Set aside and substitute
The Tribunal disagrees with the Department and makes a new decision in your favour. Usually means the visa is granted (subject to any final Department steps).
Set aside, affirm, or remit. Each has different practical consequences for your visa application. Knowing which outcome you have received determines what happens next.
Every ART decision results in one of these three outcomes.
The Tribunal disagrees with the Department and makes a new decision in your favour. Usually means the visa is granted (subject to any final Department steps).
The Tribunal agrees with the Department. The refusal stands. Further options include Federal Circuit judicial review or ministerial intervention in narrow cases.
The Tribunal directs the Department to reconsider the application with specific instructions. Department processes further; may result in grant or refusal following the Tribunal directions.
Withdrawal by applicant, consent decision, or procedural dismissal. Each has specific consequences.
The outcome determines whether the visa path continues, restarts, or ends.
Remit decisions require further Department processing. Strategy continues.
The Department must act consistently with the Tribunal directions. Usually but not always leads to grant. See remitted applications guide.
If the Tribunal directed on specific issues but left others open, fresh refusal on the open issues is possible. Stay engaged with the Department.
Department reconsideration after remit varies. Some take weeks; some take months. Staying current with Department requests matters.
The Tribunal often remits with directions rather than substituting its own grant decision. This means the Department does the final grant processing. Usually smooth, occasionally not. Legal engagement should continue through the remit phase.
For post-decision strategy, book with Sourabh Aggarwal.