Student visa saved after an attendance concern

A Chinese student's class attendance had dropped to around 60% while he was unwell for a long stretch, and Immigration New Zealand signalled it would decline his next visa. We explained his genuine reasons for the absences and his strong record otherwise, and the visa was granted.

Visa type

Fee Paying Student Visa

Issue Type

Low attendance

Turnaround

45 days

Background

[Applicant A] is a Chinese student whose attendance in his most recent course had fallen to about 60%, mainly because of a long period of illness for which he saw his doctor several times over a few months. The matter was first lodged with another adviser, then passed to us to respond to Immigration’s concerns.

Our approach

We responded with a full submission. We explained his prolonged illness and backed it with his record of doctor’s visits. We gave helpful context: coming from a medical system that treats illness more aggressively, he had expected to recover faster than he did under New Zealand’s more conservative approach. We pointed to the things that showed he was a capable student, as he had finished the course despite being unwell and had previously attended at 93%, and we set out his goal of training as a chef, an occupation then on the skill shortage list. As a safety net, we also asked that he be granted a short visitor visa if Immigration still felt it had to decline, so he would not fall into unlawful status.

Outcome

The Student Visa was granted despite the attendance history. A well-documented medical explanation, a strong overall record, and a clear future plan reframed the low attendance as a one-off difficult period rather than a pattern.

Lessons

For a student attendance problem, the case turns on whether the absences were genuine. We documented [Applicant A]’s illness with his record of doctor’s visits, which is the strongest kind of evidence, and kept the overall account consistent.

Explaining the difference between health systems helped make sense of the long illness. Coming from a system that treats illness more aggressively, he had expected a faster recovery than New Zealand’s more cautious approach gave him. The point was not that New Zealand’s care fell short, but that the mismatch in expectations led to a drawn-out illness.

Evidence that he performs well when healthy was key. His earlier 93% attendance and his completion of the course despite being unwell showed the low attendance was a specific difficult period, not how he normally studies.

Asking for a short visitor visa as a backup protects the client. If Immigration had felt it still had to decline, the fallback would have kept him in lawful status and preserved the option of applying again, so we built it into the response.