Unlawful non-citizens
Non-citizens whose substantive visa has ended and who have not lodged a further application.
Or a judicial review was dismissed. Or you are seeking ministerial intervention as a final option. A BVE keeps you lawfully in Australia while those processes play out, but the conditions are strict, work rights are rare, and a wrong step can mean detention. Our Immigration Lawyer Prateek Maan leads BVE matters.
BVEs are granted in specific end-of-pathway situations, not for general visa applications.
Non-citizens whose substantive visa has ended and who have not lodged a further application.
Applicants whose ART review rights have expired without appeal.
Applicants awaiting or seeking ministerial intervention under section 351 or 417.
Applicants in judicial review at the Federal Circuit and Family Court, or cooperating with voluntary departure.
BVEs are granted with condition 8101 (no work) by default. Work rights require a separate application and Department decision.
Applying for ministerial intervention under section 351 or 417 does not automatically grant a BVE, but if the Minister agrees to consider the case, a BVE is often granted to maintain lawful status during consideration.
Minister has discretion to substitute a more favourable decision for an ART decision. Extremely narrow grounds.
Minister has discretion to substitute a more favourable decision in protection and refugee matters.
Leaving Australia on a BVE ends the BVE and usually triggers a 3-year re-entry exclusion. Do not travel on a BVE without legal advice.
Our immigration lawyer Prateek Maan has guided clients through BVE status into ministerial interventions, judicial reviews, and late-stage ART matters. If you receive a BVE grant notice, the first 48 hours matter most.
For urgent BVE matters, book with Prateek Maan or Sourabh Aggarwal.