The countries the government really doesn't want you to visit

Published 2 hours ago
Source: 9news.com.au
The countries the government really doesn't want you to visit

More than 10 million Australians will head overseas in 2026, if recent travel trends are any indication.

But there are many destinations the federal government has strenuously warned against holidaying to, even though some of them are trying to entice foreign tourists.

Heading into the new year, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's (DFAT) Smartraveller service has slapped a "do not travel" warning on 23 countries.

READ MORE: Jess visited Afghanistan to raise awareness, but are tourists like her doing more harm than good?

Afghans walk outside Hazara's Sakhi Shrine in Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, April 19, 2024.

None of them are much surprise: war-torn Ukraine, Palestine and Yemen; military junta-run Myanmar and authoritarian North Korea; and large swaths of Africa, where the threat of terrorism, kidnapping and other violent crime looms, all feature on that list.

So too do Russia and allied Iran and Belarus, where Australians are at risk of arbitrary detention or arbitrarily enforced laws targeting Westerners.

"Russian authorities regard Australia as an 'unfriendly' nation and act accordingly," DFAT said about the world's largest country. 

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An Iranian woman shops in the Tajrish traditional bazaar in northern Tehran, Iran, Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021.

"If you're in Russia, leave immediately using commercial options."

The starkest warning, though, is saved for Afghanistan.

After re-seizing power in the country in 2021 following the disastrous US exit, the Taliban has promoted itself as a tourism destination in an attempt to bolster its fragile, war-ravaged and aid-dependent economy.

"The Afghan people are warm and welcoming and wish to host tourists from other countries and engage with them," Deputy Tourism Minister Qudratullah Jamal said in June

"Tourism brings many benefits to a country.

"We have considered those benefits and aim for our nation to take full advantage of them."

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This photo provided on July 2, 2025, by the North Korean government, shows a beach resort in the Wonsan-Kalma eastern coastal tourist zone on July 1, 2025.

While some Australians are among the foreigners who have travelled there, despite Afghans who have fled the country cautioning that it risks legitimising the Taliban's violent and abusive regime, the federal government's advice about a visit is blunt.

"Nowhere in Afghanistan is safe… understand that you could die and make a will before you go," it states.

While the "do not travel" countries are unsurprising, travellers may be a little shocked to see the advice for some of the safer nations on Smartraveller's list.

France and the United Kingdom are the only Western European countries to be marked as "exercise a high degree of caution" – the second level of advice.

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The moon rising near Inya Lake is seen Thursday, Dec.4, 2025, in Yangon, Myanmar.

Thailand, another popular destination for Australians, also has the same warning, while travellers to Rwanda and Zambia, which both have Mpox outbreaks and border "do not travel" areas, are told to "exercise normal safety precautions" – the first and lowest tier of Smartraveller advice – although specific parts of those nations have higher advisories.

The advice for each country is based on a range of factors, including intelligence from ASIO and Australia's allies, and objectively reflect the risks travellers would face there, according to DFAT.

"We frequently review our travel advisories. However, we don't change them for all issues and incidents," Smartraveller states.

"We update travel advisories if there are new or increased risks to Australians."

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