Do Australia passport holders need a visa to visit SI?
Australian ordinary passport holders do NOT need a visa for short tourist stays in Slovenia. You can enter visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period across the Schengen Area. As of 31 May 2026, ETIAS is not yet mandatory (launch expected Q4 2026 with a transitional grace period), so currently only a valid passport is required. Slovenia is a full member of the Schengen Area, and Australia is on the EU's visa-exempt list for short stays. This means Australian passport holders travelling for tourism, business, family visits or transit may enter without any visa for up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, counted cumulatively across ALL Schengen states (not just Slovenia). No application or fee is required to enter at present. Two upcoming EU systems affect Australians: the Entry/Exit System (EES), a biometric border-registration scheme (fingerprints and facial image collected at the border, no fee), which is rolling out from 10 April 2026; and ETIAS, a pre-travel online authorisation (EUR 20 for applicants aged 18-70, valid up to 3 years), expected to launch around Q4 2026 followed by a transitional period before it becomes strictly mandatory. As of 31 May 2026, ETIAS is NOT yet required, so a valid Australian passport remains the only document needed. Your passport must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your intended date of departure from the Schengen Area, have been issued within the previous 10 years, and contain at least two blank pages. Overstaying the 90/180 limit can trigger fines, deportation and Schengen-wide entry bans, so travellers should track their cumulative days carefully.
VISA-FREETOURISMMULTIPLE ENTRYLast verified 2026-05-30
For guidance only — visa rules change with little notice. Always confirm directly with the destination's embassy or foreign ministry before booking non-refundable travel. Information here applies to ordinary (non-diplomatic) passports unless noted.
Australia (PR)Living in Australia as a permanent resident? See PR-specific guidance→