You cannot really "extend" an Australian visitor visa. Instead, you apply for a new Subclass 600 visa while still in Australia, before your current one expires.
You cannot technically "extend" a visitor visa. You apply for a new Subclass 600 visa before your current one expires
The 8503 "No Further Stay" condition blocks extensions. If your visa has this condition, you cannot apply for another visa unless you get a waiver (rare)
Apply before your current visa expires. You will receive a Bridging Visa A that keeps you lawful while the new application is processed
Overstaying triggers a 3-year re-entry ban. Even one day unlawful can affect future visa applications permanently
The 8558 condition limits total stay. Multi-year visitor visas often restrict you to 12 months in any 18-month period
ETA (601) and eVisitor (651) cannot be extended onshore. You must apply for a Subclass 600 instead
You arrived in Australia planning to stay three months. Now you want to stay longer, maybe to spend more time with family, attend an event, or simply because you have fallen in love with the place. The question everyone asks: can you actually extend your visitor visa?
The short answer is yes, in most cases. But the process is not as simple as clicking "extend" on a button. Understanding the rules, conditions, and timing can mean the difference between a smooth extended stay and becoming unlawful in Australia.
Can you extend a visitor visa in Australia?
Technically, no. You cannot extend an existing visitor visa. What you can do is apply for a new Subclass 600 visitor visa while still in Australia, before your current visa expires. If granted, this new visa effectively extends your stay.
This distinction matters because each application is assessed on its own merits. The Department will look at your reasons for staying longer, your financial capacity, and whether you still meet the genuine temporary entrant requirement.
What you can extend:
Subclass 600 visitor visa (all streams)
What you cannot extend from inside Australia:
ETA (Subclass 601)
eVisitor (Subclass 651)
If you hold an ETA or eVisitor and want to stay longer, you must apply for a Subclass 600 visa. Your ETA or eVisitor cannot be renewed or extended while onshore.
Tern Tip
If you know before arriving that you'll want to stay longer than 3 months, consider applying for a Subclass 600 from the start. Unlike an ETA or eVisitor (which cap you at 3 months per visit), a Subclass 600 lets you request a stay of 6 or 12 months upfront. That saves you from having to lodge a second application and pay a second fee once you're already in Australia.
How do you apply for a visitor visa extension?
You apply for a fresh Subclass 600 Tourist Stream visa through ImmiAccount, before your current visa expires. The process is much like a first application, with a few key differences.
Step 1: Check your current visa conditions
Before anything else, log into VEVO or check your Visa Grant Notice for condition 8503 (No Further Stay). If this condition is attached to your current visa, you cannot apply for another visa without a waiver. More on this below.
Step 2: Apply through ImmiAccount
Create or log into your ImmiAccount and apply for a Subclass 600 Tourist Stream visa. Select "In Australia" as your location. The application fee is AUD $250.
Step 3: Provide supporting evidence
Your extension application needs to demonstrate:
Why you need more time: A clear, genuine reason (visiting family, attending an event, medical treatment)
Financial capacity: Bank statements showing you can support yourself
Ties to home: Evidence you still intend to leave (employment, property, family obligations)
Health insurance: Coverage for your extended stay
Step 4: Submit before your current visa expires
This is critical. As long as you apply while your current visa is still valid, you will automatically receive a Bridging Visa A (BVA). This keeps you lawful in Australia while your application is processed.
Application fee: AUD $250 (non-refundable, even if refused)
Processing time: Most onshore visitor visa applications are processed within 14-38 days, though this varies by nationality and circumstances.
When should you apply for an extension?
Apply as early as you know you want to stay longer, but ideally at least 2-4 weeks before your current visa expires.
Why timing matters:
Too late (after expiry): You become unlawful immediately. No bridging visa protection. Potential 3-year re-entry ban.
Last minute (days before expiry): Stressful, and if there are issues with your application, you have no time to fix them.
Well in advance (2-4 weeks): Gives you buffer time if the Department requests additional information.
The moment your visa expires without a new application lodged, you are unlawful in Australia. There is no grace period.
Some applicants wonder if they should wait until near the end of their visa to "maximise" their stay. This is risky. If your extension is refused, you will need to leave Australia, and processing times are unpredictable. Applying early gives you the best chance of a seamless transition.
What is condition 8503 "No Further Stay"?
Condition 8503 stops you from applying for any other visa (except a protection visa) while you are in Australia. It is the single biggest barrier to extending your stay, and it's the exact wall couples hit when they try bringing an overseas partner over on a tourist visa and switching to a partner visa onshore.
How to check if you have condition 8503:
Review your Visa Grant Notice (the letter you received when your visa was granted)
Check VEVO (Visa Entitlement Verification Online)
Look in ImmiAccount under your visa details
Who typically gets condition 8503?
The Department attaches this condition when they have concerns about your temporary intent. Common triggers include:
Weak ties to your home country
Previous overstays or visa breaches
Nationality from a high-risk country
Inconsistent information in your application
Since 2024, the Department has increasingly applied condition 8503 to visitor visas, particularly to prevent misuse of tourist visas as a pathway to other visas.
Can you get a waiver of condition 8503?
Yes, but only in limited circumstances. The Department may waive 8503 if:
Compelling and compassionate circumstances have developed since your visa was granted
The circumstances were beyond your control
They have resulted in a major change to your situation
Examples that may qualify for a waiver:
Serious illness making you unfit to travel
Death of a close family member in Australia
Natural disaster in your home country making return impossible
Violence or instability that has erupted in your home country since you arrived
Examples that will not qualify:
You met a partner and want to stay
You found a job opportunity
You simply want more time to travel
Your circumstances have not actually changed since the visa was granted
Waiver process:
Submit a request through ImmiAccount at least 4 weeks before your visa expires
Provide evidence of your compelling circumstances
Processing typically takes up to 28 days
The decision cannot be appealed to the Administrative Review Tribunal
What is condition 8558 (the 12-month stay limit)?
Condition 8558 limits you to no more than 12 months of stay in Australia in any rolling 18-month window, but it does not block onshore visa applications. This makes it very different from 8503. It does not stop you applying for another visa. It only limits how long you can stay across multiple visits.
The rule: You cannot stay in Australia for more than 12 months in any 18-month period.
This condition is commonly attached to multi-year visitor visas (3-year or 5-year Subclass 600 visas). The intent is to ensure visa holders are genuine visitors, not de facto residents.
How condition 8558 is calculated:
It operates as a rolling window. Each time you enter Australia, the Department looks back 18 months and calculates your total days of stay during that period. If you have already been in Australia for 12 months within the previous 18 months, you cannot enter.
Example: You have a 3-year visitor visa with condition 8558. You spend 10 months in Australia, leave for 2 months, then try to return. The Department looks back 18 months: you have spent 10 months in Australia during that period. You can re-enter and stay up to 2 more months before hitting the 12-month limit. After that, you must remain outside Australia until enough time passes that your rolling 18-month total drops below 12 months.
Key difference from 8503: Condition 8558 does not prevent you from applying for another visa onshore. It only restricts your cumulative stay duration.
What happens after you apply for a visitor visa extension?
You get a Bridging Visa A (BVA) automatically. As long as you applied before your current visa expired, the BVA activates the moment that visa ends and keeps you lawful while your new application is decided.
Bridging Visa A key features:
Cost: Free
Duration: Remains valid until your substantive visa application is decided
Work rights: Generally none (unless specifically granted)
Processing time: Often instant upon lodging your application
The critical limitation: Bridging Visa A has no travel rights. If you leave Australia on a BVA, it is immediately cancelled. You would be stuck offshore without a valid visa to return.
What if you need to travel while waiting?
If you must travel overseas while your visitor visa application is processing, you need a Bridging Visa B (BVB).
Bridging Visa B key features:
Cost: AUD $575
Processing time: 3-10 business days (sometimes longer)
Travel window: Allows you to leave and return to Australia within a specified period
Must be applied for before leaving: If you leave on a BVA, you cannot get a BVB
Tern Tip
Apply for a Bridging Visa B at least 2 to 4 weeks before any planned travel. If you leave Australia without one, your Bridging Visa A ceases the moment you depart, and your onshore Subclass 600 cannot be granted while you're outside Australia. That means your application will almost certainly be refused, and you'd need to apply for an entirely new visa from offshore to return.
What happens if you overstay your visa?
Overstaying your visitor visa is one of the most serious immigration breaches you can make. The consequences are immediate and long-lasting.
What are the immediate consequences of overstaying?
The moment your visa expires without a valid application lodged, you become an "unlawful non-citizen." This means:
No right to work, study, or access Medicare
Bank accounts may be frozen (financial institutions conduct VEVO checks)
Lease may be cancelled (landlords also use VEVO)
Risk of detention by Australian Border Force
No legal status in any official interaction
What is the 3-year re-entry ban?
The most significant long-term consequence is Public Interest Criterion 4014: a 3-year re-entry ban. This ban prevents you from being granted most temporary visas for 3 years after you leave Australia.
The ban applies if:
You leave Australia as an unlawful non-citizen, OR
You leave holding a Bridging Visa C, D, or E that was granted more than 28 days after your substantive visa expired
The 28-day myth: Many people believe there is a "28-day grace period" where overstaying is acceptable. This is false. You are unlawful from day one. The 28-day rule relates only to the re-entry ban: if you leave within 28 days of your visa expiring, you may avoid the automatic 3-year ban. But you still have an overstay on your permanent immigration record.
A visa overstay remains on your immigration record permanently. Even if you leave within 28 days, future visa applications may be affected.
What to do if you have overstayed
If you realise your visa has expired:
Do not panic, but act immediately
Contact the Department of Home Affairs to arrange voluntary departure
Request a Bridging Visa E to regularise your status while arranging departure
Leave Australia as soon as possible to minimise the impact on future applications
Voluntary departure generally results in better outcomes than being found and detained. It demonstrates cooperation with immigration authorities and may reduce the severity of any re-entry ban.
Can you leave Australia and apply for a new visa offshore instead?
Yes. Leaving and applying again from outside Australia is a legitimate option. It often makes sense when condition 8503 blocks an onshore application, or when you want a faster decision. Offshore Subclass 600 applications take a median of around 9 days, which is quicker than onshore.
How does the leave-and-return strategy work?
Instead of applying for a new visa onshore, you:
Leave Australia before your current visa expires
Apply for a new visitor visa from outside Australia
Return to Australia on the new visa
What are the advantages of leaving and reapplying offshore?
Offshore applications process faster: Our FOI data shows offshore Subclass 600 applications have a median processing time of 9 days, compared to 38 days onshore
Avoids bridging visa complications: No need for BVB if you want to travel
Fresh assessment: Each application is assessed independently
What are the disadvantages?
No guarantee of approval: Your new application could be refused
Gap in your stay: You must leave Australia and wait for the new visa
Pattern recognition: Repeatedly leaving and returning to "reset" your stay raises red flags
Why are repeated "visa runs" risky?
If the Department believes you are using visitor visas to effectively live in Australia rather than visit temporarily, your applications will face increased scrutiny. Signs that trigger concern:
Multiple back-to-back visitor visas over several years
Minimal time spent outside Australia between visits
No clear ties to any other country
Staying close to the maximum duration each time
Tern Tip
If you are visiting Australia frequently, consider whether a different visa (such as a parent visa, partner visa, or long-term visa) might be more appropriate for your situation. Using visitor visas to circumvent the immigration system rarely ends well.
Can you do a "border run" on a multi-entry ETA or eVisitor?
If you hold a multiple-entry ETA or eVisitor, you can technically leave Australia (even just to New Zealand for a day) and return for a fresh 3-month stay. However:
Immigration officers have discretion to question your genuine temporary intent
A pattern of minimal departures followed by immediate returns looks suspicious
You may be refused entry at the border
As a general guideline, spending at least 2 weeks outside Australia before returning on an ETA or eVisitor reduces the appearance of manipulation.
Which factors affect visitor visa extension approvals?
The biggest factors are how specific your reason to stay is, your past visa record, your finances, your ongoing ties to home, and your nationality. Not every application is equal.
How important is the reason for your extension?
The most important factor is why you want to stay longer. Strong reasons include:
Attending a specific event (wedding, graduation, funeral)
Medical treatment that requires additional time
Visiting a family member who is unwell
Completing a short course (under 3 months)
Weaker reasons include:
"I'm having a good time"
Vague plans to "see more of Australia"
No specific reason provided
How does your compliance history affect the decision?
If you have previously overstayed a visa anywhere in the world, or been refused a visa, this will be considered. A clean immigration record works in your favour.
How much money do you need to show?
Can you support yourself for the extended period? The Department wants to see:
Bank statements showing sufficient funds
Ongoing income (if receiving from overseas)
Health insurance for the additional period
What ties to home should you evidence?
The genuine temporary entrant requirement does not disappear just because you are already in Australia. You still need to demonstrate you will leave. Evidence includes:
Employment waiting for you at home
Property ownership
Family obligations (children, elderly parents)
Return flight booking
How does your nationality affect extension processing?
While it should not matter, nationality affects processing scrutiny. Applicants from countries with higher overstay rates face longer processing times and tougher evidence requirements for extensions.
How can Tern help with a visitor visa extension?
Tern's platform checks your visa conditions, helps you build strong evidence, cross-checks your documents against your form answers, and writes a personalised cover letter explaining your reasons to stay. Extending sounds simple, but applicants make avoidable mistakes: applying too late, misreading their visa conditions, or not giving enough evidence for a longer stay.
Our platform helps you:
Check your visa conditions to confirm you are eligible to apply
Prepare strong evidence that addresses the Department's concerns
Catch discrepancies automatically by extracting facts from your documents and cross-referencing them against your form answers, so a case officer does not find them first
Present a clear narrative with a personalised cover letter that explains your reasons for extending
Every application is reviewed before submission, and complex cases receive direct lawyer review.
Frequently asked questions
Final thoughts: how do you extend your stay successfully?
Check for condition 8503 first. Apply for a fresh Subclass 600 before your current visa expires. Give a clear, specific reason to stay. And avoid any pattern that looks like using visitor visas to live in Australia. Extending is possible for most visitors, but you need to understand the rules and act before your visa expires. There is no simple "extend" button: this is a fresh visa application that has to stand on its own.
The key points to remember:
Check your visa conditions (especially 8503) before making plans
Apply before your current visa expires to receive bridging visa protection
Provide strong evidence of your reasons for staying and your intent to eventually leave
Understand that repeated extensions attract scrutiny
Your nationality sets your baseline scrutiny level, but how you prepare your application determines the outcome. A well-documented extension request with clear reasons and strong home ties will be assessed favourably, regardless of where your passport is from.
Before you apply:
Use our Visa Time Checker to estimate how long your extension might take
Check your Country Risk Profile to understand the evidence requirements for your nationality
Ready to extend your stay? Start your application with Tern. Our platform guides you through exactly what evidence you need, automatically cross-checks your documents against your form answers, and writes a personalised cover letter that frames your reasons for extending.




