List of ambassadors of Australia to Turkey

The Ambassador of Australia to Turkey is an officer of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and the head of the Embassy of the Commonwealth of Australia to the Republic of Turkey.The ambassador resides in Ankara.[1] Since 2011, non-resident accreditation has been held for Azerbaijan and Georgia, which were transferred from the Embassy in Moscow.The ambassador's work is assisted by a Consulate-General in Istanbul and a Consulate in Çanakkale (since 2006).[2][3] The current ambassador, since October 2021, is Miles Armitage.
Department of Foreign Affairs and TradeHis ExcellencyMinister for Foreign AffairsResidenceAnkaraPrime Minister of AustraliaGovernor General of AustraliaAlan McNicollAustralianCommonwealth of AustraliaRepublic of Turkeynon-resident accreditationAzerbaijanGeorgiaEmbassy in MoscowIstanbulÇanakkaleJohn McMillanBarry HallJon PhilpJean DunnJames Larsennon-residentAustralia–Turkey relationsThe Canberra TimesAustralian Dictionary of BiographyAustralian National UniversityDowner, AlexanderSmith, StephenBishop, JuliePayne, MariseAustralian GovernmentLists of heads of diplomatic missions of AustraliaAfghanistanAlgeriaArgentinaAustriaBelgiumBrazilCambodiaColombiaCroatiaDenmarkEthiopiaEstoniaFranceGermanyGreeceHoly SeeHungaryIndonesiaIrelandIsraelJordanKuwaitLebanonMexicoMicronesiaMongoliaMoroccoMyanmarNetherlandsNorth KoreaNorwayPhilippinesPolandPortugalRussiaSaudi ArabiaSerbiaSouth KoreaSwedenSwitzerlandThailandTimor-LesteUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited StatesVenezuelaVietnamZimbabweHigh CommissionersBangladeshBruneiCanadaCook IslandsCyprusKiribatiMalaysiaMauritiusNew ZealandNigeriaPakistanPapua New GuineaSingaporeSolomon IslandsSouth AfricaSri LankaTrinidad and TobagoTuvaluUnited KingdomVanuatuConsuls-GeneralHong Kong and MacauHoustonNoumeaNew YorkShanghaiSurabayaAfrican UnionEuropean Union and NATOPacific Islands ForumUnited Nations in New YorkUnited Nations in GenevaUnited Nations in NairobiUnited Nations Agencies in RomeUnited Nations in ViennaUNESCOPalestineTaiwan