How to answer "Have you ever been refused a visa?" if I've had a refusal overturned

How to answer "Have you ever been refused a visa?" if I've had a refusal overturned - I Hate Nothing About You With Red Heart Light

A few years ago, I applied for a UK visa. The visa was initially refused and I had no rights of appeal. However, the refusal letter had some glaring mistakes and I sent an email to the Embassy. The refusal was "overturned" by an ECM.

I am now making an application for a visa which has the question "Have you ever been refused a visa?". How should I answer it?



Best Answer

This is a legal question that needs to be answered by a professional as it depends on the legal details.

In essence, an overturning of a ruling can be "ab initio" or an annulment. In this case, the overturning establishes that, in a legal sense, the initial refusal never happened. In this case, the legally correct answer would be "no".

It can, however, also be a change or reversal, in which case the initial refusal happened, but was later retracted. In this case, the legally correct answer would be "yes", plus an explanation that the refusal was overturned.

Without a legal experts opinion on this question, I stand with MadHatter in that you should err on the side of caution, even if it means writing two additional sentences.




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How do you answer Have you ever been refused a US visa or been refused admission to the United States or withdrawn your application for admission at the port of entry?

Have you ever been refused a U.S. Visa, or been refused admission to the United States, or withdrawn your application for admission at the port of entry? You have to answer \u201cYES\u201d if your US visa has been denied at the US embassy. You have to answer \u201cNO\u201d if the denial was made by USCIS and not the US embassy.

Have you ever had a visa application refused?

So you simply state No, you have never been refused a visa. Most countries will have a system in place wherein all records pertaining to your last application will be recorded and stored. Do visa officers make decisions visa decisions in advance before the applicant appears in person for visa interview?

How do you explain a visa rejection?

Visa refusal refers to the act of denying your entry into to a particular country by rejecting your visa application. Visa rejection may happen when you fail to prove your eligibility to visit a particular country.

How do you address a visa refusal?

State the date when received the visa denial decision. Explain the reasons why your visa was refused, as given in the rejection letter you got from the embassy (if you did)...How to Write an Appeal Letter for Visa Rejection
  • Name & Surname.
  • Passport Number.
  • Full address.
  • Date of Birth.
  • Place of Birth.
  • Email.
  • Phone Number.




  • Canada Tourist Visa | Have you ever been refused a visa or permit... | How to answer this question?




    More answers regarding how to answer "Have you ever been refused a visa?" if I've had a refusal overturned

    Answer 2

    You need to declare it.

    The fact that the decision was overturned does not mean that the refusal never happened. The question about whether you have ever been refused a visa is quite clear.

    For further explanation: this question is asked so that the Entry Clearance Officer can readily identify your past applications and confirm that you are the same person right there at the application stage - instead of having to wait until you provide fingerprints. A person can change their passport, and even change their name - but their fingerprint record will always match. Therefore they will know about your past application, whether you declare it or not. The declaration removes any possible ambiguity over whether you’re the same individual who matches a name/DOB search at the pre-fingerprint stage.

    As others have pointed out, a positive declaration will not cause you trouble. They will be able to easily see what happened with the reversal of the decision. Moreover, as this new application is a subsequent application - being made from abroad - they will be able to see that you did in fact comply with the conditions of your previous visa by leaving the country.

    Making the declaration, and adding a straightforward explanatory note, will not hinder your application.

    Deliberately trying to conceal your previous refusal will likely result in a refusal, due to a deceitful application. The one thing Immigration Officers and Entry Clearance Officers frown upon most, is an attempt to lie to them.

    Just be straight about it and you’ll have no problem.

    Source: former Immigration Officer.

    Answer 3

    Your initial question and the highly upvoted answer imply you submitting another UK visa application. However, a comment you gave on that answer implies you applying for a third country’s visa. The UK case has been sufficiently (imho) covered by MadHatter’s answer; instead here I will focus on the third country case.

    In general, I consider every visa application something whose approval is very important to me but not to the country I’m applying at. If I don’t receive a visa, there goes my holiday/business contract/conference/summer school/etc — these are very high risks to me personally. On the other hand, the country gets thousands or millions of applications annually. If they don’t accept you — well, that’s one visitor less but one we probably could have done without. Their high-risk case is accepting you as you could do all the things they want to prevent. (What exactly they want to prevent depends on the country; North Korea will have vastly different standards from the UK, to name to examples on different ends of the scale.)

    Since it is me who wants the visa, I want to paint myself in the best colours when applying. However, there is a massive information imbalance between the country I’m applying at and me. They usually have access not only to the history of all visa applications posted to them but possibly also to parts of other countries’ databases. They have a secret service and maybe agreements with other countries for sharing information. This is especially the case for the Five Eyes, for which you should, as a rule, assume every one knows everything.

    Now naively, I may assume that classifying the overturned refusal as never having happened would be a good thing. The argument is clear: the ‘expected’ answer to this question is a ‘no, I have never been refused’ and any variation of ‘yes’ may immediately raise eyebrows and harm your case. However, remember the information imbalance. It’s not unlikely for them to be able to ask the right people, pull up your information and note that there has been a refusal. Henceforth, they usually won’t care if it has been overturned later, they will see this as having proven you a liar. This damages your chances everywhere.

    On the other hand, if you answer ‘yes, I have been refused somewhere previously’ and then proceed to briefly point out the details (i.e. that the refusal was overturned), this paints you as

    • being honest
    • probably actually a genuine visitor as another country revised its decision (rare)

    Weighing the potential costs and benefits of both routes, I would very likely choose to declare the previous refusal along with the overturning and provide a (very!) brief description of the process. If there is no text field near the question, there may be one at the end of the application or I may append a supporting document.


    I also read you saying

    Why should I have to explain someone else's mistake?

    Again, this is the risk imbalance that I outlined in the second paragraph. It is you who wants the visa and you have good reasons for it. You are potentially losing a great opportunity. The country you are applying to is losing a single visitor; something they probably can’t even write in a percentage — even if you are planning on bringing your family. They don’t care if you get the visa. But you do. So you want to explain any unclear circumstances.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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