How We Approach Negative Decisions
A negative residence permit decision usually results from incomplete information or conflicting elements in the application. The first step is a full review of the decision to identify the exact reasons and determine whether the issue is factual, documentary or interpretative. Once these elements are clear, the case can be rebuilt properly.
We reorganise the evidence, correct inconsistencies between applicant and employer submissions, add missing documents and prepare a structured explanation that addresses each point in the decision. This allows the authority to reassess the case based on clear, complete and verified information.
Reconsideration Requests
Reconsideration is useful when the refusal is based on missing documents or misunderstandings. Typical examples include income documentation issues, employer submission errors, unclear family-tie certificates, study progress misunderstandings or variable-hour employment questions. A well-prepared reconsideration adds the missing elements and explains the corrected situation clearly.
Administrative Court Appeals
An appeal is appropriate when the key issue is the interpretation of facts or the weight given to evidence. This includes salary assessments, the nature of employment, family dependency, income stability or the evaluation of studies or work hours. Appeals require detailed written arguments supported by organised evidence and a clear timeline.
Prohibition of Enforcement
When removal becomes possible during an ongoing appeal, we can request a prohibition of enforcement. This prevents execution of the decision while the appeal is reviewed. The request must show strong ties, active employment or studies, and clear reasons why removal before the final decision would be disproportionate.
Case Reconstruction
We rebuild the case by preparing a clean and consistent evidence package. This includes corrected timelines, updated employer confirmations, financial evidence in the correct format, notarised or translated certificates and structured explanations addressing each finding in the refusal. A well-organised case gives the authority what it needs to reassess accurately.