art-review-without-oral
May 18, 2026

ART Review without Oral Hearing: What the Administrative Review Tribunal Amendment Means for Visa Applicants

From 18 May 2026, an important change starts affecting how some migration review matters can be handled at the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART). The law behind this is the Administrative Review Tribunal and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2026, which Parliament passed in February 2026 and which received Royal Assent on 9 February 2026. Parliament’s bill record says the Act amends the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 and the Migration Act 1958 to expand the Tribunal’s ability to decide some matters without holding an oral hearing.

From 18 May 2026, some ART visa review cases may be decided without an oral hearing, depending on the kind of case and the Tribunal’s view of what is appropriate. That does not mean every migration review loses a hearing. It means the system now gives the Tribunal broader power to decide some matters on the papers, which makes decision-ready review applications far more important than before.

The biggest change for migrants is that some reviews may move more on documents than on spoken explanation

Before this change, many migrants assumed that if they reached the Tribunal, they would definitely get a chance to explain the case in person or at least in a live hearing setting. The amendment means that assumption is no longer safe for every type of review. Parliament’s own summary says the law expands the ART’s ability to determine matters without an oral hearing.

This does not mean every migration case will now be decided without a hearing. But it does mean that some visa applicants may no longer be able to rely on a later hearing to fix a weak review application, missing evidence, poor explanation, or badly organised documents.

What this means in practical terms

Old expectationNew reality from 18 May 2026
“I can explain it properly at the hearing later.”Some matters may be decided without an oral hearing.
“My written application only needs the basics.”Your written review case and evidence may carry much more weight.
“I will upload extra documents slowly over time.”Delays or weak preparation can become riskier.

Student visa, graduate visa, partner visa and refusal review applicants should all take this seriously

The Act is especially important for migrants because ART review is often the next step after a visa refusal or cancellation review pathway opens. If the Tribunal now has broader power to decide some matters without oral hearing, then the people most affected are the ones who were depending on that live stage to explain:

Why “decision-ready” review applications matter much more after 18 May 2026

If a case may be decided without oral hearing, then the Tribunal file itself has to do more of the work. That means the application, the written explanation, the supporting documents, the chronology, and the evidence all need to make sense from the start.

The review file now needs to answer questions earlier

Case issueWhy stronger written preparation matters now
Missing factsYou may not get a later live chance to fix them
Weak explanationThe papers may carry more weight than before
Unclear evidenceA decision-maker may rely more heavily on what is already filed
InconsistenciesThey become harder to recover from if no oral hearing is held

This is not about scaring applicants. It is about changing their strategy. From 18 May 2026, the safer mindset is: prepare your ART review like it may need to stand strongly on its own documents.

This change does not mean migrants lose all review rights

It is important not to overstate the law.

The amendment expands the Tribunal’s ability to decide certain matters without oral hearing. It does not mean every applicant automatically loses review rights. It also does not mean every matter will become paper-only. The correct and accurate way to explain it is that the Tribunal now has broader ability to handle some matters in that way.

That distinction matters because a lot of online commentary becomes too dramatic. The better message is:

  • review rights still matter
  • ART still matters
  • but applicants should no longer assume a live hearing will always be the stage that saves the case

The real migration impact is on preparation quality, not just procedure

For many migrants, the 2026 ART amendment will matter less because of legal wording and more because of how it changes behaviour.

Applicants who submit weakly prepared review applications may now be taking a bigger risk than before. Those who organise their evidence properly, explain the case clearly, and address the real problem early are likely to be in a stronger position.

What visa applicants should do differently after 18 May 2026

Better approachWhy it matters now
Prepare a full written case earlyThe written material may be more decisive
Organise documents clearlyStrong structure helps the Tribunal read the case faster
Explain inconsistencies directlyWeak gaps may not be rescued later in a hearing
Do not rely on “I’ll explain later”That assumption is riskier after the amendment starts
Get proper review strategy before lodgingTiming and structure matter more

Why this matters for migration agents, sponsors and applicants alike

This change is not only about the Tribunal. It also affects how migration advisers, sponsoring employers, education providers and visa applicants should think about refusal and review risk in the first place.

If review becomes more document-driven in some cases, then the best protection is often not a better hearing strategy later. It is a stronger original visa application now and a stronger review file if things go wrong.

That is especially relevant in 2026 because many migration pathways are already becoming more selective, more evidence-based and more integrity-focused. This ART change fits that wider direction.

The easiest way to explain the 2026 ART amendment

If you want one simple line for readers, it is this:

From 18 May 2026, some ART migration review cases may be decided without an oral hearing, so visa applicants need stronger written explanations and better-organised evidence from the start.

That is the cleanest and most useful way to explain what the law means in real life.

Aussizz Group has helped 200,000+ applicants to their Australian Dreams, and this is exactly why updated migration strategy matters. If you are lodging an ART review, responding after a refusal, or trying to understand how the Administrative Review Tribunal and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2026 affects your visa position from 18 May 2026, book a consultation with Aussizz Group and get guidance based on the current rules, not older assumptions.

FAQs

Q1. What is the Administrative Review Tribunal and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2026?

It is an Australian law that amends the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024 and the Migration Act 1958 to expand the ART’s ability to decide some matters without holding an oral hearing.

Q2. When does the Administrative Review Tribunal and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2026 start?

The practical date applicants should plan around is 18 May 2026. Parliament’s official record shows Royal Assent on 9 February 2026, and the latest relevant law compilations run only until 17 May 2026.

Q3. What changes from 18 May 2026 for visa applicants?

Some ART matters may be decided without an oral hearing, which means the written review case and supporting documents become even more important.

Q4. Does this mean every ART migration case will be decided on the papers?

No. The law expands the Tribunal’s ability to decide some matters without oral hearing, but it does not mean every case will automatically be handled that way.

Q5. Why is this important for student visa refusal reviews?

Because applicants should no longer assume a later oral hearing will always be available to fix weak explanations, missing documents, or confusing facts. The written case may matter more than before.

Q6. Why is this important for partner visa and other migration reviews?

For the same reason: if a matter can be decided without oral hearing, then relationship evidence, sponsor details, timelines and supporting documents need to be stronger from the beginning.

Q7. Did Parliament pass this law already?

Yes. Parliament’s official bills record says the Act passed both Houses and received Royal Assent on 9 February 2026.

Q8. Is this law about creating the ART?

No. The ART was already established under the Administrative Review Tribunal Act 2024. This 2026 Act changes how some matters can be determined.

Q9. What is the safest strategy after 18 May 2026?

Prepare review applications as if the written evidence and explanation may need to stand strongly on their own. Do not rely on a future oral hearing to rescue a weak case.

Q10. Where can applicants get help understanding how this affects their review?

Applicants should get advice quickly if they are facing a refusal or ART review, because timing, structure and evidence now matter even more from 18 May 2026 onward.

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