Victorian Covid rule axed – fully-vaccinated NSW residents can travel to Melbourne quarantine free

Dan Andrews axes Victoria’s strict border rules – meaning fully-vaccinated residents in NSW can now travel to Melbourne without needing to quarantine

  • Fully-vaccinated NSW residents can now travel into Victoria quarantine free
  • Anyone from Sydney or surrounding regions can enter on an orange permit 
  • Those who aren’t vaccinated must get a permit and isolate for 72 hours


NSW residents who are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 can now travel to Victoria without needing to quarantine.

Relaxed requirements now apply to fully vaccinated travellers who have been in red or orange zones and the border bubble has been reinstated for Broken Hill and Shepparton.

From midnight, Victoria scrapped red zones that applied to Greater Sydney areas so anyone who has been in Sydney, the Blue Mountains, the Central Coast, Shellharbour and Wollongong can now enter Victoria on an orange zone permit, without any quarantine or testing.

Passengers wearing protective masks collecting baggage after arriving on a flight from Melbourne at Sydney Airport. NSW residents who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can now travel to Victoria without needing to quarantine

Anyone who isn’t vaccinated requires a permit, must get tested within 72 hours and isolate until they receive a negative Covid-19 test result.

The remainder of regional NSW is now classified as green zones and vaccinated people from there will simply require a permit to enter Victoria.

People coming into NSW from Victoria have to stay-at-home for 14 days but can leave home for essentials like food, exercise, medical care or work or study if they can’t do that at home.

Meanwhile, in NSW 92.3 per cent of eligible people 16 and older have had at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 81.6 per cent of adults are fully vaccinated.

Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said passing 92 per cent was a “great achievement” but she wants to see the rates increase.

“I want to get 95 per cent or even above,” Dr Chant said on Tuesday.

The number of people hospitalised with COVID-19 has dropped, with 589 in hospital including 128 in intensive care and 69 on ventilators.

The fall in the number of people in hospital and in intensive care was also a relief for staff who have been working in a system under stress for months.

“But it will not mean they have much of a breather – we also have business as usual,” Dr Chant said.

NSW recorded 273 locally acquired virus cases and four more deaths in the 24 hours to 8pm on Monday.

Less than two weeks after the first easing of restrictions, Dr Chant warned an expected rise in case numbers was yet to come.

“Let’s try to make sure that our ICUs have as few as possible people with COVID in them, as we open up over this Christmas-New Year period,” she said.

There have been 479 COVID-19 related deaths in NSW since the latest outbreak began on June 16, and 535 in total since the start of the global pandemic.

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