What travel looks like in Australia in 2020
Australia confirmed its first case of coronavirus on January 25 and recorded its first death one month later. By the end of March, overseas travel was banned and social restrictions went into effect – measures that seemed to work, at first. Restrictions began to lift at the start of May, but months later, there's been a significant surge in Melbourne, and the city is now in the middle of another lockdown. Here’s the latest:
Editor's note: This article was last updated on August 6, 2020. We will update this piece regularly to stay on top of the latest travel advice.
Travel restrictions in Australia
Australia’s borders are closed to all but Australian citizens, residents, and immediate family members, citizens of New Zealand who reside in Australia, and New Zealanders transiting to New Zealand, barring a handful of exceptions. Health screenings may occur upon arrival, and anyone who shows signs of infectious disease in transit will be assessed on the plane and either quarantined or hospitalized upon arrival.
To ease pressure on quarantine facilities, the number of Australians permitted to return home is currently being strictly regulated. Transit passengers can’t travel within Australia, but they can leave on an international flight departing from the same city, as long as the time between flights is less than eight hours and they remain at the airport for the duration. If the wait is between eight and 72 hours, quarantine is mandated at a state-designated facility.
Domestic travel is allowed in some locales, but Australians are restricted from travelling overseas, and foreign-flagged cruise ships are banned from docking at Australian ports until at least September 17.
Will I have to quarantine when I arrive in Australia?
A 14-day quarantine at designated facilities is mandatory upon arrival for all incoming travelers. No domestic travel or connecting flights are allowed before the quarantine is completed, and testing for COVID-19 may also be required.
After deplaning, passengers are instructed to collect their luggage and go through customs, immigration, and biosecurity, then take a bus to the hotel where they’ll quarantine until they receive medical clearance. In some states and territories, travelers may have to chip in for the cost of quarantine, and COVID-19 tests may be administered during quarantine as well.
Current lockdown status in Australia
Restriction levels vary from state to state.
In Victoria, where hundreds of new cases were reported in mid-July, a stage four lockdown is in place as of August 2, and will remain in place until at least 13 September. Curfews are in effect from 8 pm to 5 am every evening. People are only allowed to leave their house for work and essential health, care or safety reasons. Everyone must wear a face mask outside of the home. Regional Victoria including Mitchell Shire have moved to a stage three lockdown, meaning everyone must stay home, except to leave for food and supplies, study or work, care and healthcare and for exercise and outdoor recreation. Everyone must wear a mask, and no visitors are allowed in others’ homes, and residents are only allowed to gather with one person from outside their household in public. Learn more about the restrictions here.
The border between Victoria and New South Wales is currently closed. As of 7 August, New South Wales residents returning from Victoria will have to go into mandatory hotel quarantine for 14 days at their own expense.
Within New South Wales regional travel is permitted. Caravan and camping parks as well as some NSW National Parks are open; museums, galleries, and libraries are operational, and pubs, clubs, cafes, and restaurants are open, though capacities are restricted. The NSW government has updates on restrictions and health advice.
Western Australia and Tasmania are closed to non-essential travel, but other states and territories are easing back into local, regional, and interstate travel. The Australian tourism board’s interactive status map is a good resource for planning purposes.
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Sydney: The Sydney Opera House remains closed, but Sydney Harbour National Park has reopened, and the BridgeClimb is back in business. Shut down by the police for overcrowding in late March, Bondi Beach is welcoming surfers and sun-worshippers once again.
Melbourne: Victoria is experiencing a resurgence of cases. Melbourne has entered a stage four lockdown, while the rest of the region is in stage three.
Queensland: The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park is open.
Northern Territory: Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park reopened to visitors on August 6.
What they’re saying in Australia about COVID-19 and travel
Before cases spiked in Melbourne, Australia was easing travel restrictions and lifting social-distancing protocols across the country, and regions hard-hit by the lack of travelers were beginning to bounce back. Now, though, the situation has changed, and sentiments have shifted. In June, Reuters reported, “the Victorian state government requested all flights be diverted to other states to prevent the risk of imported cases,” and the state’s borders were closed, with Premier Daniel Andrews telling reporters, “People are desperate for this to be over, no one more than me, but it isn’t and pretending won’t get us to the other side.”
When it comes to country-wide plans to reopen, organizations like the Australian Medical Association are urging caution. “These new outbreaks send a strong signal that the other States should rethink the pace of easing of their COVID-19 restrictions until community transmission in Melbourne is under control to avoid the risk of a similar situation playing out in their own communities,” AMA president Dr. Tony Bartone said in a public statement. “It has to be a gradual and cautious process – and it must be with strict adherence to the medical advice and public health guidelines… The COVID-19 spikes in Melbourne are a warning for all Australians how quickly virus outbreaks can occur anywhere in the country.”
COVID-19 snapshot
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