Five Patterns · Hundreds of Appeals · What Actually Works

After hundreds of ART appeals, five evidence patterns consistently win.

Evidence strategy is led by our team Sourabh Aggarwal and Gurjeev Bhalla across partner, skilled, and employer sponsored appeals. The Tribunal responds to specific evidence characteristics regardless of visa type. Partner, skilled, character, and cancellation cases all hinge on how evidence is gathered and presented. Here is what actually persuades members.

The five winning patterns

Contemporaneous. Independent. Specific. Consistent. Responsive.

These characteristics appear in almost every successful ART appeal. Absent them, even genuine applicants struggle.

Contemporaneous

Created at the time of the event. Bank statements, dated photos, social media posts, tickets, tax records. Date-verifiable.

Independent

From sources other than the applicant. Third-party statements, institutional records, government documents. Reduces credibility attacks.

Specific

Named people, named dates, named places. Not vague references. Members credit specificity.

Consistent

Aligned with other evidence and prior statements. Inconsistencies are the single biggest refusal driver at hearings.

Responsive

Directly addresses the refusal grounds. Evidence that does not respond to the Department concerns does not help.

Evidence that does not help

Four weak patterns.

Some common evidence types fail to persuade. Recognising them saves time and cost.

Bulk-prepared statementsMultiple statements in similar voice or structure. Suggests coaching rather than independent observation. Lower weight.
Generic reference lettersLetters that do not name specific duties, dates, or events. Applied to any applicant in the same occupation.
Very recent evidence onlyHeavy evidence of recent months, thin evidence of earlier periods. Suggests the relationship or claim strengthened for the application.
Unverifiable claimsClaims without supporting dates, photos, or receipts. Hearing questioning exposes them.
Evidence by case type

Specific application of the principles.

The five patterns apply across case types but the specific evidence differs.

Partner visa hearings

Relationship evidence across social, financial, household, commitment categories. Contemporaneous social media is strongest.

Skilled and employer sponsored

Employment references with duties-mapped ANZSCO language. Tax and payroll records. Institutional recognition.

Character and cancellation

Rehabilitation evidence, community involvement, family impact. Medical, psychological, and criminal record context.

The single highest-impact evidence investment is getting reference letters rewritten.

Generic reference letters from the original application can often be reissued with duty-mapped specificity, dated detail, and independently verifiable contact points. For skilled and employer-sponsored appeals, rewriting references often turns appeals around on its own.

Common questions

The questions we hear most.

For evidence strategy, book with Sourabh Aggarwal.

Can I include evidence the Department did not have?
Yes. The ART accepts fresh evidence. This is often the heart of a successful appeal.
What if I cannot get new reference letters because I left the employer?
We have template drafting approaches that work even with former employers. Ex-supervisors and HR teams can usually assist if approached professionally.
Does social media count as evidence?
Yes, often powerfully. Dated posts, tagged photos, check-ins are contemporaneous and independent. Partner visa appeals benefit enormously.
How much evidence is too much?
Quality over quantity. Members read submissions and skim evidence. Tightly curated, well-indexed evidence is stronger than volume without structure.
Evidence mapping and submission drafting for every ART appeal type

The right evidence changes outcomes.

Book a consultation. We review your refusal and map the specific evidence that will persuade the Tribunal.

Some information on this page has been sourced from the Department of Home Affairs and has been interpreted and approved by Principal Migration Agent Sourabh Aggarwal (MARN 1462159). Last reviewed: May 2026.