under section 501(6) the decision is discretionary: the decision-maker weighs your circumstances before deciding, so your response can speak directly to the factors that count. We work out which power applies to you first, because it changes where the argument has to be aimed.
The strongest requests are built on documents, not assertions. Depending on your circumstances, that can include character references from people who know you well, evidence of stable employment, proof of your family ties and any children who depend on you, and material showing rehabilitation - completed courses, treatment, conduct since any offending and the time that has passed. The aim is to back every claim you make with something a decision-maker can rely on, rather than simply stating it. Vague or unsupported claims tend to carry little weight, so we help you gather and present the right evidence in the time you have.
It depends heavily on your situation, and you should get advice before lodging anything. A character concern can affect future visa applications too, and a cancellation can trigger a bar on further applications while you remain in Australia, so a new application is not always available or wise. Your immigration status in the meantime - including whether a bridging visa applies - also depends on your circumstances. We'll look at the whole picture before recommending any step, so you don't accidentally weaken your position. You can read more about bridging visa eligibility as background, but treat it as general information only.

Written and reviewed by Brian Chan, Registered Migration Agent (MARN 2217857)

Visa Store Australia, Perth · Last reviewed June 2026 · Verify on the MARA register · General information only, not personal migration advice.

Don't face this alone.

We'll give you a straight assessment, help build the strongest possible case, and be in your corner throughout. Call or send us the notice now.

Character Cancellation (s501) Urgent help from a migration agent
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