
At 12:01 a.m. on New Year’s Day the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) quietly indexed Australian passport fees to inflation, pushing the cost of a standard 10-year adult passport up by AUD 10 to AUD 422. Five-year passports for children and seniors now cost AUD 213, while two-day express processing surges to a wallet-sapping AUD 663.
The increase cements Australia’s status as the world’s most expensive travel document; peer nations such as the United States charge roughly half. DFAT argues full cost-recovery is essential for service quality, yet consumer advocates say the annual rises outpace wage growth and penalise low-income travellers.
Demand remains robust. DFAT issued more than 2.1 million passports in 2025 and expects the usual January rush as holiday-makers discover that many countries require six months’ validity. Appointment slots at Australia Post are already filling fast, underscoring the need for early renewal.
Meanwhile, travellers who prefer to outsource the legwork can turn to VisaHQ, whose Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) offers up-to-date fee calculators, validity alerts and end-to-end passport and visa support—helping applicants sidestep repeat visits and avoid costly express surcharges.
Corporate mobility teams should revisit policy ceilings—especially for family moves—and allow extra lead time when budgeting assignments. Travellers facing tight timelines may wish to renew well before expiry to avoid eye-watering express surcharges later in the year.
A broader review into passport funding is due mid-2026, raising the prospect of a structural overhaul—or further fee hikes—in the next budget cycle.
The increase cements Australia’s status as the world’s most expensive travel document; peer nations such as the United States charge roughly half. DFAT argues full cost-recovery is essential for service quality, yet consumer advocates say the annual rises outpace wage growth and penalise low-income travellers.
Demand remains robust. DFAT issued more than 2.1 million passports in 2025 and expects the usual January rush as holiday-makers discover that many countries require six months’ validity. Appointment slots at Australia Post are already filling fast, underscoring the need for early renewal.
Meanwhile, travellers who prefer to outsource the legwork can turn to VisaHQ, whose Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) offers up-to-date fee calculators, validity alerts and end-to-end passport and visa support—helping applicants sidestep repeat visits and avoid costly express surcharges.
Corporate mobility teams should revisit policy ceilings—especially for family moves—and allow extra lead time when budgeting assignments. Travellers facing tight timelines may wish to renew well before expiry to avoid eye-watering express surcharges later in the year.
A broader review into passport funding is due mid-2026, raising the prospect of a structural overhaul—or further fee hikes—in the next budget cycle.






