Comisión Parlamentaria Apoya Proyecto de Ley para Fortalecer la Supervisión de Interior y Agencias Fronterizas
Récord de 2,9 millones de titulares de visas temporales en Australia, según nuevos datos de la ABS
China Extiende la Entrada Sin Visa de 30 Días para Australianos Hasta Finales de 2026
Últimas Noticias
Nueva Zelanda abre sus puertas a ciudadanos chinos y del Pacífico que viajen desde Australia sin necesidad de visa
A partir del 3 de noviembre de 2025, en un piloto de un año, los ciudadanos chinos y de las islas del Pacífico que viajen desde Australia a Nueva Zelanda podrán ingresar solo con una NZeTA, sin necesidad de visa de turista. Esta medida reduce la burocracia para los itinerarios trans-Tasmania y podría servir como modelo para futuros programas de movilidad en el Pacífico.
Canberra Responde al Senado sobre los Proyectos de Ley de Visados para el Pacífico y Anuncia su Implementación en 2026
El Ministerio del Interior ha respondido al informe del Senado sobre la legislación que sustenta la Visa de Compromiso con el Pacífico, confirmando su lanzamiento para julio de 2026 y manteniendo una baja tarifa de sorteo de solo 25 AUD. La respuesta aclara los plazos de patrocinio y los apoyos para la integración, brindando a los empleadores australianos una visión más clara de una nueva fuente de talento proveniente del Pacífico.
Supercell Storm Slams South-East Queensland, Forcing Diversions at Brisbane Airport
Giant-hail supercells battered south-east Queensland on 1 November, forcing flight diversions, halting ground operations at Brisbane Airport and disrupting road freight. The weather event exacerbates existing airline delays and underscores the need for mobility risk-planning during Australia’s storm season.
Home Affairs Opens MATES Visa Ballot, Launching 3,000 Places for Young Indian Professionals
Home Affairs opened the 2025-26 MATES ballot on 1 November, offering 3,000 two-year visas to Indian graduates in priority STEM and digital sectors. The scheme—part of the Australia-India mobility pact—requires no employer sponsorship and is expected to ease skill shortages while deepening bilateral ties. Employers should prepare recruitment pipelines, and applicants are urged to beware of scam websites.
Operational “meltdown” triggers mass flight cancellations across Australia
Staffing gaps, maintenance bottlenecks and earlier weather disruptions combined to cancel 48 flights and delay nearly 1,000 more at Australia’s busiest airports on 1 November 2025. The chaos stranded business travellers and sparked fresh calls for faster skilled-migration visas to shore up aviation labour shortages.
New Regulatory Mandate for Airservices Australia Takes Effect, Prioritising Safe Growth in Drone and Urban-Air Mobility
A new two-year Statement of Expectations for Airservices Australia became effective on 1 November, mandating faster integration of drones, cyber-secure air-traffic upgrades and readiness for Western Sydney’s 24-hour airport. The framework will reshape air-mobility infrastructure and could lower transit times for both passengers and critical freight.
Nation-wide Airline Disruptions: 48 Cancellations and 954 Delays Throw Australian Itineraries Into Chaos
Australian airports recorded 48 cancellations and nearly a thousand delays on 1 November, paralysing domestic and international schedules. Jetstar, Virgin and Qantas were hardest hit, affecting FIFO mining operations and corporate travellers. The disruption highlights the need for robust travel-risk policies and may trigger regulatory scrutiny of airline performance.
Qantas resumes international flights from Adelaide with new seasonal Auckland service
On 31 October 2025 Qantas launched a four-times-weekly Adelaide–Auckland service—its first international flight from South Australia since 2013. The seasonal route shortens business-travel itineraries, adds 30,000 seats to the trans-Tasman market and provides a new one-stop pathway from Adelaide to New York, boosting trade and tourism on both sides.
EU moves to triple ETIAS fee to €20, hitting Australian travellers from 2026
The European Commission has proposed lifting the ETIAS fee from €7 to €20, tripling the cost that visa-exempt Australians will pay to enter the Schengen Area when the authorisation becomes compulsory in 2026. Though small per trip, the hike could add thousands to corporate travel budgets and arrives as firms already grapple with Europe’s new biometric Entry/Exit System.
Qantas unleashes week-long ‘Red Tail’ sale as Chile waives visas for Australians
Qantas has put more than 300,000 international seats on sale until 5 November, slashing fares on U.S., Bali and trans-Tasman routes. The timing coincides with Chile’s decision to grant 90-day visa-free access to Australians, making South American travel cheaper and paperwork-free. Mobility teams can secure 2026 travel at steep discounts while updating compliance systems for Chile’s new visa-waiver.
Skilled-Migration ‘Reset’ at Risk as Red Tape Slows New Visa Framework
Migration advisers say the government’s flagship Skills-in-Demand visa could bog down in slow processing and rigid labour-market-testing rules. Without streamlined pathways for accredited sponsors and high-salary hires, companies may redirect talent elsewhere, undermining Australia’s competitiveness.
Salary Thresholds for Employer-Sponsored Visas to Rise Again from 1 July 2025
Fragomen’s 30 October alert confirms that Australia’s employer-sponsored salary thresholds will rise on 1 July 2025—TSMIT and SID Core Skills to AUD 76,515 and Specialist Skills to AUD 141,210—requiring sponsors to budget higher base pay and update assignment letters well before mid-year.
Government Delays Weekly-Hours Guarantee for PALM Workers to 2026
Canberra has postponed the planned 30-hour per-week pay guarantee for Pacific PALM visa holders until July 2026, opting to keep a looser 120-hour monthly rule. The backflip eases cost pressure on growers but reignites exploitation concerns and adds compliance uncertainty for labour-hire companies.
Home Affairs Launches Confidential Online Service for People with Expired Visas
From 29 October, people in Australia with expired visas can book confidential consultations online with Status Resolution Officers, giving overstayers a voluntary pathway to legalise or finalise their status. The shift from enforcement to support could shrink Australia’s overstayer population and helps businesses retain valuable workers.
Human Rights Commissioner Slams Secret Deportation of Non-Citizen to Nauru
Australia has secretly deported the first non-citizen to Nauru under a 30-year, A$2.5 billion pact, prompting the Human Rights Commissioner to warn of legal and ethical breaches. The move highlights Canberra’s willingness to outsource difficult migration cases and could foreshadow more offshore transfers. Companies employing foreign nationals should prepare for a more aggressive enforcement stance.
Digital Air-Traffic Towers Coming to Sydney and Canberra Under Airservices Plan
Airservices Australia will equip Western Sydney International Airport with the nation’s first digital ATC tower, then replicate the technology in Canberra and other airports, hiring 60 new controllers to manage the transition. Digitisation aims to improve safety, cut costs and ease congestion for business travellers.
Australia Launches Online Status-Resolution Portal for Overstayed Visa Holders
Home Affairs has introduced an online booking system that lets people with expired Australian visas arrange confidential meetings with Status Resolution Officers. The goal is to encourage voluntary compliance and reduce unlawful overstays—an issue closely watched by employers and education providers.
Adelaide Airport Debuts CT Scanners as Air NZ and Qantas Restart Trans-Tasman Services
Adelaide Airport rolled out CT security scanners on 28 October 2025, slashing screening times just as Air New Zealand inaugurated Christchurch-Adelaide flights and Qantas restored its Adelaide-Auckland link. Faster checkpoints and new routes are expected to boost South Australia’s business and leisure travel.
Government Tables Response on Pacific Engagement Visa Bill, Signals 3,000 Places From Mid-2026
Home Affairs’ 27 October 2025 response to a Senate report confirms the Pacific Engagement Visa will proceed, providing 3,000 permanent visas annually from July 2026. The scheme aims to deepen regional ties and ease labour shortages but faces opposition over housing and selection criteria.
Jetstar’s Newcastle–Bali Route Takes Off, First International Flights for the Hunter
Jetstar began tri-weekly Newcastle–Bali flights on 27 October 2025, giving the Hunter region its first international air link and adding cargo capacity for exporters. The new route shortens travel times for leisure and FIFO travellers and is forecast to boost the local economy by AUD 55 million.
Home Affairs Hosts SME Webinar on Hiring Overseas Workers and Cyber Security
A 27 October 2025 Home Affairs webinar gave SMEs updated guidance on sponsoring overseas workers, VEVO compliance and protecting against recruitment-related cyber scams. The session addressed looming wage-threshold hikes and common paperwork pitfalls—critical intel for regional employers facing skill shortages.
Canberra Committee Grills Officials on New Air-Services Treaties with Colombia, Saudi Arabia and Peru
Parliamentary hearings on 27 October 2025 examined three new Air-Services Agreements with Colombia, Saudi Arabia and Peru. Officials said the treaties modernise aviation rules, expand traffic rights and could unlock new direct or code-share flights as early as 2026—important for Australian exporters and corporate travel programmes.