Onshore Bar After Refusal · Key Exceptions Apply

Section 48 bar, what it is and how to work with it.

Section 48 of the Migration Act is one of the most important rules for onshore visa holders who have had a visa refused or cancelled. It blocks most further onshore applications. Understanding Section 48, and its exceptions, often determines what options remain. For many applicants, the onshore partner visa pathway is the single door that stays open.

What Section 48 does

The onshore application bar, in three sentences.

Read this section first. Then the exceptions make sense.

The core rule

If you are in Australia and your visa was refused or cancelled (or a previous visa was refused while you were onshore), you cannot apply for most further visas while onshore. You must leave Australia to apply, unless an exception applies.

When it attaches

Section 48 attaches from the date of the refusal or cancellation of a visa while you were onshore. It continues for as long as you remain in Australia without having departed since.

Why it exists

The provision prevents applicants from making successive onshore applications for different visas in order to remain in Australia indefinitely. It forces people to resolve their status or leave.

What Section 48 does NOT do

Three important things it does not block.

The bar is specific. Knowing what sits outside it is as important as knowing what sits inside.

Does not affect offshore applications

Once you leave Australia, Section 48 no longer restricts your applications. You can apply for any visa from offshore. See our offshore application strategy page for the pragmatic path when no onshore exception works.

Does not apply to ART appeals

Lodging an ART appeal of the refusal or cancellation is not a further visa application. Section 48 does not block it. Your appeal rights remain intact regardless of the bar.

Does not apply to exception visas

Several visa types are specifically exempt. These exceptions are the key to onshore options for Section 48 barred applicants. See the full list of exceptions.

The main Section 48 exceptions

Which visas stay open despite the bar.

Most refused onshore applicants have only a few remaining options. For those in genuine relationships with Australians, the partner visa pathway often turns a dead end into a route to permanent residency.

Partner visa (Subclass 820)The most important exception. Onshore partner visa applications can be lodged despite Section 48. This is why partner visas are sometimes the only remaining pathway for refused applicants.
Protection visaProtection visa applications can be lodged despite Section 48, provided the protection claim is genuine.
Medical Treatment visa (Subclass 602)Specific medical treatment applications can proceed despite Section 48 where genuine medical need exists.
Bridging visas and other narrow exceptionsBridging visas continue to be available in relevant circumstances. Territorial asylum and certain other visas prescribed in the Regulations are also exempt.
Partner visa as a Section 48 exception

The critical pathway. For genuine relationships only.

This pathway has turned more refused applications into permanent residency than any other single provision. It also has its own particular demands.

Must be a genuine relationship

Depends on a real relationship with an Australian citizen, permanent resident, or eligible New Zealand citizen that meets the partner visa criteria. Not a back door for people without real relationships.

Evidence burden is higher

The Department scrutinises partner visa applications made by people who were refused other visas. Evidence across all four relationship areas (financial, social, household, commitment) needs to be exceptionally strong.

Timing matters

The partner visa should be lodged while the applicant still holds a bridging visa. Once unlawful, the application becomes more complex and a Schedule 3 waiver may be required.

Section 48 is one of the reasons partner visas matter so much in Australia's system.

A student visa refusal, a skilled migration refusal, or an employer sponsored visa refusal can leave an onshore applicant with no remaining options except departure or partner visa. For applicants in genuine Australian relationships, this exception can be life-changing.

Strategic use of Section 48 exceptions

Three strategies we use regularly.

Every Section 48 case is assessed for all three. Sometimes the answer is clear. Sometimes it takes a detailed consultation to map out.

Assess the partner visa pathway

If a real relationship exists, we map the evidence and assess lodgement strategy. If the relationship is not genuine, attempting the route is both legally risky and can trigger PIC 4020 findings.

Assess whether protection applies

Protection visa applications are serious matters with their own eligibility tests. We advise carefully and only where genuine protection claims exist.

Plan offshore lodgement

For applicants without exception visa options, planning the offshore reapplication is the pragmatic path. We assist with departure timing, offshore application strategy, and rebuilding the case.

Common Section 48 questions

The questions we hear most.

For a map of your remaining visa options given Section 48, book a consultation with Sourabh Aggarwal or Prateek Maan.

I had a student visa refused. Can I still apply for anything onshore?
Partner visa and protection visa are the main onshore exceptions. If you have an Australian partner in a genuine relationship, the 820 pathway is available despite Section 48.
Does Section 48 go away after time?
No. Section 48 does not expire while you remain onshore. It continues until you leave Australia, which resets the bar.
Does leaving and coming back fix Section 48?
Yes, in most cases. Departing Australia and returning on a new visa usually removes the Section 48 bar. The logistics of doing this safely depend on your specific circumstances.
Can I lodge an ART appeal and a partner visa at the same time?
Yes, usually. These are parallel pathways and can both be active. The appeal addresses the previous refusal. The partner visa is a fresh application based on the relationship.
Mapped pathway, not just a wall

Section 48 bar? We know the exceptions and options.

Book a consultation to map your remaining visa options. Most applicants have more doors open than they realise, but timing and strategy matter.

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.