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What you need to do before travelling to New Zealand

Planning to take a trip within the trans-Tasman travel bubble? There are steps you need to follow before you fly.

 

With quarantine-free travel now possible between Australia and New Zealand, overseas holidays and business trips are once again on the agenda: but it’s not as simple as booking a flight and turning up at check-in.

Depending on your specific travel plans, you’ll need to complete at least two online declarations prior to travel, with many jetsetters requiring a third pass as well.

Once your flight is locked away, here’s a handy checklist to follow in the week leading up to your trans-Tasman voyage.

Step 1: Register your quarantine-free travel with New Zealand

Before you can check-in for a flight to New Zealand, you’ll need to register a few details of your trip with the NZ Government.

From start to finish, this process takes just a few minutes.

This confirms that your journey will be quarantine-free, and once you’ve completed the form (via the NZ Government website, from any time after making your booking), you’ll receive an email to present at the airport, allowing you to check-in.

You’ll need to enter your flight number, planned arrival date in New Zealand, your passport information, your phone number and address (e.g. hotel name) in New Zealand, your email address, and the details of an emergency contact, just in case you can’t be reached.

 

 

Upon completion, either print the email you receive which contains a quarantine-free confirmation code, or have the email ready to present on your phone at the airport.

You’ll also want to download the NZ COVID Tracer app for iPhone or Android ahead of your trip, which is used to check-in at venues across New Zealand for contact tracing purposes.

(As well, if you’re not a citizen of Australia or New Zealand and don’t have a pre-arranged visa, you’ll also need to apply for an NZeTA visa waiver to enter NZ, as was the case prior to COVID-19. This includes Australian permanent residents who don’t hold citizenship with either country.)

Step 2: Complete an Australian Government ‘travel declaration’

Prior to entering Australia, you’ll also need to submit an international travel declaration.

This registers your journey with the Australian Government for contact tracing purposes, and confirms you won’t need to quarantine on arrival in Australia, provided you’ve only spent time in Australia and New Zealand within 14 days of your arrival.

You can complete your travel declaration online within six days of departure, and ideally, not less than 72 hours before you fly.

(The website suggests your form can be filed seven days prior to departure, but the system counts the departure date as ‘day one’, so for travel on a Thursday, the form can be completed from Friday in the week prior.)

You’ll again need your passport and travel details at-hand to complete the process and receive a confirmation, which can be shown at the airport as part of the check-in process, and if requested, again upon arrival in Australia.

Step 3: Check Australian domestic border pass requirements

In addition to your international travel declaration with the Australian Government, you may also need to apply for a border pass or to register your travel plans with your home state or territory, along with any you plan to transit through where similar requirements exist.

Here’s where to get that done:

The timeframes for lodging your form or pass vary between jurisdictions, so check the latest advice for your state or territory via the links above.

Step 4: Check your passport expiry

Chances are, you haven’t looked at your passport since at least early last year: so, before making all of your travel arrangements, dust it off, and double-check its expiry date.

Not only does the passport need to be valid, but you’ll need to meet any requirements of the country you’re visiting.

New Zealand’s latest advice is that temporary visitors must enter using a passport valid “for one month beyond the date they intend to depart, if the issuing government has consular representation in New Zealand that is able to issue and renew travel documents,” which is true of the Australian Government.

Those permanently relocating to NZ, however, may enter using a passport “valid for enough time to allow them to travel to New Zealand.”

The same is true of New Zealand citizens and residents returning home – with Australian citizens and residents returning to Australia similarly able to enter Australia up to their passport’s printed expiry date.

 

Complete article on Executive Traveller