You must notify the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) if you plan to move overseas for six months (183 days) or more in a twelve-month period. You must do this within 7 days from the date of leaving Australia. Update your contact details via myGov.
If you were born in Australia and have been ordinarily resident in Australia throughout the first 10 years from your birth, you may already be an Australian citizen and eligible for Evidence of Australian citizenship. Check your eligibility.
All Australian citizens must enter and exit Australia on an Australian passport.
You can lose Australian citizenship if you take steps to renounce it. You may decide to do this because you are a citizen of another country, or you are entitled to become a citizen of another country. There is a detailed process that you must follow.
Travel for three months or longer
The Statutory Declaration must state you are making an application for travel exemption on the basis that you intend to be absent from Australia for more than three months. Evidence may include: confirmed flight itinerary, with return date of at least three months after departure date.
Some foreign governments require visitors to carry passports with at least six months validity beyond their planned stay. You may be refused entry if you do not comply. Well before you travel, you should check the entry requirements of the countries you plan to visit or transit.
Australia has bilateral visa waivers and reciprocal agreements with several countries in the Schengen Area. These agreements may allow you to spend up to 60 or 90 days in the country for tourism, regardless of stays in other Schengen countries.
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.
Person 60 years or over.
The Australian Government is committed to protecting and promoting traditional rights and freedoms, including freedom of speech, opinion, religion, association and movement.
Border arrangements
Unvaccinated Australian citizens and permanent residents can leave and enter Australia without an individual travel exemption. Travellers entering or leaving Australia do not require a negative pre-departure test and cruise vessels can enter Australian territory.
As an Australian tax resident you are required to pay Australian income tax on your worldwide income. This applies whether you are living in Australia or are temporarily moving overseas. Of course, you don't want to pay tax twice on the same income. That is why the government has tax arrangements with most countries.
If you have a Child Support Case
If you have a child support debt we may issue a Departure Prohibition Order. It'll stop you from leaving Australia until you either: pay your debt in full. enter into an acceptable payment arrangement.
Children born in Australia, with a birth certificate issued in Australia, are not automatically Australian citizens or Australian permanent residents. To be an Australian citizen, at least one parent must be an Australian citizen or permanent resident of Australia at the time of the child's birth.
You could be eligible for Australian citizenship by descent if you were born outside Australia and one (or both) of your parents at the time of your birth was also an Australian citizen at that time.
Citizens and permanent residents of Australia (who do not have certain criminal convictions) may visit, live and work in New Zealand indefinitely.
What Are the Consequences That Stateless People Encounter? Without citizenship, stateless people have no legal protection and no right to vote, and they often lack access to education, employment, health care, registration of birth, marriage or death, and property rights.
As a permanent resident, you are generally eligible for naturalization after five years. This is the most common way that people apply to become a U.S. citizen. To qualify, you must have lived in the U.S. continuously for the five years immediately preceding the date you file Form N-400, Application for Naturalization.
Yes, if you can show us that: visa waiting times would cause significant travel delays if you only had one passport, or. a destination country won't accept a passport showing evidence of travel to a third country, or. you have another good reason to need an additional passport.
According to the Henley Passport Index, the Australian passport is considered the 9th most powerful passport in terms of travel freedom. That means that at the present time, Australian nationals can travel to around 100 countries visa-free and more than 30 countries with a visa on arrival.
Current passport and the passport (or passenger arrival card) you used to enter Australia for the first time. Photo ID issued in Australia. At least 3 documents proving you have been living continuously in Australia since arrival (e.g. utility records, tax bills, employment contracts).
The 90-day rule doesn't apply to those holding a dual intent visa (H, L visas). During the first 90 days upon entering the U.S., a “single-intent” visa holder can not: Engage in unauthorized employment. Enroll in an unauthorized course of study (without a proper student visa)
Staying for 90 days— means that as soon as you enter any country within the Schengen area, your 90-days clock starts. This counts for every country in the zone. For example, let's say you spend 30 days in Germany, then 30 days in France, and 30 days in Austria; you've spent 90 days in the Schengen zone.