Cancellation Defence
NOITCC Response
Received a Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation (NOITCC)? You have a limited window to respond. Our immigration lawyers prepare compelling submissions that have prevented visa cancellations. Call today — urgent advice available.
What Is a NOITCC?
A Notice of Intention to Consider Cancellation (NOITCC) is a formal notice issued by the Department of Home Affairs when it believes there may be grounds to cancel your existing visa. Receiving a NOITCC means the Department has identified information — whether from their own monitoring, a third party, a police report, or your own disclosed information — that they believe may satisfy one of the visa cancellation grounds under the Migration Act 1958.
The NOITCC process is designed to give you natural justice — the opportunity to know the case against you and to respond before a final decision is made. This is your window of opportunity. A well-prepared, comprehensive response supported by strong evidence can result in the Department deciding not to cancel your visa. A poor response, or no response, makes cancellation near-certain.
If your visa is cancelled following a NOITCC, you may have rights of appeal to the ART — but it is far better to prevent the cancellation in the first place.
What a Strong NOITCC Response Includes
- A detailed, personally signed statutory declaration addressing each ground raised in the NOITCC directly and specifically
- Supporting evidence directly addressing each cancellation ground (police certificate updates, medical evidence, employment records, character references)
- Evidence of community ties — family in Australia, employment, property, length of residence, children's schooling
- Character references from employers, community leaders, religious leaders, and professionals who know the applicant
- Evidence of rehabilitation (for criminal history NOITCCs) — counselling records, support group attendance, psychological reports
- Hardship submissions — the impact on Australian citizen or permanent resident family members if cancellation proceeds
- Legal submissions identifying applicable Ministerial Direction 99 primary and other considerations that weigh against cancellation
- Medical evidence for any health or mental health factors that are relevant to the circumstances
| Ground | Basis | Response Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Character — criminal convictions (s501) | Prison sentence of 12+ months, or substantial criminal record | Rehabilitation evidence, community ties, family hardship |
| Character — association with criminal groups | Association with outlaw motorcycle gangs or organised crime | Detailed statutory declaration, evidence of separation from associations |
| Condition breach — work breach (student) | Student worked over 48 hours per fortnight | Correction of factual errors, evidence of circumstances |
| Condition breach — study requirement | Student failed to maintain enrolment or attendance | Medical evidence, extenuating circumstances, re-enrolment proof |
| Misrepresentation / fraud | Allegations of false information in original application | Rebuttal evidence, statutory declarations, corrective information |
| Sponsor compliance (employer visa) | Employer sponsor non-compliance affecting worker visa | Demonstrate worker’s non-involvement in sponsor breach |
| National security / adverse ASIO assessment | Security clearance concern | Highly complex — specialist advice immediately |
Section 501 Character Cancellations — Special Note
Section 501 character cancellations are the most common and most serious type of NOITCC. If you have a prison sentence of 12 months or more, or a substantial criminal record, your visa may be subject to mandatory consideration of cancellation under Section 501. In some circumstances, the Minister may cancel your visa without any NOITCC — this is known as a mandatory or non-discretionary cancellation.
For Section 501 matters, the decision-maker is required to comply with Ministerial Direction 99, which sets out the factors to be weighed for and against cancellation in a specific sequence. Primary considerations include the protection of the Australian community and the best interests of minor children. Other considerations include family ties, the person’s length of residence in Australia, the strength of their ties to their home country, and their prospects of rehabilitation.
Our lawyers have extensive experience in Section 501 character submissions and know exactly what the Department and the ART are looking for in terms of evidence and legal argument.
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