A refused UK visa is not the end of the road. For most visitor visas there is no appeal, so the answer is a stronger fresh application that fixes every point in your refusal letter. We read the letter with you, work out what went wrong, and re-prepare, re-translate and reorganise your whole pack — so the next application is clearly stronger.
Getting a refusal is upsetting, but it is more common than people think — and there is almost always a clear next step. A refusal does not ban you from applying again, and there is no waiting period.
The big question is whether your route is one you APPEAL or one you simply REAPPLY for — and this is where the old advice that "UK visas can't be appealed" gets people into trouble. It is true for visitor visas, but a spouse, fiancé(e) or parent refusal usually CAN be appealed, with a strict 28-day deadline you must not miss.
This page explains exactly which path applies to your refusal, how to read your refusal letter, the most common reasons Thai applications are refused, how to ask the Home Office why you were refused, the duty to declare past refusals, and what we re-do so the next application is genuinely stronger.
A visitor refusal normally has no right of appeal — the route forward is a stronger fresh application. A spouse, fiancé(e) or parent (human-rights) refusal usually CAN be appealed within about 28 days. There is no waiting period to reapply, but using deception can mean a re-entry ban of up to 10 years.
This is the most important thing to get right, because the wrong assumption can waste your money or cost you a deadline.
Broadly, UK refusals fall into three groups — and your decision letter is the final word on which one is yours, so read it first.
For a standard visitor visa there is normally no right of appeal, and usually no administrative review either, unless your application included a human rights claim. So waiting for an appeal or writing letters of complaint rarely changes anything.
The only court challenge for a pure visitor refusal is "judicial review" in the higher courts — but that only looks at whether the decision was unlawful, not whether the officer should have said yes, and it is slow and expensive.
For almost everyone, the route that actually works is a fresh application that is clearly stronger than the one that was refused: one that takes each reason in the refusal letter and answers it head-on with better evidence and a clearer story. It is not about arguing with the decision; it is about removing the reasons it was made. Always check your own letter, because it states exactly what (if anything) you can challenge.
This is the part the old advice gets badly wrong, and missing it can do real harm. A refusal of a spouse, unmarried partner, fiancé(e) or parent-of-a-British-child application is normally treated as a refusal of a human rights claim — and those usually carry a RIGHT OF APPEAL to the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber). That is a proper independent judge who can overturn the decision, not just the Home Office looking again.
The catch is the deadline: when you are appealing from outside the UK, you normally have only about 28 days from the date the decision was sent to you. Miss it and you may lose the right to appeal altogether (the tribunal can sometimes accept a late appeal if you explain why, but never rely on that).
So the moment a family refusal arrives, note the date on the letter and act — do not let the 28 days drift while you decide. In many family cases you can choose between appealing and simply reapplying with a stronger pack; which is better depends on your facts and on what the refusal letter says, so read it carefully first.
Appealing from outside the UK, you normally have only about 28 days from the date the decision was sent — miss it and you may lose the right to appeal altogether.
If your refused application was a points-based one — most commonly a Skilled Worker or Student visa — there is a third option called an administrative review. This is a request for the Home Office to look again at the decision because of a caseworking error: a mistake in how they applied the rules or counted your points.
It is NOT a chance to add documents you forgot, and it is not an independent court — it is the Home Office checking its own work. Your decision letter will say whether administrative review is available and how long you have (for entry-clearance decisions this is normally 28 days).
If the refusal was simply because something was missing or unconvincing rather than a Home Office error, a fresh, stronger application is usually the better route. As always, the letter is the final word on what you can do.
Whichever path applies, everything starts with the letter the Home Office sent you. It sets out the exact reasons you were refused, usually pointing to the specific paragraphs of the rules that were not met, AND it tells you whether you can appeal or ask for a review and by when.
Read it slowly and write down each separate reason — there is often more than one — and note the date, because any deadline runs from it. Do not skim it or assume you already know why.
Every point on that list has to be answered in the next application; if you fix two reasons but ignore the third, the result is likely to be the same. If anything is in legal language you cannot follow, that is exactly the kind of thing we translate into plain Thai and English and explain to you point by point.
For Thai applicants, almost every visitor refusal comes down to one or more of three things. First, weak or unexplained money: bank statements that do not match your stated income, or a large lump sum that appeared just before you applied with no explanation — this looks borrowed and is one of the biggest causes of refusal.
Second, not enough proof that you will return home: the officer is not convinced you have strong enough reasons to come back to Thailand — a stable job, family, property, or studies. Third, an unclear plan: vague travel dates, no real itinerary, or a trip that does not seem to fit your circumstances.
Family-visa refusals more often turn on the financial requirement, missing or wrongly-formatted evidence, the relationship not being shown clearly, or a missing item such as the TB certificate or English test. We go through each of these with you and gather the evidence that answers it directly.
Every UK application asks about your full immigration history, and you must declare ALL previous refusals — both UK refusals and refusals by other countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia and the Schengen countries. This trips people up, because some assume only UK history counts; it does not.
The refusal itself is not a ban, and one honest refusal is judged on its own merits. What does cause lasting harm is dishonesty: hiding a refusal, giving false information, or using a fake or altered document is treated as deception, and that can lead to a re-entry ban of up to 10 years, during which UK applications are refused automatically.
The Home Office can see far more of your history than people expect, so the only safe approach is to declare everything and present the truth in the strongest, clearest way. The goal is never to hide the earlier refusal — it is to put forward a genuinely stronger, fully honest case that an officer can say yes to.
One honest refusal is judged on its own merits and is not a ban — but hiding it or using a false document is deception, which can lead to a 10-year ban.
If your refusal letter is short and you are not certain why you were turned down, you have a right to see your own records. You can send the Home Office a request for your case notes — this is called a Subject Access Request — and they must give you the information they hold about your application, including the officer's notes.
It is free and you do not need a lawyer to ask. If you do not have a UK address, you make the request by email to the Home Office, and they normally respond within one month.
The notes often reveal the real concern in plain terms, which tells you exactly what to strengthen. We can help you make this request and read the notes back to you in Thai so you know precisely what to fix before you reapply.
One thing has changed that often confuses people reapplying: a successful UK visa is no longer a sticker (a "vignette") glued into your passport. It is now a digital visa — an eVisa. After a successful decision you receive an email telling you how to set up a free online UKVI account, and your permission to travel and stay is held in that account.
You prove your status by generating a "share code" (valid 90 days) that you give to an airline, employer or landlord — there is nothing stamped in the passport to lose. So when you reapply and succeed, do not wait for a sticker that will not come: check the decision email and set up your UKVI account.
We explain this step in plain Thai so nothing is missed at the airport.
A good fresh application begins with a complete, well-organised set of documents that answers every point in your refusal. Use the checklist below to start rebuilding your pack — it saves on this device and prints.
We will then review it against your refusal letter and fill in what was missing. (The checklist is geared to a visitor reapplication; if your refusal was a spouse, fiancé(e) or other family route, tell us and we'll send the right list.)
There is no waiting period, but rushing back in the next day with the same pack will not help.
Give yourself enough time to gather better evidence, then plan your submission around the usual decision time — a visitor decision is normally about 3 weeks (around 15 working days) from your biometrics appointment, while a settlement (family) decision usually takes around 12 weeks. Use the planner below to work out a sensible date to reapply.
When you reapply with us, we treat it as a fresh build, not a copy of the application that was refused. We read your refusal letter (and your case notes, if you request them) to pin down each reason, then re-prepare your forms, re-translate your documents to a certified standard, and reorganise your whole pack so every point is answered clearly.
This is document preparation — it improves the completeness and accuracy of what you submit. It is not a guarantee of the outcome, which only the Home Office decides, and we do not provide regulated immigration advice or assess your chances.
The cost of reapplying depends on which visa you are applying for — a visitor visa and a spouse visa have very different government fees — and your service cost depends on how much we need to re-do.
Remember that the UK application fee is paid again for each new application and is not refunded for a refusal; any health surcharge (IHS) you paid is normally refunded if you are refused.
Rather than guess, start with a free document check: send us your refusal letter and we will read it, tell you plainly what needs fixing, and come back with a clear plan and a fixed price — with no obligation.
Last reviewed: June 2026. Figures, deadlines and processes change — always confirm the current position on gov.uk, and treat your own decision letter as the final word on which options apply to you.
Tell us about your refusal and what the letter said — we'll come back with a clear plan and a price to reapply. No obligation.
Your details are kept private (PDPA / UK-GDPR). General information, not regulated immigration advice.