Australia visa options for United States passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Electronic travel authorisation (eTA)
Apply online for a quick travel authorisation before you go.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for Australia
Foreign nationals visiting, working, studying or migrating to Australia. There is no visa-free entry (New Zealand citizens get a Special Category visa on arrival); all others need a visa or travel authority before travel.
- Tourist
Tourist / short stay (ETA 601 / eVisitor 651)
Up to 3 months per entry within a 12-month validity
- Insurance
- Recommended— no Medicare for most tourists; travel/health cover advised
- Good for
- Eligible passport holders for tourism (601 for e.g. US/Japan/Singapore; 651 for European passports)
- Requirement
- Eligible passport; apply via the ETA app (601) or online (651, free); no work for an Australian employer
- Business
Visitor visa (subclass 600, tourist & business)
Granted for 3, 6 or 12 months depending on stream
- Insurance
- Recommended— adequate health/travel cover advised
- Good for
- Nationals not eligible for ETA/eVisitor, and business visitors (meetings, conferences)
- Requirement
- Apply online/paper; business stream covers visits, not paid work for an Australian employer
- Work
Skilled temporary work (Skills in Demand, subclass 482)
Up to 4 years
- Insurance
- Required/Required — adequate Overseas Visitor Health Cover (OVHC) generally needed; mandatory where condition 8501 is imposed
- Good for
- Skilled workers sponsored by an approved employer (replaced the TSS visa in Dec 2024)
- Requirement
- Employer sponsorship + eligible occupation; salary at/above the Core Skills threshold (AUD ~76,515, rising to ~79,499 on 1 Jul 2026)
- Work
Working Holiday (subclass 417 / 462)
12 months per visa (max 6 months with one employer); second/third visas via specified work
- Insurance
- Recommended— no Medicare for most holders; health/travel cover advised
- Good for
- Young adults (18–30, or 18–35 for some nationalities) from partner countries
- Requirement
- Eligible nationality, age limit, sufficient funds
- Study
Student visa (subclass 500)
Generally aligned to the course (up to ~5 years)
- Insurance
- Required— Overseas Student Health Cover (OSHC) is mandatory for the entire stay
- Good for
- International students in a CRICOS-registered course
- Requirement
- Confirmation of Enrolment, Genuine Student requirement, English + financial evidence
- Residence
Skilled permanent residence (subclass 189 / 190 / 491)
Permanent residence (189/190); 491 is a 5-year regional provisional route to PR
- Insurance
- OptionalNot required — permanent residents access Medicare; private cover optional
- Good for
- Invited skilled workers seeking permanent (or regional-provisional) residence
- Requirement
- Points-tested via SkillSelect (65-point pass mark; actual cut-offs higher), positive skills assessment, eligible occupation
- Residence
Partner / family permanent residence
Two-stage: provisional (820/309) leading to permanent (801/100)
- Insurance
- OptionalNot required — temporary partner holders can usually enrol in Medicare while the permanent decision is pending
- Good for
- Spouses and de facto partners of citizens, PRs or eligible NZ citizens
- Requirement
- Genuine relationship with an eligible sponsor; health and character requirements
- Transit
Transit visa (subclass 771)
Up to 72 hours
- Insurance
- OptionalNot required — short transit
- Good for
- Travellers transiting through Australia en route to another country
- Requirement
- Confirmed onward travel within 72 hours; needed when not eligible for Transit Without Visa
Australia has no dedicated digital-nomad visa — remote work must be for overseas clients only on a visitor visa. Skilled-visa income thresholds rise on 1 Jul 2026, and points cut-offs change over time. Students must hold OSHC; many temporary workers need OVHC. Last checked: 2026-06 — confirm with immi.homeaffairs.gov.au.
Last verified June 2026
Routes that depend on your nationality
Some of Australia’s long-stay routes are open only to citizens of specific countries. Here’s where a United States passport stands:
Work and Holiday visa (subclass 462)
You qualify — open to United States passport holders
Sister scheme to 417 (youth mobility). Age 18-30; valid partner-country passport required. Most countries have an annual quota/cap and several (e.g. China, Indonesia, Vietnam) use a pre-application ballot; some streams also require functional English and minimum tertiary education. The 29 codes here are the well-documented partner countries (consistent across Tourism Australia / Wikipedia, June 2026); the official Dept of Home Affairs list is longer and periodically expanded with additional lower-quota partners (e.g. Bangladesh, Cambodia, Croatia, India, Laos, Mexico, Colombia, Sri Lanka, Fiji and other Pacific nations) — verify against immi.homeaffairs.gov.au for the full set.
Working Holiday visa (subclass 417)
Not open to United States passport holders
Age 18-30 generally; extended to 18-35 for UK, Canada, Denmark, France, Ireland and Italy passport holders. No annual cap, no ballot, no English-test or pre-arranged-employment requirement. 12-month stay, extendable to 2nd/3rd year via specified regional work. Open ONLY to these 19 partner-country passport holders (the higher-income-country stream). List consistent across Dept of Home Affairs / Tourism Australia / Wikipedia as of June 2026.
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into Australia, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
United States → Australia: frequently asked
- Do United States passport holders need a visa to visit Australia?
- Electronic travel authorisation (eTA). Apply online for a quick travel authorisation before you go. Always confirm with the official source before booking.
- Can a United States passport holder live or work long-term in Australia?
- Yes, via a long-stay visa. Australia has 8 documented visa types covering work, study, residence and — where it exists — digital-nomad routes.
- Do I need travel insurance for Australia?
- Entry to Australia never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Australia visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.