Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I'm going to be visiting Australia for 10 days next month.  The Border Force website says that I should declare my medications and have a letter from my doctor.  Is this really necessary? It's seems rather pointless for a couple of strips of common medicines.

Posted
9 hours ago, Zaphod Priest said:

The Border Force website says that I should declare my medications and have a letter from my doctor.  Is this really necessary?

You have answered your own question. 

 

Border Force say you should declare and have a letter from your doctor.  Don't declare, and do not have a letter from your doctor, may result in a fine, or worse, and you can be sure you will be searched every single time you return to Australia in future years. 

Posted
9 hours ago, Zaphod Priest said:

I'm going to be visiting Australia for 10 days next month.  The Border Force website says that I should declare my medications and have a letter from my doctor.  Is this really necessary? It's seems rather pointless for a couple of strips of common medicines.

What are they?

Posted
13 hours ago, KhunHeineken said:

You have answered your own question. 

 

Not really.  If the changes of being caught are negligible, I'll take the risk.  I really don't want to waste the time, money and inconvenience of getting a doctor's letter if I think I can get away for it.

As for being searched on future entries, I have never been to Australia before, and after this trip, I'm unlikely to go again.  Not an issue.

  • Like 1
Posted
39 minutes ago, Zaphod Priest said:

 

Not really.  If the changes of being caught are negligible, I'll take the risk.  I really don't want to waste the time, money and inconvenience of getting a doctor's letter if I think I can get away for it.

As for being searched on future entries, I have never been to Australia before, and after this trip, I'm unlikely to go again.  Not an issue.

There's a decent chance you would get put in for a baggage check coming from Thailand.

 

I'd declare them but not worry about a medical certificate.

Posted
On 2/26/2025 at 4:59 AM, Zaphod Priest said:

 

Not really.  If the changes of being caught are negligible, I'll take the risk.  I really don't want to waste the time, money and inconvenience of getting a doctor's letter if I think I can get away for it.

As for being searched on future entries, I have never been to Australia before, and after this trip, I'm unlikely to go again.  Not an issue.

You just keep talking yourself into it and reaffirming what you know to be a bad decision.

 

A bit like guys saying, "my girl is different" despite everyone telling the guy she's not.  

 

Australian Border Force is not 'different."  :smile:

Posted
On 2/26/2025 at 1:40 PM, Will27 said:

There's a decent chance you would get put in for a baggage check coming from Thailand.

 

I'd declare them but not worry about a medical certificate.

Yes, just declare them you will pay no duty for them  

Posted
On 2/26/2025 at 11:59 AM, Zaphod Priest said:

 

Not really.  If the changes of being caught are negligible, I'll take the risk.  I really don't want to waste the time, money and inconvenience of getting a doctor's letter if I think I can get away for it.

As for being searched on future entries, I have never been to Australia before, and after this trip, I'm unlikely to go again.  Not an issue.

So why ask the question in the first place, if you had no intention of adhering to the advice given.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...