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SYDNEY, Australia - Australia is ditching paper arrival cards. On July 13, the federal government confirmed plans to roll out digital passenger cards, branded the Australia Travel Declaration, across every international airport and seaport in the country within the next 12 to 18 months, according to One Mile at a Time.
The shift marks the end of the orange paper Incoming Passenger Card that travelers have filled out by hand for decades. The new Australia Travel Declaration captures the same immigration, customs, and biosecurity information but allows passengers to submit it electronically before they land.
How the Digital System Works
The government has been testing the Australia Travel Declaration with Qantas since October 2024 on selected international flights into Brisbane, Sydney, and Melbourne. So far, more than 450,000 passengers have used the system during the pilot, according to One Mile at a Time. Eligible travelers complete the declaration via the Qantas app up to 72 hours before departure, then receive a QR code to present to Australian Border Force and biosecurity officers on arrival.
The pilot has been limited to adult, English-speaking passengers using SmartGates and self-service kiosks. Access will expand to include children, groups, and non-English speakers as the rollout progresses. Until the digital system is available nationwide, all other travelers must still complete the paper card on arrival.
National Rollout Funded by AU$56.1 Million Package
The phased rollout will be supported by a AU$56.1 million investment over four years, earmarked to modernize airport operations and border systems, according to reporting based on the government's announcement. The plan calls for digital passenger cards to be introduced progressively at all international airports and seaports over the next 12 to 18 months, bringing Australia in line with other countries that have moved to electronic arrival systems.
The government and industry are co-designing broader access via a web form and, eventually, app-based solutions beyond the Qantas pilot. The goal is to eliminate paper cards entirely once the infrastructure is in place at every entry point.
What Travelers Should Know
If you're flying into Australia on Qantas and are invited to use the trial, the process is straightforward: complete the Australia Travel Declaration via the Qantas app before your flight, save the QR code, and show it at the border. It cuts out the scramble to fill in the paper card during descent or in the arrivals hall. Passengers in the pilot report smoother processing through SmartGates, with less waiting and no handwritten forms to manage.
But if you're flying on another carrier or arriving at a port not yet part of the rollout, you'll still need the paper card. The digital system isn't universal yet, and access remains limited during the transition. Check with your airline or the Australian Border Force website before departure to confirm which process applies to your trip.
What This Changes at the Border
Digitizing passenger cards is a logical step. Paper forms are slow, prone to error, and a pain to process on both sides of the immigration counter. The Australia Travel Declaration should speed up arrivals, reduce bottlenecks at busy airports, and make the border experience less analog for travelers who already book flights, check in, and clear customs via apps and kiosks.
The 12 to 18 month rollout timeline is ambitious but not unrealistic. Australia's SmartGate infrastructure is mature, and the Qantas pilot has been running long enough to iron out major glitches. The challenge will be scaling the system across carriers, ensuring non-English speakers and families can navigate it, and managing the inevitable technical hiccups when servers go down or QR codes don't scan.
There are open questions about data security and information sharing. The Australia Travel Declaration collects personal, immigration, and biosecurity information and shares it across government agencies and, in the Qantas pilot, through the airline's app. How that data is stored, who has access, and what safeguards exist will matter to travelers concerned about privacy. The government hasn't published detailed protocols yet, and transparency will be critical as the system expands.
For now, the practical calculus is simple: if you're eligible for the digital option, use it. It's faster, cleaner, and eliminates the ritual of hunting for a pen in the arrivals hall. But until the rollout is complete, pack patience. The transition will be messy, and not every entry point will move at the same pace.
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