In a landscape where immigration outcomes often hang by a thread, AV Immigration Services has quietly emerged as a trusted name among applicants facing the stress of rejections and resubmissions. While many firms advertise high-level success rates on initial applications, few put their name behind the tougher terrain: appeals. Yet, the latest internal quarterly report from AV Immigration Services shows something rarely seen in the industry a 95.3% success rate on appealed Permanent Residency cases, a figure that’s beginning to draw quiet attention within legal and settlement circles alike.

What makes this number more than just a statistic is the kind of cases that get to the appeal stage. These are often files burdened by missing documentation, misunderstood eligibility criteria, or technical errors that have slipped past both client and consultant. The fact that AV Immigration Services is not only taking on these cases but consistently converting them into approved outcomes suggests more than just process knowledge it reflects a depth of legal insight and case strategy that’s often honed over decades, not years.
Though AV Immigration Services may appear new in terms of branding, the core team behind it brings with them over 20 years of experience in the global immigration ecosystem. The firm was assembled by professionals who have previously worked with some of the most rigorous immigration jurisdictions, handling everything from work permits and PR pathways to refusal reversals and legal escalations. That depth shows, not just in statistics, but in how clients describe their interactions thorough, unhurried, transparent, and grounded in real policy knowledge.
According to senior case strategist Anisha Verma*, the team spends considerable time not just correcting the errors from prior filings but also preparing clients for what comes next. “An appeal isn’t just a paperwork exercise it’s a psychological reset for most applicants. We treat it that way. Our job is not only to win the case but to rebuild their confidence in the system,” she says. This holistic approach is part of the reason AV Immigration Services often receives referrals not just from satisfied clients but from other consultants and lawyers who don’t handle appeals in-house.
Part of the firm’s success also comes from its document vetting protocols. Every appeal file undergoes what the team calls a “reverse engineering check,” where former decisions are analyzed line-by-line against federal guidelines and court precedents. This isn’t automated. These are done by seasoned professionals, many of whom have worked on both sides of the immigration counter. Their inside-out understanding of how immigration officers interpret ambiguity is a clear advantage.
But success in appeals isn’t only about knowing the law. It’s about timing, empathy, and context. Immigration policies shift, officer discretion plays a role, and human stories get buried under forms and codes. AV Immigration Services has made it a practice to bring those stories back to the forefront. In one notable case, a client whose application was rejected due to supposed "lack of proof of settlement funds" was able to reverse the decision after AV’s team meticulously reconstructed a timeline of banking transfers, combined it with a strong affidavit from the employer, and positioned it within a cultural context unfamiliar to the visa officer. The appeal was approved within 27 days.
There’s also a noticeable lack of boastfulness in how the firm presents its numbers. The quarterly report isn’t a sales tool it’s an internal practice, compiled to study patterns and improve internal benchmarks. That it found its way into public view was a byproduct of transparency rather than PR strategy. Still, the implications are hard to ignore. As more applicants navigate complex immigration systems and face rejections despite meeting basic eligibility, firms like AV Immigration Services — that choose to engage in the harder fight rather than only the easy wins — will continue to stand apart.


