
Legislation introduced to the House of Representatives on 30 April 2026 would give Australia’s immigration minister unprecedented powers to impose six-month entry bans on temporary-visa holders from designated countries. The bill—announced by Assistant Minister for Citizenship Julian Hill—comes amid a widening Middle-East conflict and rising concern about non-return rates for short-stay visitors. Under the draft Migration Amendment, the minister may issue an “arrival control determination” listing the visa subclasses and nationalities affected. The measure could be renewed once, extending a ban to a maximum of 12 months. Exemptions apply for immediate family members of Australian citizens and for holders of humanitarian or protection visas. Both government and opposition parties support the proposal, arguing it provides a flexible, proportionate response to sudden geopolitical crises without cancelling visas outright. Human-rights organisations, however, warn that sweeping ministerial discretion could see legitimate students and business travellers caught in the net, hurting Australia’s education exports and trade ties.
For organisations, students and individual travellers who need to keep abreast of these rapid regulatory changes, VisaHQ offers a one-stop portal with live updates on Australian entry rules, automated alerts and guided visa applications. Visit https://www.visahq.com/australia/ to check whether your subclass is affected by any new arrival control determination and to explore alternative visa or routing solutions before plans are disrupted.
If enacted, multinationals will need to monitor determinations closely. Mobility teams moving staff on subclass 400 (temporary work) or 600 (business visitor) visas from high-risk regions may face sudden travel blackouts and should build dual-routing contingencies into assignment planning. Registered migration agents advise pre-emptive applications for alternative travel documents, such as Bridging Visa B, where feasible. The Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee will open an expedited inquiry next week, with the government aiming for royal assent before Parliament rises in June.
For organisations, students and individual travellers who need to keep abreast of these rapid regulatory changes, VisaHQ offers a one-stop portal with live updates on Australian entry rules, automated alerts and guided visa applications. Visit https://www.visahq.com/australia/ to check whether your subclass is affected by any new arrival control determination and to explore alternative visa or routing solutions before plans are disrupted.
If enacted, multinationals will need to monitor determinations closely. Mobility teams moving staff on subclass 400 (temporary work) or 600 (business visitor) visas from high-risk regions may face sudden travel blackouts and should build dual-routing contingencies into assignment planning. Registered migration agents advise pre-emptive applications for alternative travel documents, such as Bridging Visa B, where feasible. The Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee will open an expedited inquiry next week, with the government aiming for royal assent before Parliament rises in June.