Australia


Everyone travelling to Australia must present a valid and approved travel document as evidence of their identity and nationality. The most common and preferred travel document is a passport, but other types of travel documents may also be accepted.
Australian citizens have an automatic right of entry to Australia, and do not require a visa. Australian citizens need only to present the following documents to officers in immigration clearance:
  • a valid Australian passport or other acceptable travel document
  • a completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card.
See: Passenger cards

Australians who hold dual or multiple nationalities should hold an Australian passport and use it to enter or leave Australia, even when using a foreign passport overseas. The only exception is where they have been issued with an Australian Declaratory Visa.
See: Australian Declaratory Visa (ADV)

Most New Zealand citizens are granted an electronic Special Category Visa (SCV) on arrival in Australia, subject to meeting health and character requirements.
To be eligible for the Special Category Visa, New Zealand citizens need to present the following documents to officers in immigration clearance:
  • a valid New Zealand passport
  • a completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card, including health and character declaration.

New Zealand citizens who hold a travel document other than a New Zealand passport are not eligible to be granted a Special Category Visa on arrival, and therefore should apply for a visa prior to travelling to Australia.
New Zealand citizens with tuberculosis or criminal convictions may not be eligible for a Special Category Visa. These New Zealand citizens should approach the nearest Australian immigration office to discuss their situation before travelling to Australia so as to avoid possible delay or being refused entry at the border.
New Zealand citizens may also be eligible to apply for a range of other visas appropriate to their circumstances, or for Australian citizenship.


Australian Citizenship

All travelers other than Australian and New Zealand citizens need to present the following documents to officers in immigration clearance:
  • a valid passport or other acceptable travel document
  • a valid visa or authority to enter Australia (including electronic visas)
  • a completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card, including health and character declaration.

Anyone who arrives without a valid travel document, visa or authority to enter Australia, may be refused entry to Australia or delayed until their identity and claims to enter Australia have been confirmed.

There are different requirements for the following travellers:
  • members of Armed Forces
  • civilian employees of specific Armed Forces
  • partners or dependant relatives of members or civilian employees of specific Armed Forces

1. Members of Armed Forces
The details below apply only to military personnel from the following countries: Antigua, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Brunei, Canada, Fiji, Grenada, Jamaica, Malaysia, Mauritius, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Solomon Islands, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Thailand, Tonga, Tuvalu, United Kingdom and the USA.

Members of the Armed Forces of a country listed above who are traveling on duty do not need to obtain a visa prior to travelling to Australia if the following documents are provided to officers in immigration clearance:
  • Military Identity Document (a valid passport may also be accepted in lieu)
  • Movement Orders
  • A completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card (if arriving at a proclaimed port, such as an international airport).

Military personnel from other countries not mentioned above must obtain a visa prior to traveling to Australia and will need to present standard, non-military travel documents to officers in immigration clearance.
More information is available in the sections above.


2. Civilian employees of specific Armed Forces
Civilian employees of Armed Forces from Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Singapore and the USA and who are traveling for military purposes do not require a visa if the following documents are provided to officers at immigration clearance:

  • a valid passport
  • a Status Certificate (presented in either their passport or on an official letterhead)
  • a completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card (if arriving at a proclaimed port, such as an international airport).

3. Partners or dependent relatives of members or civilian employees of specific Armed Forces
The details below apply only to members or civilian employees of the Armed Forces from the following countries: Antigua, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Brunei, Canada, Fiji, Grenada, Jamaica, Malaysia, Mauritius, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Solomon Islands, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Thailand, Tonga, Tuvalu, United Kingdom and the USA.

Partners or dependent relatives of members or civilian employees of the Armed Forces of countries listed above who are accompanying or joining these Armed Forces members, do not require a visa if the following documents are provided to officers in immigration clearance:
  • a valid passport
  • Movement Orders OR Status Certificate (presented in either their passport or on official letterhead)
  • a signed and completed Incoming Passenger Card (when arriving at a proclaimed port, such as an international airport).

A small number of travelers may have other types of travel documents which are also acceptable for travel to Australia. Holders of these documents will in most cases also require a visa.
The travel documents must be issued by a recognized authority and be acceptable for travel to Australia. The document must have a photograph of the bearer and provide the holder with a re-entry authority to the country of issue, or an entry authority to another country.
Other acceptable travel documents include:
  • Document of Identity (if holder is not an Australian citizen then a visa is required)
  • Certificate of Identity (a visa is required)
  • Document for Travel To Australia – DFTTA (a visa is required. DFTTAs are normally issued to offshore refugee and humanitarian entrants for their initial entry to Australia.)
  • Laissez Passer (a visa is required)
  • Convention Travel Document (such as Titre de Voyage – a visa is required)
  • Documents issued to refugees (a visa is required)
  • ‘Kinderausweis’ issued to German minors – photo of bearer not required (a visa is required)
  • Military documents for military personnel traveling by air (see ‘Documents for foreign military personnel traveling by air’ section above).

The Australian Declaratory Visa (ADV) is an administrative document that resembles a visa. It is issued in limited circumstances to Australian citizens who hold dual nationality only if the applicant:
  • is a dual national under the age of 18 or
  • has an emergency or other situation preventing travel on an Australian passport.

The Australian Declaratory Visa is valid for five years from the date of issue, unless the holder ceases to be an Australian citizen, in which case the holder will need a normal visa to travel to Australia.
Charges apply for this service.

Information is available in a fact sheet for permanent residents of Australia holding a document such as:
  • a Return Resident Visa (RRV)
  • an Authority to Return (ATR)
  • a Return Endorsement (RE).

Applications for a Resident Return Visa can be made online.

Permanent residents of Norfolk Island do not need to apply for a visa before travelling to Australia.
Instead they may apply for a Permanent Resident Norfolk Island Visa (PRNIV) on arrival in Australia by presenting the following documents to officers in immigration clearance:
  • a valid passport endorsed with their Norfolk Island permanent residence status
  • a completed and signed Incoming Passenger Card.

The visa is valid for the duration of the stay in Australia. An application for a new PRNIV is required each time a permanent resident of Norfolk Island arrives in Australia.


-source http://www.immi.gov.au/
There are no comments on this page.