Automatic conditions
Applied by law to every visa of that subclass. Visitor 600s always carry 8201. Students always carry 8202.
Conditions like 8101, 8105, 8503, 8202 matter. A breach can cost you your visa, trigger a 3-year re-entry ban, and bring PIC 4020 scrutiny on every future application. This guide decodes every common condition in plain English.
Every Australian visa carries conditions. Some automatic, some discretionary, some requested by the applicant. The full list sits in Schedule 8 of the Migration Regulations 1994.
Applied by law to every visa of that subclass. Visitor 600s always carry 8201. Students always carry 8202.
Added by the decision-maker based on case facts. 8503 is often discretionary on visitor visas where stay intent looks unclear.
Sometimes requested by the applicant. A visitor may declare 8503 upfront if no further stay is planned.
Conditions attach to the visa, not the person. New visa means new conditions. Old conditions end.
These are the conditions that appear most often in our consultations. Each links to a detailed breakdown.
Breach of any condition creates grounds for cancellation under section 116 of the Migration Act. Waivers exist but are narrow.
Cancellation under Section 116. Unlawful status unless a bridging visa is in place. 3-year re-entry ban under PIC 4013. Future applications face PIC 4020 scrutiny.
8503 can be waived via formal request with compelling or compassionate circumstances. Work conditions on BVC and BVE can be relaxed through Form 1005.
They apply for the life of the visa. The only path around them is a different visa entirely.
Condition 8503 on a visitor visa is a classic example. Applicants return home, discover they cannot extend onshore, and realise their original advice was incomplete. Reading your own grant notice carefully is the first line of defence.
For visa condition interpretation or waiver applications, book with Sourabh Aggarwal.