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JobSeeker Payment (JSP) customer going overseas 001-19051503



This document helps Service Officers decide if JobSeeker Payment (JSP) is payable to the customer while they are overseas and for how long. It also explains action to be taken by the Service Officer and the customer before their departure. The portability script should always be used when assessing a customer's departure from Australia.

Leaving to live in another country

If a JSP customer leaves Australia to live in another country, JSP and any concessions or add-ons will stop on the date of departure. This is because the customer stops being an Australian resident and loses qualification.

Temporary absence - approved reason for travel

JSP customers (including principal carers of a dependent child) who temporarily leave Australia for an approved reason may be entitled to payment for a specific negotiated period but no more than 6 weeks. JSP may be portable for:

Customers will be exempt from their mutual obligation requirements while absent for these reasons.

The allowable absence reasons are subject to very specific guidelines.

The rate paid for JSP customers who are payable overseas will include add-ons (if qualified) for the period of the absence up to the maximum portability period.

Supporting documents - acceptable proof of the absence

Customers will need to provide acceptable proof of the absence to determine if they satisfy one of the approved reasons, preferably before their departure.

In an emergency, if it is accepted that the customer is leaving for an approved reason they will need to provide supporting documents on their return. If the documents are not acceptable or not provided, a debt will be raised.

If a customer provides evidence or supporting documents to a service centre about a previous temporary absence, which was not for an approved reason at the time, there is no need to run the Review officer script as a decision on their portability has not yet been made. Refer the case to Centrelink International Services (CIS). See the Resources page for contact details.

JSP will stop from the date of departure if the reason for leaving Australia is not acceptable or proof of the reason is not provided either before or after the absence.

Portability interview

Use the Portability Script - Departures and Returns to assess the customer's entitlement to payment while they are outside Australia. If the script is available, use it to code the absence from Australia.

Service centre and smart centre staff are responsible for handling the portability interview and any departure coding where a customer clearly does not satisfy an approved reason or where the customer is leaving Australia to live in another country.

If a customer has indicated their overseas travel meets the initial criteria for an approved reason, refer the case to Centrelink International Services (CIS) to assess entitlement and code the departure. The portability script will guide service centre and smart centre staff when it is necessary to refer to CIS.

Only CIS have the delegation to assess, approve and record an approved absence.

Portability period

A person's portability period starts on the day they leave Australia. For portability purposes, a customer is not inside Australia for any part of the day they departed Australia regardless of the time of departure. If the customer is travelling outside Australia on a cruise, the date of departure is the date the ship leaves the last Australian port.

The day a customer returns to Australia is not included as part of their absence. They are considered to be inside Australia on that day and therefore no longer affected by portability. If they leave and return on the same day, this is not considered a departure from Australia for portability purposes.

Notification of intended departure and return

The Department of Home Affairs generally advises when a customer or child leaves or returns to Australia. The Centrelink system uses the information to assesses the portability of payments and concession cards. The assessment will happen regardless of whether the customer has told Services Australia their travel details. Note: do not cancel Department of Home Affairs datalink activities.

Where the customer gives evidence they travelled on different dates, the agency should consider using those different dates, if both the following apply:

  • the new dates are logical
  • the results will be a better outcome for the customer

This most often happens if a customer passes through Australian customs on one day but the flight leaves the next day.

In many cases, customers do not have to tell the agency if they are leaving Australia temporarily for less than 6 weeks, or when they have returned from a temporary absence.

When customers do need to tell us about a departure before leaving Australia or when they have returned to Australia they can use the Travelling outside of Australia service. This service is in their Centrelink online account. If the travel or portability assessment is complex the online service will ask them to contact the agency.

Services Australia website lists when customers must tell the agency they are leaving or returning to Australia. The Resources page has a link.

Customer advises change to departure or return dates

If a customer who is travelling for an approved reason advises they are departing on a specific date, and then departs Australia more than 3 days before or more than 3 days after the advised date:

  • any specific negotiated period of portability approved for the original date of departure will no longer apply
  • the customer's approved reason for travel outside Australia may no longer be valid, and payments will stop when the immigration datalink verifies the customer's actual date of departure
  • it is essential that a customer advises of any change in their departure details before they travel if they want to be paid for the absence

If the customer is unable to return to Australia at the end of the specific negotiated period, they should contact Centrelink International Services (CIS) or their payment will stop. If more time overseas is needed, this can be discussed and any approved absence possibly extended.

Services Australia has the discretion to extend the period of portability under certain circumstances:

  • if the customer is unable to return to Australia for a reason other than an approved reason (for example, they are hospitalised), or
  • the customer is still needed overseas at the end of the maximum portability period

In both situations, refer the customer to CIS for assessment and coding.

Customer's dependent child leaving Australia

If the customer is the principal carer of a dependent child (or children) and that child (or all dependent children) leaves Australia, it can affect the customer's entitlement. It may also have an impact on the mutual obligation requirements that apply to a customer.

If the child goes overseas to live in another country, they stop being a dependent child and the customer will stop being considered the principal carer for that child immediately on the child's departure. Any payment or concession paid to the customer for the care for the child will stop on the departure date. The customer's Job Plan may need to be reviewed with this change in carer status.

If a child leaves Australia temporarily or was born outside Australia, the customer will generally still be regarded as the principal carer for up to 6 weeks, even if the customer remains in Australia.

A person cannot be the principal carer of any child who has been outside Australia for more than 6 weeks unless the customer is outside Australia with that child and they are still entitled to the social security payment they were receiving when they left Australia (that is, the customer's maximum portability period has not stopped).

If the customer returns to Australia without the child and the child has already been outside Australia for more than 6 weeks, the customer will stop being considered the principal carer for that child from the date of their return.

If a customer has stopped being the principal carer of a child because the child has been outside Australia for more than 6 weeks and the child returns to Australia for less than 6 weeks before going overseas again, the customer will stop being the principal carer of that child for the entire period of the later absence.

If the child returns to Australia and the customer remains overseas, the customer continues to be the principal carer for the child for the remainder of the customer's portability period. If the child leaves Australia again less than 6 weeks from return and re-joins the customer overseas, the customer will continue to be considered the principal carer for that child for the remainder of the customer's portability period.

Restoration of payment upon return to Australia

If a customer remains outside Australia after their payment has stopped for a portability related reason, continuation of payment on their return to Australia may be possible. Generally, payment can be automatically or manually restored if they return to Australia within 13 weeks of their payment stopping. See Returning to Australia.

If the customer is also receiving Pensioner Education Supplement (PES), PES will suspend if JobSeeker Payment suspends. PES cannot be restored if there is a gap in entitlement. It will need to be reclaimed even if the suspension is less than 13 weeks. PES will need to be cancelled so JSP can be restored (if applicable). See Cancellation of Pensioner Education Supplement (PES) and ABSTUDY PES.

JSP granted under the New Zealand 10 year residence exemption

If a customer has been granted JSP under the New Zealand 10 year, residence exemption, their payment cannot be restored on return to Australia if there is any gap between the date of suspension/cancellation and the date of restoration. As this exemption can only be used once, the customer will not be able to be re-granted JSP again under this exemption.

If a customer has been granted JSP under the New Zealand 10 year residence exemption, they can only receive JSP for 6 months. Any portability paid for an approved reason cannot be paid past the date JSP is due to stop under these provisions.

The Resources page has examples of portability of JobSeeker Payment (JSP), links to Services Australia website for information about portability of payments and travelling overseas with Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme (PBS) medicines and contact details for Centrelink International Services (CIS).

Coding departures and returns for customers leaving Australia

Overseas absences for eligible medical reasons

Overseas absences for humanitarian reasons

Overseas absences for acute family crisis

Overseas absences for Australian Defence Force Reserves

Discretion to extend portability period

Portability of Add-ons

Pension Supplement overseas absences

Family Tax Benefit (FTB), Child Care Subsidy (CCS) and Paid Parental Leave scheme customer/child going overseas

Recording and correcting employment income details

Effect of income support entitlement on Family Tax Benefit (FTB)

Exempting a job seeker from their mutual obligation requirements when going overseas

Restricted portability for payment during overseas absences where customer has special circumstances

Returning to Australia

Changing details of a customer's travel to and/or from Australia

View/update overseas travel online