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Yes β every Czech traveller needs a visa to enter Australia, but the right one is simple to get. Australia does not offer visa-free entry to anyone, so a passport alone is not enough. For Czech passport holders the correct travel document is the eVisitor (subclass 651), a free electronic visa created specifically for citizens of eligible European countries. The Czech Republic is one of those eligible countries, so Czech travellers apply for the eVisitor rather than a standard tourist visa.
The eVisitor is requested entirely online and linked electronically to your passport β there is no sticker, no label and no embassy appointment. You can review the destination on our Australia travel hub or go straight to the Australia eVisitor page.
The eVisitor is a multiple-entry visa for short visits to Australia for tourism or business visitor activities. It is granted electronically and is designed for passport holders of eligible European countries, including Czech citizens. Once approved, it is tied to the passport you used to apply, so you simply travel on that passport and the airline and border systems read your visa automatically.
Typical reasons Czech travellers use the eVisitor include holidays and sightseeing, visiting friends and relatives, attending conferences or business meetings, and short courses of study. It does not permit paid work in Australia. If your plans involve working, long-term study or migration, you will need a different visa category.
Yes β the Australian government does not charge a visa application fee for the eVisitor. This is one of the key advantages of the eVisitor over other Australian travel permits: there is no government cost for the visa itself for eligible European passport holders such as Czech travellers. If you choose to apply through an assisted service, an optional service fee may be added for help completing the form, checking your details for errors and supporting you if anything needs to be corrected β but the eVisitor itself carries no Australian government charge.
The eVisitor is mandatory for every Czech citizen travelling to Australia for a short visit, regardless of age. There is no family or group visa: each traveller, including children and infants, needs their own eVisitor linked to their own passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application on a child's behalf using the child's passport details.
Czech permanent residents who hold a passport from a non-eligible country cannot use the eVisitor on that passport β eligibility is based on holding a passport from an eVisitor country. If you hold dual nationality, apply on your Czech (or other eligible European) passport and travel on the same passport.
The eVisitor is requested online, so you do not upload a stack of paperwork, but you do need accurate details and you must meet Australia's entry conditions. Have the following ready before you apply:
Most Czech travellers fly to Australia from Prague with a connection through Dubai, Doha or Istanbul, so total travel time is long. Apply a few days before departure so your grant has time to come through comfortably before check-in. Remember you must be outside Australia when you apply and when the visa is granted.
For Czech applicants, the eVisitor is frequently approved within minutes, and very often the grant notice arrives by email the same day. In some cases β for example if additional checks are needed β it can take up to around 24 to 72 hours. You should not count on instant approval at the airport: apply several days before departure so you have a buffer if anything needs attention. If you are asked for more information, respond promptly so your grant is not delayed.
The eVisitor is valid for up to 12 months from the date it is granted and allows multiple entries. On each visit you may stay up to 3 months. This makes it well suited to Czech travellers planning a single long holiday, a multi-stop trip around Australia, or several shorter business or family visits across the year.
The 12-month period and the 3-month-per-visit limit are separate: you can come and go as often as you like while the visa is valid, provided no single stay exceeds three months. The eVisitor is tied to the passport you used to apply, so if you renew or replace your Czech passport you will need a new eVisitor linked to the new document.
The eVisitor is a visitor visa, so it covers tourism and a defined set of business activities β but not employment. As a Czech eVisitor holder you can:
You cannot work for or provide services to an Australian business, sell goods or services to the public, or stay longer than three months on a single visit. If you need to work or study long-term, apply for the appropriate visa instead.
The eVisitor lets you board your flight and is checked electronically, but the final decision to enter Australia is made by a Border Force officer on arrival. Be ready to show your valid Czech passport (the same one linked to your visa) and to explain the purpose and length of your visit. Australia has strict biosecurity rules, so you must declare any food, plant material, wooden items or medicines on your Incoming Passenger Card β when in doubt, declare it. Many airports use SmartGate for eligible ePassport holders, which can speed up clearance for Czech travellers.
An approved eVisitor allows you to board your flight, but entry is confirmed by the immigration officer on arrival. Present the same Czech passport you used to apply, complete your Incoming Passenger Card accurately, and be ready to explain where you will stay and how long you plan to visit. Provided your documents are in order and consistent with your application β and you have declared anything required under Australia's biosecurity rules β you will be admitted and can begin your trip, whether that is Sydney and the east coast, the Outback, or Australia's wine regions and reefs.
Every traveller needs their own eVisitor, including children and infants, because each visa is linked to an individual passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application for a child using the child's own Czech passport details. If you are travelling as a Czech family, simply submit a separate eVisitor application for each member. The visa is free of Australian government charge for each eligible person, so a family trip does not carry a per-person visa cost from the Australian government.
Yes. Australia requires a visa from every visitor, and Czech citizens use the eVisitor (subclass 651) β a free electronic visa for eligible European passport holders. It is requested online and linked to your passport, with no sticker or embassy appointment.
Yes. The Australian government does not charge a visa application fee for the eVisitor for eligible European citizens, including Czech travellers. If you apply through an assisted service, an optional service fee may apply for help completing and checking your application.
The eVisitor allows stays of up to 3 months per visit and is valid for up to 12 months from the date it is granted, with multiple entries. No single visit can exceed three months, but you can enter and leave as often as you like while it is valid.
It is often granted within minutes, and the notice is sent by email. Occasionally it can take up to around 24 to 72 hours if extra checks are needed, so Czech travellers should apply several days before departure rather than at the airport.
No. The eVisitor is for tourism and business visitor activities only β it does not allow paid work. You can attend meetings and conferences and study for up to three months, but for employment you need a different visa.
You mainly need a valid Czech passport, a working email address for the grant notice, and accurate answers to the health and character questions. There is no document upload, but your passport details must match exactly.
Yes. Every traveller needs an individual eVisitor linked to their own passport, including children and infants. A parent or guardian can apply on a child's behalf using the child's Czech passport details, and it is free of Australian government charge.
No. The eVisitor lets you board your flight, but the final decision is made by a Border Force officer on arrival. Carry your passport, complete the Incoming Passenger Card honestly, and declare any food, plant or wood items under Australia's biosecurity rules.