Visitor visas

Australian eVisitor visa for Europeans: complete guide (Subclass 651)

Everything European passport holders need to know about the eVisitor: eligible countries, how to apply, conditions, and when you need a different visa.
Antonious Nehme
Antonious NehmeImmigration Lawyer, Legal Practitioner Number 551364131 March 2026 • 12 min read • Updated 9 May 2026
Australian eVisitor visa for Europeans: complete guide (Subclass 651)
Quick answer

The Australian eVisitor (Subclass 651) is a free electronic visa for passport holders from 36 European countries that allows visits of up to 3 months per entry over a 12-month validity. You apply online through ImmiAccount, and most applications are auto-granted within minutes.

  • The eVisitor (Subclass 651) is free and available to passport holders from 36 European countries, including all 27 EU member states plus the UK, Norway, Switzerland, and others
  • Processing is usually instant. Most eVisitors are auto-granted within minutes. Some take up to a few days
  • You can stay up to 3 months per visit with multiple entries over a 12-month validity period
  • You apply online through ImmiAccount, not through the Australian ETA app
  • Standard British Citizens are eligible. British National Overseas (BNO), British Dependent Territories Citizens, and British Overseas Citizens are not
  • You cannot extend an eVisitor onshore. If you want to stay longer than 3 months, you need to apply for a Subclass 600 visitor visa
  • Remote work for an overseas employer is allowed if it is incidental to your visit, but full-time remote work is a grey area

If you hold a European passport and want to visit Australia, the eVisitor (Subclass 651) is almost certainly your fastest and cheapest path. It is free and usually granted within minutes of submission. For most Europeans, this is the only visa you will ever need for a trip to Australia.

Getting there requires setting up an ImmiAccount if you do not already have one, navigating English-language government forms, and entering your passport details with precision. That is straightforward for some people and genuinely fiddly for others.

But "free and instant" does not mean there is nothing to know. Which European countries are actually eligible? What can you do (and not do) on an eVisitor? What if you want to stay longer than three months? And if you hold a British passport that is not a standard British Citizen passport, the rules change entirely.

This guide covers every detail, based on official Department of Home Affairs policy and our experience helping thousands of applicants through the process.

What is the eVisitor visa (Subclass 651)?

The eVisitor is a free, electronic visa that allows passport holders from 36 European countries to visit Australia for tourism, business visitor activities, or short-term study. It was created as a reciprocal arrangement between Australia and European nations, reflecting the historically low immigration risk from these countries.

Key facts:

  • Cost: Free (no application charge)
  • Stay: Up to 3 months (90 days) per visit
  • Validity: 12 months from the date of grant
  • Entries: Multiple (you can enter and leave Australia as many times as you want within the 12 months)
  • Processing: Most applications are decided within minutes. Some take 1 to 3 days
  • Applied for: Online through ImmiAccount

The eVisitor is linked electronically to your passport. There is no visa label or stamp. Airlines and border officers check your status digitally when you board or arrive.

Tern Tip

The eVisitor cannot be extended while you are in Australia. If you think you might want to stay longer than 3 months, consider applying for a Subclass 600 visitor visa from the start. It costs more and takes longer, but it gives you the flexibility to apply for extensions onshore.

Which countries are eligible for the eVisitor?

The eVisitor is available to passport holders from all 27 EU member states plus 9 non-EU European countries, including the UK (standard British Citizen passports only), Norway, Switzerland, and Iceland. Residency alone is not enough: a Brazilian citizen living in Germany, for example, would need to apply for a Subclass 600 instead.

Which EU member states are covered?

AustriaBelgiumBulgaria
CroatiaCyprusCzech Republic
DenmarkEstoniaFinland
FranceGermanyGreece
HungaryIrelandItaly
LatviaLithuaniaLuxembourg
MaltaNetherlandsPoland
PortugalRomaniaSlovakia
SloveniaSpainSweden

Which non-EU European countries are covered?

AndorraIceland
LiechtensteinMonaco
NorwaySan Marino
SwitzerlandUnited Kingdom (standard British Citizen passport only)
Vatican City

That is the complete list. If your country of passport is not listed here, you are not eligible for an eVisitor and should check whether you qualify for an ETA (Subclass 601) or need to apply for a Subclass 600 visitor visa.

Only your passport nationality matters for eVisitor eligibility, not your country of residence. A French citizen applies for an eVisitor regardless of where they live. A non-European citizen living in Europe applies for a different visa.

How do I apply for an eVisitor step by step?

You apply for the eVisitor by creating an ImmiAccount, starting a new Subclass 651 application, completing the form, and submitting it without any application fee. The eVisitor is one of the more straightforward Australian visa applications, but straightforward is not the same as quick. If you do not already have an ImmiAccount, you will need to create one, set up multi-factor authentication, and navigate an English-only government portal with no translation support. Realistically, the process takes closer to an hour if you are starting from scratch, and longer if you are not comfortable with government online systems or English is not your first language.

Important: You apply through ImmiAccount (the Department of Home Affairs online portal), not through the Australian ETA app. The ETA app is only for Subclass 601 applicants. Applying through the wrong channel is a common mistake.

How do I create an ImmiAccount? (Step 1)

Go to ImmiAccount and create an account if you do not already have one. You will need a working email address and to set up a password.

How do I start a new eVisitor application? (Step 2)

Select "New application," then navigate to "Visitor" and choose "eVisitor (651)."

How do I complete the form? (Step 3)

The application asks for:

  • Personal details: Name, date of birth, gender (as shown on your passport)
  • Passport details: Passport number, country, issue and expiry dates
  • Contact information: Address, phone, email
  • Travel details: Planned arrival date (approximate is fine)
  • Character declaration: Whether you have any criminal convictions
  • Health declaration: Whether you have tuberculosis

Most of these fields are straightforward. The form does not ask for financial evidence, employment letters, or travel itineraries. This is one of the key differences from a Subclass 600 application.

How do I submit? (Step 4)

Review your answers, confirm your declarations, and submit. There is no fee to pay.

How do I receive my decision? (Step 5)

Most eVisitor applications are auto-granted within minutes. You will receive a Visa Grant Notification by email. Some applications are referred for manual processing, which can take a few days. If your application is referred, do not panic. This happens for various reasons (name matching, previous travel history) and does not mean refusal.

Tern Tip

Double-check that your passport details are entered exactly as they appear on your passport. Even a small typo (like transposing two digits in your passport number) can cause your visa to not be linked correctly, which means problems at the airport.

How long does eVisitor processing take?

Most eVisitor applications are granted within minutes of submission, and around 95% are decided within 1 day. The eVisitor system uses automated processing (sometimes called "auto-grant") for straightforward applications. If your passport is from an eligible country, you have no adverse immigration history, and there are no security flags on your name, the system approves your application without a human case officer ever looking at it.

When does processing take longer?

The only reason an eVisitor takes more than a day is if it gets flagged for manual review. This happens when something in your record or profile requires a human to look at it:

  • Adverse immigration history: A previous Australian visa refusal, cancellation, or overstay on your record
  • False information in a prior application: If the Department has reason to believe you provided misleading information previously
  • Genuine temporary entrant concerns: If the Department has information suggesting you may not leave Australia when your visa expires
  • Name matching: If your name is similar to someone flagged on a security or immigration watchlist (more common than you might think with common European names)
  • Criminal declarations: Declaring a criminal conviction triggers manual assessment

In our experience, the longest eVisitor processing we have seen is around one week. If your eVisitor has not been granted within a few days and you have an imminent travel date, contact the Department of Home Affairs or your nearest Australian embassy. Do not submit a second application, as duplicate applications can cause further delays.

Use our Visa Time Checker for a personalised processing estimate based on your nationality and circumstances.

What does the eVisitor allow me to do in Australia?

The eVisitor permits tourism, business visitor activities, and study of up to 3 months per visit. You can use the same eVisitor for different purposes across different visits within the 12-month validity.

What counts as tourism and holidays?

This is what most Europeans use the eVisitor for. Sightseeing, visiting friends and family, attending sporting or cultural events, cruises departing from Australian ports, and general recreation are all covered.

What counts as business visitor activities?

The eVisitor allows you to conduct certain business activities in Australia, but there is a clear line between "business visitor" and "work." The distinction matters because the eVisitor carries Condition 8101 (no work).

Allowed:

  • Attending conferences, trade fairs, and seminars
  • Making business enquiries or exploring investment opportunities
  • Negotiating contracts or business deals
  • Participating in meetings with Australian business contacts
  • Government-to-government visits

Not allowed:

  • Providing services to an Australian business (paid or unpaid)
  • Selling goods or services directly to the Australian public
  • Any work that an Australian resident could be hired to do

Can I study on an eVisitor?

You can study or train for up to 3 months on an eVisitor. This includes English language courses, short professional development courses, and recreational classes. If your course runs longer than 3 months, you need a student visa (Subclass 500).

Can I work remotely on an eVisitor?

Remote work for an overseas employer is generally allowed on an eVisitor if it is incidental to your visit, following the same policy that applies to all Australian visitor visas. Department policy clarifies that "online work" for a foreign employer, done alongside genuine tourism, does not breach Condition 8101.

What this means in practice:

  • Permitted: Checking emails, joining video calls, handling tasks for a few hours while primarily on holiday
  • Grey area: Working full-time remotely for weeks while technically "visiting"
  • Not permitted: Working for an Australian employer, freelancing for Australian clients, or receiving Australian-sourced income

The reality is that thousands of Europeans enter Australia on eVisitors and do some remote work alongside their holiday. The Department's concern is not occasional laptop use in a cafe. It is people using visitor visas to effectively live and work in Australia without the right visa.

If remote work is your primary purpose for being in Australia rather than an incidental activity alongside genuine tourism, you should consider a Working Holiday visa (if you are eligible) or explore other visa options.

What are the key eVisitor conditions and limitations?

The eVisitor caps each visit at 3 months, runs for 12 months from grant with multiple entries, cannot be extended onshore, is linked to a single passport, and prohibits work under Condition 8101. Understanding these conditions prevents problems at the border and during your stay.

How long can I stay per visit?

Each time you enter Australia on an eVisitor, you can stay for a maximum of 3 months (90 days). The clock resets every time you leave and re-enter. However, using this to live in Australia semi-permanently (leaving briefly to reset your 3 months, then returning immediately) will attract scrutiny and likely refusal on a future entry.

How long is my eVisitor valid?

Your eVisitor is valid for 12 months from the date of grant, not from the date of your first entry. You can enter and leave Australia as many times as you want during that period, as long as each stay is under 3 months.

Can I extend my eVisitor onshore?

This is the most important limitation for Europeans planning longer trips. Unlike the Subclass 600, the eVisitor cannot be extended or renewed while you are in Australia. If you want to stay beyond 3 months, you must apply for a Subclass 600 visitor visa, and you must do so from outside Australia.

If you are already in Australia on an eVisitor and realize you want to stay longer, your options are limited. You can apply for a Subclass 600 onshore (as it is a different visa subclass), but this is a more involved process with fees and evidence requirements. Read our guide to visitor visa extensions for the full picture.

Is my eVisitor linked to a specific passport?

Your eVisitor is electronically linked to the passport you used when applying. If you get a new passport during the 12-month validity, you need to apply for a new eVisitor using the new passport details. The old eVisitor will not transfer.

What does Condition 8101 (no work) mean?

You must not work in Australia. This means no employment with an Australian employer, no providing services to Australian businesses, and no running a business in Australia. The remote work exception discussed above applies only to incidental work for overseas employers.

When do European passport holders need a Subclass 600 instead?

European passport holders need a Subclass 600 instead of the eVisitor when they want to stay longer than 3 months, are already onshore, hold a non-standard British passport, have a serious criminal record, or need to apply onshore for another visa. The eVisitor works perfectly for most European travellers, but for these situations the Subclass 600 visitor visa is the right path.

What if I want to stay longer than 3 months?

The eVisitor has a hard 3-month limit per visit. If you plan to stay 6 months or even 12 months (perhaps visiting family for an extended period, or travelling extensively), you need a Subclass 600. The Subclass 600 allows stays of 3, 6, or 12 months depending on the stream.

What if I am already in Australia?

The eVisitor can only be applied for from outside Australia. If you are onshore and your current visa is expiring, you cannot apply for a new eVisitor. Your option is to apply for a Subclass 600.

What if I hold a non-standard British passport?

This catches many people by surprise. While standard British Citizen passport holders are fully eligible for the eVisitor, several other categories of British passport are not:

  • British National Overseas (BNO) passport holders
  • British Dependent Territories Citizens (BDTC) passport holders
  • British Overseas Citizens (BOC) passport holders
  • British Protected Persons
  • British Subjects without citizenship

If you hold any of these passport types, you must apply for a Subclass 600 visitor visa. This is a common issue for Hong Kong residents who hold BNO passports. A BNO passport alone does not qualify for the eVisitor, even though it is issued by the UK government.

What if I have a serious criminal record?

While minor convictions do not necessarily prevent an eVisitor grant, more serious criminal history may mean your application is refused or you are advised to apply for a Subclass 600, which allows for a more thorough character assessment. Read our guide to criminal records and the character test for details.

What if I need to apply onshore for another visa?

If you are in Australia on an eVisitor and your circumstances change (for example, you enter a relationship and want to apply for a partner visa), the 8503 "No Further Stay" condition may or may not be attached to your eVisitor. Check your Visa Grant Notification carefully. If it is attached, you will need a waiver before you can apply for another visa onshore.

What changed for UK passport holders after Brexit?

Standard British Citizens remain fully eligible for the eVisitor (Subclass 651) after Brexit. The UK's departure from the European Union did not change eVisitor eligibility for British Citizen passport holders.

This is because eVisitor eligibility was never based on EU membership. It is based on bilateral agreements between Australia and individual countries. The UK's agreement with Australia predates and is separate from the EU arrangement.

What you need to know:

  • British Citizen passport: Eligible for eVisitor. Nothing changed
  • Irish passport: Eligible for eVisitor (Ireland remains an EU member state)
  • BNO passport: Not eligible for eVisitor. Was not eligible before Brexit either
  • Dual UK/EU nationals: Can apply using whichever eligible passport you prefer

The practical difference after Brexit is administrative rather than immigration-related. UK passport holders continue to use the eVisitor exactly as before.

What if my eVisitor is refused?

A refused eVisitor remains on your immigration record permanently and must be declared on every future Australian visa application. Refusals for European passport holders are rare, but the common reasons include:

  • Criminal history: Convictions that raise character concerns
  • Previous visa non-compliance: Overstaying a previous Australian visa, or being refused or having a visa cancelled in the past
  • Adverse security information: Matches on security databases (sometimes erroneous)
  • Incorrect information: Inconsistencies between your application and Department records
  • Health concerns: Declaring active tuberculosis

A refused eVisitor remains on your immigration record permanently. This does not mean you can never visit Australia, but it does mean every future application will reference the refusal, and you will need to address it.

If your eVisitor is refused:

  1. Read the refusal letter carefully. It should state the reason, though refusal letters for eVisitors are often brief and templated
  2. There is no formal review right for eVisitor refusals (unlike Subclass 600 refusals, which can be appealed to the Administrative Review Tribunal)
  3. You can apply for a Subclass 600 instead. This gives you the opportunity to provide supporting evidence and address whatever concern led to the refusal
  4. Do not reapply for the same eVisitor immediately with the same information. The system will likely produce the same result

For a deeper look at what happens after a refusal and how to recover, see our complete visitor visa guide.

A refused visa, even for a free eVisitor, stays on your immigration record. It affects every future Australian visa application. If you have any concerns about your eligibility, applying for a Subclass 600 with proper supporting evidence may be a safer first step than risking an eVisitor refusal.

eVisitor vs ETA vs Subclass 600: which do I need?

If you are a European passport holder, the decision is usually straightforward. But here is a quick comparison to make sure you are choosing the right visa.

FeatureeVisitor (651)ETA (601)Subclass 600
Eligible nationalities36 European countriesUSA, Canada, Japan, South Korea, and othersAll nationalities
CostfreeAUD $20From AUD $200
Maximum stay3 months3 months3, 6, or 12 months
Validity12 months12 monthsVaries
Processing timeUsually instantUsually instant1 day to 2+ months
How to applyImmiAccount (online)Australian ETA appImmiAccount (online)
Evidence requiredMinimalMinimalComprehensive
Can extend onshoreNoNoYes (if no 8503 condition)
Review rights if refusedNoNoYes (AAT/ART)

The simple rule for Europeans: Use the eVisitor for trips up to 3 months. Apply for Subclass 600 if you need longer, are already in Australia, or have circumstances (criminal history, previous refusals) that make the eVisitor risky.

For the full breakdown of all visitor visa options, read our complete Australian visitor visa guide.

Frequently asked questions

Next steps

For most Europeans, the eVisitor is the simplest Australian visa you will encounter. There is no fee, no embassy appointment, and no stack of supporting documents. But "simple" depends on where you are starting from. If English is not your first language, or you rarely interact with government online systems, the ImmiAccount process and form-filling can take longer than expected, and a small data entry error can cause delays.

If your situation is more complex (you want to stay longer than 3 months, you have a previous refusal, or you hold a non-standard British passport), start with our complete visitor visa guide to understand all your options.

Ready to apply? Start your eVisitor application with Tern and we will walk you through each step, catch errors before they become problems, and confirm your visa is correctly linked to your passport.

分享此文章
Start your visa application

Ready to start your visa application?

Related Posts

Australian ETA visa 2026: ETA vs eVisitor vs Subclass 600
Visitor visas
Australian ETA visa 2026: ETA vs eVisitor vs Subclass 600
31 Mar 2026 • 14 min
Visitor visa extensions: can you stay longer in Australia?
Visitor visas
Visa extensions
Visitor visa extensions: can you stay longer in Australia?
4 Mar 2026 • 14 min
Australian visitor visa 2026: complete guide (600, 601, 651)
Visitor visas
Australian visitor visa 2026: complete guide (600, 601, 651)
19 Jan 2026 • 19 min
分享此文章
Start your visa application

Ready to start your visa application?

tern
澳大利亚签证申请,律师全程监督,操作简单如应用。
律师认证平台
Tern Visa Pty Ltd是一家独立公司,与澳大利亚内政部无关联。我们不签发签证;签证由内政部签发。本网站上的一般信息不构成法律建议。当您使用我们的申请流程时,移民协助(包括个性化建议)由澳大利亚法律执业者根据法律执业提供,并通过Tern平台交付。执业者的详细信息显示在申请流程中。

联系我们

support@ternvisa.com
澳大利亚悉尼
关注我们
© 2026 Tern Visa Pty Ltd。保留所有权利。澳大利亚商业编号:63 690 495 991