- Bonnie Blue teased a return to Australia
- Claims she will do Schoolies this year
- Government sources: it’s not going to happen
- READ MORE: Annie Knight reveals the truth about Bonnie Blue’s despicable plan
Controversial sex worker Bonnie Blue‘s sensational promise to return to Australia for Schoolies 2025 appears to be nothing more than smoke and mirrors, and legally impossible without a major intervention.
Government sources have advised Daily Mail that it is virtually ‘impossible’ for Blue, 26, to return Down Under after she was deported last year for planning to film with ‘barely legal boys’ on the Gold Coast.
The mandatory ban is set to keep her out of Australia until at least late 2026 because when a visa is cancelled, the banned individual faces an automatic three-year exclusion period.
To return to Australia earlier, Blue – whose real name is Tia Bellenger – would need to apply for a waiver, a process that is rarely successful and requires compelling and exceptional circumstances that she is unlikely to muster for a sex tour.
Despite this, the British national recently boasted to A Current Affair that she had ‘good lawyers’ and would be ‘doing Schoolies this year,’ teasing parents that her grand return would cause ‘the biggest uproar’ yet.
But Home Affairs insiders say any chance of Blue turning up on the Gold Coast – the spot most traditionally associated with Schoolies – is pure fantasy.
Australian adult star Annie Knight, 28, a former friend and collaborator of Blue, has blown the whistle on what Blue is allegedly doing instead.
Bonnie Blue (pictured) told A Current Affair that she planned to come to Australia this year

‘Her visa is cancelled. She can’t come to Australia, she doesn’t have a lawyer who can change Australian laws,’ she told News Corp.
‘I know with 100 per cent certainty she’s in Bali right now getting content to post in three weeks’ time.’
During an interview with 60 Minutes host Ali Langdon recently, Blue coyly hinted she could be back in Australia in a matter of weeks.
‘I don’t want to give too much away, but let’s just say I’ve got good lawyers and I will be doing Schoolies this year,’ she said.
Shocked, Langdon replied: ‘I cannot believe the Australian Government is allowing you back into the country.’
‘A good lawyer gets you a very long way, maybe even Down Under,’ Blue teased.
But Blue did not specify she was doing Schoolies in Australia. She did, however, agree that any possible return to Australia would cause controversy – especially for parents of freshly 18-year-old sons.
‘I don’t want to give too much away, but let’s just say I’ve got good lawyers and I will be doing Schoolies this year,’ Blue told 60 Minutes host Ali Langdon in an episode aired on Monday
‘I think it’s going to frustrate a lot of parents. So I am very excited for Schoolies. I think this is going to cause the biggest uproar this year,’ she said.
Bonnie did not reveal what steps she was taking to win back her Australian visa, but claimed there was ‘a lot of work’ that goes on behind the scenes.
The Department of Home Affairs refused to comment on Blue’s individual case when contacted by Daily Mail.
Blue was banned from Australia last year over her smutty Schoolies plans after a Change.org petition was signed by tens of thousands of furious Aussies.
Petition starter Bambi C wrote that ‘Bonnie finds [Schoolies] the perfect opportunity to find young boys to prey on and record sexual content to sell’.
‘This is her sole working job whilst living in Australia from the UK. How is she contributing to our society?’ Bambi asked.

Child safety expert Kristi McVee also vehemently opposed Blue’s plans saying: ‘If this was a male [OnlyFans] creator targeting ‘barely legal’ young women, we would be up in arms, they would be called paedophiles.’
‘They’re just jealous, like the hate is coming from middle-aged women that don’t understand,’ Blue said to Daily Mail at the time.
Home Affairs minister Tony Burke said: ‘The Australian visa system has rules. If you don’t intend to obey those rules, don’t apply.’


