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Australia's accompanying visa problem

1. Did the Australian Immigration Service ask you to have a chest X-ray at the end of the year? Or did you do it when you went to the physical examination yourself? If you do it yourself, you won't admit it.

All provinces and cities in Australia have designated medical examination hospitals. When your accompanying visa is submitted (one week or so at the earliest, one day), you will be informed to go to the designated hospital for physical examination, and your physical examination results will be directly transmitted to the Immigration Bureau by electronic means.

In addition, when applying for a visa (including renewal), the medical examination results that have been more than one year are not recognized and need to be re-examined.

2. The accompanying visa itself is a binding visa of the same kind (for example, if your husband gets a 573 visa, your visa type will be 573). Theoretically, the main applicant is going to Australia with the auxiliary applicant, so it is illegal to go there after half a year. Of course it can be solved this way. Your husband will go to Australia first, and you can apply for a visa to accompany him after half a year. This operation is also in line with Australian regulations.

In addition, please note that all accompanying visa applicants can apply for accompanying visas in Australia only if the remaining time of the main applicant's visa is greater than or equal to 12 months, otherwise they have no right to apply.