Fully vaccinated Australians will soon be able to leave the country without an exemption

Fully vaccinated travellers will no longer need an exemption to leave the country, ahead of the international borders reopening.

A file photo of a couple holding hands whilst wearing protective gloves and masks in the departures area at the Sydney International Airport.

A file photo of a couple holding hands whilst wearing protective gloves and masks in the departures area at the Sydney International Airport. Source: AAP

Fully vaccinated Australians will no longer need to apply for an exemption to leave the country, ahead of the country easing its international borders.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison confirmed the exemption will be scrapped from 1 November, when overseas flights will resume.

Meanwhile, Singapore has announced it would allow Australians to travel to the country without quarantine from 8 November.

"Over half a million Australians have already been able to download the international vaccine certificate," Mr Morrison told the Seven Network.

"We are very close now to the reciprocal arrangements with Singapore."
International COVID-19 Vaccination Certificate
You'll need to use an International COVID-19 Vaccination Certificate to travel overseas. Source: Getty Images/ d3sign
Health Minister Greg Hunt said the changes were made in line with rising vaccination rates across the country.

"We want Australians to be able to reunite with their loved ones, whether it's for births, weddings or just to visit family," Mr Hunt said.

Australians will need to prove their are fully vaccinated an approved or recognised vaccine.

The second dose will need to have happened at least one week before travel.

While vaccines are only approved for people aged 12 and over, the travel changes will also apply to children under 12.
Those who aren't vaccinated will still need an exemption to travel overseas and will be subject to travel caps.

Australian citizens, permanent residents and their family will be let into the country first.

Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews said the government was looking to welcome skilled workers and international students back by the end of the year.

"I look forward to further easing restrictions over coming weeks and months as more and more Australians become fully vaccinated," she said.

"The Morrison government stands ready to once more welcome a significant number of fully vaccinated people across Australia's international border."
It comes as the prime minister said the first-dose rate in Australia had surpassed the rate in the United States.

"The national plan is working. The national plan is about opening Australia up and that is because the vaccination rates are climbing so high," Mr Morrison said.


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2 min read
Published 27 October 2021 8:03am
Updated 22 February 2022 2:03pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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