
The Consulate-General of Italy in Sydney has notified the Italian-Australian community that it will suspend the bulk of its consular services—passports, citizenship, legalisations and notarial work—on Monday 13 and Tuesday 14 April while technicians install a major systems upgrade. The notice stresses that visa services will continue to operate at their usual times and with previously confirmed appointments, minimising disruption for Australian travellers bound for Italy in the northern-hemisphere summer.
For travellers who still need to organise visas—whether for Italy or another destination—VisaHQ offers a convenient online solution. Via its Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/), you can verify entry requirements, complete forms digitally, arrange secure document collection and track applications in real time, sidestepping the rush when consular desks are offline.
The blackout affects thousands of dual citizens who routinely visit the Market Street offices for AIRE registry updates, power-of-attorney signings and urgent passport renewals. Applicants with booked appointments outside the visa section are being re-allocated to dates from Wednesday 15 April onward; the consulate warns walk-in requests will not be accommodated. While the closure is short, migration agents say it highlights capacity strains across Sydney’s European missions as they modernise legacy IT architecture ahead of the EU-wide shift to digital civil-status records. Businesses that rely on timely legalisations—such as wine exporters shipping to Italy—should factor the two-day pause into logistics schedules. The consulate recommends monitoring its website and social channels for real-time updates and urges clients with looming overseas travel to check passport validity now to avoid last-minute surprises when the counters reopen.
For travellers who still need to organise visas—whether for Italy or another destination—VisaHQ offers a convenient online solution. Via its Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/), you can verify entry requirements, complete forms digitally, arrange secure document collection and track applications in real time, sidestepping the rush when consular desks are offline.
The blackout affects thousands of dual citizens who routinely visit the Market Street offices for AIRE registry updates, power-of-attorney signings and urgent passport renewals. Applicants with booked appointments outside the visa section are being re-allocated to dates from Wednesday 15 April onward; the consulate warns walk-in requests will not be accommodated. While the closure is short, migration agents say it highlights capacity strains across Sydney’s European missions as they modernise legacy IT architecture ahead of the EU-wide shift to digital civil-status records. Businesses that rely on timely legalisations—such as wine exporters shipping to Italy—should factor the two-day pause into logistics schedules. The consulate recommends monitoring its website and social channels for real-time updates and urges clients with looming overseas travel to check passport validity now to avoid last-minute surprises when the counters reopen.