Skip to main content

Middle East Conflict

Registration now open for Bahrain, Iran, Israel, Kuwait, Lebanon, Qatar and UAE
Read more

GLOBAL ALERT

Travel, fuel supply and security impacts of conflict in the Middle East
Read more
Home - smartraveller.gov.au, be informed, be prepared - logo
Smartraveller
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube

Search Smartraveller

Browse destinations

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Before you go
    • The basics
      • Destinations
      • Europe and the Schengen Area
      • Getting a foreign visa
      • Travel insurance
      • CHOICE travel insurance buying guide
      • Travelling safely overseas (Easy Read)
    • Who you are
      • Academics
      • Colour, race, ethnicity, or religion
      • Dual nationals
      • Journalists
      • LGBTQIA+
      • Mature and older travellers
      • School leavers
      • Travelling with children
      • Travelling with a disability
      • Travelling with pets
      • Women
    • Activities
      • Adoption
      • Antarctica and the Arctic
      • Backpacking
      • Business
      • Living and working overseas
      • Marriage
      • Retiring overseas
      • Sports and adventure
      • Studying
      • Surrogacy
      • Volunteering
    • Major events
      • Cultural events
        • Anzac Day
      • Religious events
        • Ramadan
        • Hajj
      • Sporting events
        • FIFA World Cup 2026
    • Health
      • Infectious diseases
      • Going overseas for a medical procedure
      • Medical assistance overseas
      • Medication and medical equipment
      • Mental health
      • Organ transplant tourism
      • Pregnancy
      • Reciprocal health care agreements
      • What happens if you die overseas
    • Staying safe
      • Armed conflict
      • Assault
      • Cyber security
      • Extreme weather and natural disasters
        • Bushfire
        • Cyclones
        • Earthquakes and tsunamis
        • Floods
        • Landslides, mudslides and avalanches
        • Tornadoes
        • Volcanic eruption
      • Kidnapping
      • Partying safely
      • Piracy
      • Protests and civil unrest
      • Scams
      • Severe hot and cold weather
      • Sexual assault
      • Terrorism
      • Theft and robbery
    • Laws
      • Carrying or using drugs
      • Child sex offences
      • Female genital mutilation
      • Modern slavery
    • Getting around
      • Air travel
      • Boat travel
      • Cruising
      • Public transport
      • Road safety
  • Destinations
    • View all destinations
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • Pacific
  • While you're away
    • When things go wrong
      • Arrested or jailed
      • Lost property
      • Medical assistance
      • Money problems
      • Someone is missing
    • Crime overseas
    • Crisis or emergency
      • Nuclear incident
    • Australia's biosecurity and border controls
  • Urgent help
  • Our services
    • Consular State of Play
      • Data
      • Case studies
      • Images
      • Videos
      • Audio
      • Historical data
    • Consular Services Charter
      • ميثاق الخدمات القنصلية (Arabic)
      • 领事服务章程 (Chinese Simplified)
      • 領事服務章程 (Chinese Traditional)
      • Panduan Layanan Konsuler (Indonesian)
      • 領事サービス憲章 (Japanese)
      • 영사 서비스 헌장 (Korean)
      • กฎบัตรว่าด้วยบริการต่าง ๆ ของกงสุล (Thai)
      • Quy định về Dịch Vụ Lãnh Sự (Vietnamese)
    • Communities
      • العربية (Arabic)
      • Bahasa Indonesia
      • 中文 简体 (Chinese Simplified)
      • 中文繁體 (Chinese Traditional)
      • 日本語 (Japanese)
      • 한국어 (Korean)
      • ภาษาไทย (Thai)
      • Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
      • Filipino community
      • Indian community
    • Crises
    • How we write our travel advice
    • What our travel advice levels mean
    • News and updates
    • Notarial services
      • Documents we can legalise
      • Documents in Australia
      • Documents overseas
      • Certificate of No Impediment
      • Notarial forms
    • Passport services
    • Resources
      • Insurance Council of Australia reports
      • Consular Privacy Collection Statement
    • Subscription
    • Voting overseas
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. How we write our travel advice

How we write our travel advice

Last Updated
Friday, 15/05/2026

 

Read this page to understand how we develop our travel advisories. For information about our advice levels, go to what our advice levels mean.

On this page:

  • Smartraveller travel advisories
  • What does 'advice level' mean?
  • When we update our advice
  • Where our information comes from
  • Travel insurance and advice levels

Smartraveller travel advisories

It's important to know how safe the places you plan to travel are before you book your trip. This includes places you'll transit through. It's also important to stay informed during your travels if things change. Our travel advice helps you know the risks.

We have travel advisories for 179 destinations. Each advisory has specific information about:

  • safety
  • health
  • local laws
  • travel
  • local contacts.

Our advice also applies to Australian officials travelling and living overseas. We also adhere to the principle that there is no difference in information about security and other risks provided to Australian travellers and Australian government employees. We ensure we give the same advice about the risks to the public as we do to Australian officials.

There are limits to what the Australian Government can do if you get into trouble. Read the Consular Services Charter to understand how and when we may help.

Where we don't have travel advice

We don't have travel advice for countries with few Australian travellers or where the risks are low. We regularly check if we need travel advice for these destinations.

Our consular partners also publish travel advice. Check with them if we don't have an advisory for where you're going.

  • Canada
  • the United Kingdom
  • the United States
  • New Zealand

What does 'advice level' mean?

We give each destination an overall advice level of 1, 2, 3 or 4. These levels show the risk for Australians travelling there.

A higher advice level means higher risk.

The levels are:

  • Level 1: Exercise normal safety precautions (green)
  • Level 2: Exercise a high degree of caution (yellow)
  • Level 3: Reconsider your need to travel (orange)
  • Level 4: Do not travel (red).

Sometimes, we give a higher or lower level to areas within a country for specific risks or safety reasons. This could be a city, border region or other location.

It's important to understand the advice levels for each place you travel to and transit through. The advice level can affect your safety and travel insurance.

Read our information for each advice level to understand the risks.

Where to find the advice level for your destination

The coloured bar at the top of each advisory page shows the overall level.

We also show the overall advice level and any regional levels under 'advice levels' on the advisory page.

When we update our advice

We keep all our travel advisories under review but we don't change them for all issues and events. If a travel advisory hasn't been updated for several months, it's not out of date. There's just been no reason that an update has been required.

We update our advice if:

  • there are new risks to Australian travellers
  • the known risks change.

Risks include things such as:

  • security threats, for example terrorism
  • major protests or unrest
  • armed conflict
  • infectious diseases
  • new entry rules or laws
  • a natural disaster.

Stay informed about changes to our advice.

  • Subscribe to get an email when we update our travel advice. You can also subscribe for news updates.
  • Follow Smartraveller on Facebook, X and Instagram.
  • Follow your nearest Australian embassy or consulate on social media for local information and advice.

Changes to the advice level

We'll raise or lower the advice level if the risk for Australian travellers has changed. This could be because of a specific event or something else. We'll include the change in the 'Latest update' section at the top of the travel advisory page.

Sometimes regions or cities within the destination have different levels. This can be because either higher or lower risks or safety concerns exist for that specific location.

We may update our advice with new information without changing the advice level. We won't change the advice level if we decide that the risk for Australians hasn't changed.

If we raise the level of your destination, consider the advice carefully. Take extra precautions.

Where our information comes from

We use a range of sources to update our travel advisories, such as:

  • Australian diplomatic missions overseas
  • threat assessments from ASIO's National Threat Assessment Centre
  • intelligence reporting
  • information from our consular partners in the US, UK, New Zealand and Canada
  • other Australian government departments
  • media and open-source reporting
  • common problems Australians face overseas
  • feedback from travellers.

Our advisories objectively assess the risks you face overseas. Diplomatic, political or commercial factors do not influence them.

Travel insurance and advice levels

Check the advice level of where you're going before buying insurance.

Most travel insurance policies won't cover you in level 4 countries. Some will also exclude level 3 countries depending on the advice level reasons.

Some policies only let you cancel for safety reasons if we raise the advice level after you buy your policy. Most won't cover cancellation for safety reasons if the advice level hasn't changed.

If we raise the travel advice level to level 3 or level 4 and you want to cancel your trip, contact your insurer. Find out if you can claim to cover cancellation costs or itinerary changes.

Each travel insurance company will be different. Check with yours directly.

Read more

  • Learn about what our travel advice levels mean.
  • Read the travel advice for all the destinations you're travelling to or through.
  • Read our general travel advice and tips before you go.
  • Read the Consular Services Charter to understand our limits.
  • Contact the Consular Emergency Centre if you're overseas and need urgent help.

See also

  • Read the guides for travellers, including the travel insurance buying guide (CHOICE).
 
 

Main navigation

  • Consular State of Play
    • Data
    • Case studies
    • Images
    • Videos
    • Audio
    • Historical data
  • Consular Services Charter
    • ميثاق الخدمات القنصلية (Arabic)
    • 领事服务章程 (Chinese Simplified)
    • 領事服務章程 (Chinese Traditional)
    • Panduan Layanan Konsuler (Indonesian)
    • 領事サービス憲章 (Japanese)
    • 영사 서비스 헌장 (Korean)
    • กฎบัตรว่าด้วยบริการต่าง ๆ ของกงสุล (Thai)
    • Quy định về Dịch Vụ Lãnh Sự (Vietnamese)
  • Communities
    • العربية (Arabic)
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • 中文 简体 (Chinese Simplified)
    • 中文繁體 (Chinese Traditional)
    • 日本語 (Japanese)
    • 한국어 (Korean)
    • ภาษาไทย (Thai)
    • Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
    • Filipino community
    • Indian community
  • Crises
  • How we write our travel advice
  • What our travel advice levels mean
  • News and updates
  • Notarial services
    • Documents we can legalise
    • Documents in Australia
    • Documents overseas
    • Certificate of No Impediment
    • Notarial forms
  • Passport services
  • Resources
    • Insurance Council of Australia reports
    • Consular Privacy Collection Statement
  • Subscription
  • Voting overseas

Emergency consular assistance

The Australian Government provides 24-hour consular emergency assistance.

+61 2 6261 3305 from overseas

1300 555 135 from within Australia

For how we can help you overseas see the Consular Services Charter.

Enquiries and feedback

For non-urgent enquiries, or to provide feedback on consular services that you've recently received, contact us online.

For information on notarial services, email legalisations.australia@dfat.gov.au

To report a vulnerability you’ve identified on this website or to find out more about the department’s Vulnerability Disclosure Policy visit the DFAT website

About us

Smartraveller is provided by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

For more information go to about us.

Information in other languages

Find information in other languages.

 

Follow us

Facebook

Twitter

Instagram

YouTube

RSS

News

Read our latest news.

Resources

View resources for travel industry and media.

Was this information helpful?

Your feedback will help us improve your experience.

Footer

Australian Government logo. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  • Privacy policy
  • Copyright
  • Cookies and analytics
  • Accessibility
  • Disclaimer
  • Legal
  • Sitemap

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Before you go
    • The basics
      • Destinations
      • Europe and the Schengen Area
      • Getting a foreign visa
      • Travel insurance
      • CHOICE travel insurance buying guide
      • Travelling safely overseas (Easy Read)
    • Who you are
      • Academics
      • Colour, race, ethnicity, or religion
      • Dual nationals
      • Journalists
      • LGBTQIA+
      • Mature and older travellers
      • School leavers
      • Travelling with children
      • Travelling with a disability
      • Travelling with pets
      • Women
    • Activities
      • Adoption
      • Antarctica and the Arctic
      • Backpacking
      • Business
      • Living and working overseas
      • Marriage
      • Retiring overseas
      • Sports and adventure
      • Studying
      • Surrogacy
      • Volunteering
    • Major events
      • Cultural events
        • Anzac Day
      • Religious events
        • Ramadan
        • Hajj
      • Sporting events
        • FIFA World Cup 2026
    • Health
      • Infectious diseases
      • Going overseas for a medical procedure
      • Medical assistance overseas
      • Medication and medical equipment
      • Mental health
      • Organ transplant tourism
      • Pregnancy
      • Reciprocal health care agreements
      • What happens if you die overseas
    • Staying safe
      • Armed conflict
      • Assault
      • Cyber security
      • Extreme weather and natural disasters
        • Bushfire
        • Cyclones
        • Earthquakes and tsunamis
        • Floods
        • Landslides, mudslides and avalanches
        • Tornadoes
        • Volcanic eruption
      • Kidnapping
      • Partying safely
      • Piracy
      • Protests and civil unrest
      • Scams
      • Severe hot and cold weather
      • Sexual assault
      • Terrorism
      • Theft and robbery
    • Laws
      • Carrying or using drugs
      • Child sex offences
      • Female genital mutilation
      • Modern slavery
    • Getting around
      • Air travel
      • Boat travel
      • Cruising
      • Public transport
      • Road safety
  • Destinations
    • View all destinations
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • Pacific
  • While you're away
    • When things go wrong
      • Arrested or jailed
      • Lost property
      • Medical assistance
      • Money problems
      • Someone is missing
    • Crime overseas
    • Crisis or emergency
      • Nuclear incident
    • Australia's biosecurity and border controls
  • Urgent help
  • Our services
    • Consular State of Play
      • Data
      • Case studies
      • Images
      • Videos
      • Audio
      • Historical data
    • Consular Services Charter
      • ميثاق الخدمات القنصلية (Arabic)
      • 领事服务章程 (Chinese Simplified)
      • 領事服務章程 (Chinese Traditional)
      • Panduan Layanan Konsuler (Indonesian)
      • 領事サービス憲章 (Japanese)
      • 영사 서비스 헌장 (Korean)
      • กฎบัตรว่าด้วยบริการต่าง ๆ ของกงสุล (Thai)
      • Quy định về Dịch Vụ Lãnh Sự (Vietnamese)
    • Communities
      • العربية (Arabic)
      • Bahasa Indonesia
      • 中文 简体 (Chinese Simplified)
      • 中文繁體 (Chinese Traditional)
      • 日本語 (Japanese)
      • 한국어 (Korean)
      • ภาษาไทย (Thai)
      • Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
      • Filipino community
      • Indian community
    • Crises
    • How we write our travel advice
    • What our travel advice levels mean
    • News and updates
    • Notarial services
      • Documents we can legalise
      • Documents in Australia
      • Documents overseas
      • Certificate of No Impediment
      • Notarial forms
    • Passport services
    • Resources
      • Insurance Council of Australia reports
      • Consular Privacy Collection Statement
    • Subscription
    • Voting overseas