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DFAT issues new UK travel warning after Britain raises terrorism threat level

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has updated its travel warning for the United Kingdom after the UK government raised its terrorism threat level on Thursday. 

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has updated its travel warning for the United Kingdom after the UK government raised its terrorism threat level on Thursday. 

British authorities upped the terrorism threat level on 30 April from “substantial” to “severe”, meaning “an attack is highly likely in the next six months”.

The raised alert comes after a stabbing in North London. But the UK says the change is “not solely a result of that attack”.

UK travellers.
A group of travellers in London.

“The terrorist threat level in the UK has been rising for some time, driven by an increase in the broader Islamist and Extreme Right Wing terrorist threat from individuals and small groups based in the UK,” the government states on its website.

According to DFAT’s Smartraveller site, Aussie travellers should “be alert to the risks and take official warnings seriously”.

The Australian Government has not changed its overall travel alert level for the UK, advising Aussies to “exercise a high degree of caution… due to the threat of terrorism”. This is the second-lowest travel alert level.

Air travelers queue at border passport control entrance gates at Heathrow Airport on September 9, 2023 in London, UK. The British aviation hub is the busiest in the Europe by passenger traffic. UK entry travel warning
The UK travel warning comes two months after the country changed entry rules for some visitors.

Earlier this year, the rules for entry into the UK changed for dual Australian-British citizens.

“Australian-British or Australian-Irish dual citizens must enter the UK on their British or Irish passports, or through a certificate of entitlement in another valid passport,” Smartraveller advises. 

“These dual citizens are unable to obtain an ETA or visa to enter the UK. Dual citizens may not be able to board a flight to the UK without a valid document.”

The new rule came just over a year after the UK government mandated another new law requiring Australian visitors to obtain an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) before travelling to the country (for short stays).

Tenby Harbour, Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK
DFAT’s UK advice is at the second-lowest level. (Picture: Tenby Harbour, Wales)