Refugee and Humanitarian Visa
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Seeking Protection in Australia: Which Refugee or Humanitarian Visa Applies to You?
Australia’s protection framework covers people already in the country fearing return, and those outside Australia needing permanent resettlement. Understanding which pathway applies — and getting your application right — is the most critical step you will take.
“This is not a visa to extend your stay or a shortcut to permanent residence. Australia’s protection program exists for one purpose — to provide safety to people who genuinely face persecution or serious harm if returned to their home country. Getting the application right matters more here than anywhere else.”
Australia’s Refugee and Humanitarian Program is one of the most high-stakes areas of immigration law. With over 85% of Protection Visa applications refused, and unsuccessful applicants facing detention and removal, there is very little margin for error. At the same time, for people who genuinely need protection, it can be a life-changing pathway to safety and permanent residence.
This guide explains the two main streams — onshore protection and offshore resettlement — and walks through three scenario-based cases to help you understand which pathway may apply to your situation.
Which Pathway Applies to You?
The following three scenarios illustrate how Australia’s protection framework applies to different real-world situations. Each reflects common circumstances our team encounters at Aran Legal.
01
You're in Australia on a student visa and fear returning home because of your political activism
You are a 26-year-old from a country with an authoritarian government. You arrived in Australia on a student visa two years ago. Since then, the situation at home has deteriorated — your online pro-democracy activism has been documented by authorities, and several friends who returned home have since been detained. You have a well-founded fear of persecution if you return, and your government is unable or unwilling to protect you.
- Seek legal advice before doing anything else. Do not lodge an application without professional guidance. A poorly prepared protection visa application significantly increases refusal risk — and refusal carries serious, immediate consequences for your ability to remain in Australia.
- Gather evidence of your fear of persecution. This includes documentation of your political activities, communications from or about authorities in your home country, news coverage of the political climate, statutory declarations from people who know your situation, and country condition reports prepared by independent organisations.
- Lodge the SC 866 application while your student visa is still valid, or on a valid Bridging Visa. Once lodged, you will be issued a Bridging Visa A (BVA), allowing you to remain in Australia lawfully while your application is assessed.
- Participate fully in the Department's assessment process. You may be asked to attend interviews and provide additional evidence. Your migration lawyer will prepare you thoroughly and ensure your claims are clearly and truthfully presented throughout.
- If refused, you may have access to merits review at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART). Review deadlines are strict — missing them can permanently close off your options. Act immediately and contact a lawyer the same day you receive a refusal.
Pathway: Subclass 866 — Onshore Protection Visa. Your case rests entirely on the strength and credibility of your evidence. Clear, honest, and well-supported documentation is the single most important factor in any protection visa application.
02
You're a registered refugee living in a third country, hoping to be resettled in Australia through UNHCR
You fled your home country five years ago due to ethnic persecution and have been living in a neighbouring third country in a refugee camp. You are registered with UNHCR as a refugee. You cannot return home and cannot permanently settle where you currently are. You hope to be resettled in Australia but do not know whether you will be considered or how to make that happen.
- Understand that you cannot apply directly. The Subclass 200 is not an application you lodge yourself — it is initiated through a referral by UNHCR. UNHCR identifies and refers individuals for resettlement based on their protection needs and vulnerability. Your role is to ensure your registration is maintained and accurate.
- Keep your UNHCR registration current and up to date. Attend all scheduled appointments, communicate any changes in your circumstances, and ensure your protection needs are accurately documented. UNHCR uses this data to identify candidates for resettlement.
- If referred by UNHCR to Australia, the Department of Home Affairs will conduct its own independent assessment — including interviews, background checks, health assessments, and a review of your protection claims. You do not need to be in a specific country when referred.
- If granted the SC 200, you will travel to Australia as a permanent resident. You will have access to settlement services, welfare support, Medicare, family reunion rights, and the right to return to Australia if you travel overseas.
Pathway: Subclass 200 — Refugee Visa (Offshore). The critical reality of this pathway is that you cannot initiate it yourself — it depends entirely on UNHCR referral and Australia’s annual humanitarian program allocation. Demand far exceeds available places. If you have a family member in Australia holding a protection visa, ask about split family provisions — this can prioritise your case significantly.
03
You face serious human rights abuses at home — and your sibling in Australia can propose your application
You are living in your home country and face severe, systematic discrimination based on your religion — denied employment, education, and basic services. The situation amounts to a gross violation of your human rights. You may not meet the strict legal definition of a refugee, but the harm you face is real and documented. Your sibling is an Australian permanent resident and is willing to formally propose your application.
- Your sibling in Australia lodges a formal proposal on your behalf. The Subclass 202 requires a proposer — an Australian citizen, permanent resident, eligible New Zealand citizen, or an approved organisation. Your sibling submits a proposal form with supporting information about your circumstances and their relationship to you.
- Document the discrimination and human rights abuses you face. Evidence is critical — statutory declarations, letters from community or religious leaders, news reports about conditions in your area, medical records where relevant, and personal accounts of incidents you have experienced. The threshold for SC 202 is high and requires compelling, specific documentation.
- The Department assesses whether your situation meets the SC 202 threshold — substantial discrimination amounting to a gross violation of human rights. This is a demanding legal standard. Your Aran Legal lawyer will ensure your evidence is framed correctly and that the full picture of your circumstances is clearly communicated.
- If granted, you will travel to Australia as a permanent resident with access to settlement services, welfare, Medicare, and the right to sponsor family members under certain conditions. Your sibling's support during the settlement period is both a practical asset and a positive factor in the application.
Pathway: Subclass 202 — Global Special Humanitarian Visa. This is a viable pathway for people who face serious human rights abuses but fall outside the strict refugee definition — provided they have a legitimate proposer in Australia. The strength and specificity of the documentation is the single most important factor in these applications.
What You Must Be Able to Demonstrate
Regardless of pathway, the Department of Home Affairs requires credible, substantiated evidence. Vague claims and unverified statements are not sufficient.
For Onshore Applications (SC 866)
- Well-founded fear of persecution — credible evidence of a real chance of serious harm if returned home.
- Failure of state protection — your home country's authorities are unable or unwilling to protect you.
- No safe internal relocation — you cannot reasonably move to another part of your home country to escape harm.
- Credible identity evidence — satisfactory documentation of your identity, nationality, or statelessness.
For Offshore Applications (SC 200, 202, 203, 204)
- UNHCR referral for SC 200, 203, and 204 — or a valid proposer in Australia for SC 202.
- Genuine and documented protection need — the nature and severity of harm must be verifiable through evidence.
- Health and character requirements — all applicants must meet Australian health and character standards.
ℹ What happens if your application is refused? For SC 866, you may have access to merits review at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART). However, review deadlines are strict — often as short as nine business days. If refused, contact a migration lawyer immediately. Missing review deadlines permanently closes off your options
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There are no hidden costs for our services as our fees are clearly set out in a cost agreement.
Deal directly with a lawyer
From the first same-day response to the granting of your visa, you’ll have direct access to a migration lawyer.
Clear communication
Our experienced migration lawyers will give you regular updates and clear explanations of visa pathways.
Installments available
3-6 month instalment options are available on some visa types and visa applications.

Australian visas - what you need to know
Some of the most common types of visas for people looking to migrate to Australia:
- Partner visas: These can include visas for your fiancé, married, or de-facto partner.
- Family visas: These visas can include adoption, carer, dependent relative, and more.
- Parent visas: The requirements for each parent visa type differ; there are key eligibility requirements that apply to all applicants.
- Work and skilled visas: These can include temporary and permanent visas for both regional and metropolitan areas. These are online temporary visas.
- Protection visas: These can allow you to stay in Australia if you fear returning to your home country.
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