Under Section 17 of the Immigration Act 2009, the Minister of Immigration has the authority to issue Special Directions — instructions that can grant a visa, waive requirements, or override normal immigration rules for a specific person or group of people.
Special Directions exist precisely because immigration law cannot anticipate every human situation. They are a safety valve — an acknowledgement that sometimes the rules produce an outcome that is unjust, and that a higher authority must step in. They are rare, they require exceptional circumstances, and they demand the most persuasive case an adviser can build.
Talk to an AdviserSpecial Directions are reserved for genuinely exceptional cases — where every normal pathway has been exhausted or does not exist, and compelling circumstances demand a different outcome.
Your circumstances are genuine but do not fit any standard visa category — for example, a person with deep ties to New Zealand who cannot qualify for residence or any work visa through normal channels.
Get HelpYou have been through the Immigration and Protection Tribunal, and all formal appeal processes have concluded without a successful outcome — but exceptional humanitarian circumstances remain unaddressed.
Get HelpSituations involving serious medical conditions, risk of harm, severe family hardship, or other extraordinary personal circumstances that the normal immigration framework cannot adequately accommodate.
Get HelpPeople who have lived in New Zealand — often for many years — without lawful status, and whose removal would cause disproportionate hardship to themselves, their families, or their New Zealand–born children.
Get HelpCases that fall through gaps in immigration policy — where the rules as written produce an unintended and unjust outcome, and where a Ministerial direction is the only mechanism to correct it.
Get HelpWhere a Deportation Order has been issued and all other remedies are unavailable, a Special Direction to the Minister is sometimes the last avenue to prevent removal — and requires the strongest possible case.
Get HelpBoth involve the Minister of Immigration — but they operate differently and apply in different situations. Knowing which applies to your case is critical.
A formal written direction from the Minister instructing INZ to grant a visa or waive requirements. It operates outside normal visa rules entirely — the Minister can direct an outcome that the standard policy would not permit.
A request to the Minister to cancel a deportation order on humanitarian grounds. It operates within the deportation framework — the Minister can stop a removal proceeding on compassionate grounds, but does not issue a visa directly.
Unsure which applies to you? We assess your situation and advise on the right pathway.
The Minister of Immigration receives many requests for special consideration. A request that does not stand out — that is generic, unsupported, or does not clearly articulate why this case is exceptional — will not succeed. There is no second chance.
Our advisers approach every Special Direction case with the same rigour as a legal submission. We construct a narrative that is honest, evidence-backed, and precisely targeted at the circumstances that the Minister has the power — and the reason — to act on.
Build Your CaseClearly shows that all normal immigration options have been considered and exhausted — not simply that the applicant prefers a special route.
Medical evidence, family statements, country condition reports, financial records — every claim is backed by specific, credible documentation.
Explains why granting the direction serves — or at least does not undermine — the public interest, including New Zealand's immigration integrity.
Asks for the minimum necessary intervention — a specific visa type, a specific waiver — rather than an open-ended request that is harder to justify.
The submission must be structured, concise, and legally accurate — Ministerial offices see many poorly prepared requests; standing out requires precision.
We review your complete immigration history, all prior decisions, and every option that has been considered — to confirm that a Special Direction is the appropriate pathway and assess realistic prospects.
We advise on the specific direction that should be requested — the right visa type, the right waiver, the precise scope — so the request is clear, targeted, and proportionate.
We build a comprehensive, evidence-backed submission — covering your circumstances, the humanitarian factors, any public interest considerations, and a clear legal basis for the direction requested.
We submit the request to the Minister's office, respond to any follow-up, and continue to represent your interests until a final decision is reached — advising on next steps whatever the outcome.
Think your situation may require a Special Direction? Contact us — we'll give you an honest assessment of your options.
Ask an AdviserSpecial Directions under Section 17 are uncommon — they are reserved for genuinely exceptional cases where the normal immigration system cannot produce a just outcome. However, this does not mean they are unobtainable. With the right circumstances and a well-prepared request, they are a real pathway for people in genuinely extraordinary situations. We advise honestly on whether your case meets the threshold.
In theory, Section 17 can be invoked at any stage — but in practice, the Minister is very unlikely to issue a Special Direction where standard pathways remain available and untested. A compelling Special Direction request almost always demonstrates that normal routes have been genuinely exhausted or do not exist. We assess your full situation and advise on the right sequencing of remedies.
There is no statutory right of appeal against a Ministerial decision not to issue a Special Direction. However, if the decision was made unlawfully — for example, without properly considering relevant factors — a judicial review of that decision may be possible. We advise on whether a judicial review is viable after a declined request.
A Special Direction request does not automatically halt deportation proceedings. However, a substantive, well-prepared request directed to the Minister can in practice cause INZ to pause removal while the matter is under active Ministerial consideration. If deportation is imminent, contact us immediately — we can advise on the most urgent steps to take.
A character waiver is an INZ-level decision that allows a visa to be granted despite character concerns — it operates within the normal visa framework. A Special Direction is a Ministerial power that sits above the normal framework entirely, and can be used for a wide range of situations beyond character issues. Both require compelling cases, but they operate at different levels of the immigration system.
Yes — Section 17 allows the Minister to issue Special Directions for categories or groups of people, not just individuals. This has been used in the past for specific humanitarian situations affecting communities, such as temporary protection for people from countries experiencing conflict or natural disaster. However, most Special Direction requests are made on behalf of individuals with specific circumstances.