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Country entry guide · Oceania

Traveling to Australia with your dog

Difficulty: Difficult — permit, tests and quarantine required

Australia has one of the strictest dog-import schemes in the world, run by the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) to keep the country rabies-free. Your dog can only be imported directly from an approved country, must hold a biosecurity import permit obtained in advance, and must complete a mandatory stay at the Mickleham post-entry quarantine facility near Melbourne. What you prepare depends heavily on where your dog is coming from: approved countries are grouped by rabies risk (Group 1, 2 and 3), and a dog from a non-approved country must first live in an approved country before it can qualify. Plan on at least six months of veterinary preparation. This guide explains each step so you know exactly what to prepare before you book.

📋 At a glance

Dogs allowed Yes — from approved countries only
Import permit (BICON) Required
Microchip Required
Rabies vaccination Required
Rabies antibody test (RNATT) Required — 180-day waiting period
Veterinary health certificate Required
Quarantine (Mickleham, Melbourne) Required — minimum 10 days

⏱️ Estimated preparation time

EU traveller

Group 1 (e.g. New Zealand): the simplest path, but still weeks of preparation and certification before export.

Listed country

Group 2 (rabies-free approved countries): allow ~6 months — import permit, tests, treatments, then quarantine in Australia.

Non-listed country

Group 3 (rabies-present approved countries) or non-approved origin: 6+ months — rabies test with a 180-day wait, permit, tests, then quarantine.

Times are indicative. The rabies antibody test alone adds a fixed 3-month wait.

⚠️ Important

  • MyDogCanFly provides general information — not veterinary or legal advice.
  • Only a veterinarian and DAFF's import conditions (via BICON) can confirm the exact procedure for your individual dog.
  • Requirements depend on: the country of origin and its group, previous travel history, identification, vaccinations, the itinerary and the travel date.

Always consult your veterinarian before booking your trip.

🧭

Find a flight to Australia

Compare the airlines that accept dogs and check their conditions.

🧭 How your dog's entry requirements are decided

The exact steps depend on three things — Australia (your destination) sets a strict national scheme, but your dog's origin decides the detail.

  1. 1
    Country of destination — Australia★★★★★

    Australia's own biosecurity scheme applies to every dog: an import permit, an ISO microchip, rabies protection, several disease tests and treatments, and a mandatory post-entry quarantine at Mickleham near Melbourne.

  2. 2
    Country of departure and its group★★★★★

    Dogs may only be imported directly from an approved country. Approved countries are graded by rabies risk into Group 1, 2 and 3, which decides whether a rabies antibody test and its 180-day wait apply.

  3. 3
    Countries your dog recently stayed in★★★★☆

    Your dog must have lived in an approved country for at least 180 days before export. A dog coming from a non-approved country must first relocate to an approved country and complete that residency before it can qualify.

So read the requirements below as Australia's framework, then confirm your dog's group, origin and history against your BICON import permit and your vet.

✅ Entry requirements

Requirement Required? When Exceptions Official reference
Import permit (BICON) Required Apply in advance through DAFF's Biosecurity Import Conditions system after rabies steps; most permits issue in 20–40 business days (up to 123). Cats and dogs from some Group 1 territories may not need a permit — check the country-specific guide. DAFF — Import permits for cats and dogs
Approved country of origin Required Dog must have lived in an approved (Group 1/2/3) country for at least 180 days before export, counted from when the RNATT sample reaches the lab. A dog from a non-approved country must first relocate to an approved country and complete the residency there. DAFF — Bringing cats and dogs to Australia
ISO microchip Required ISO-compliant (usually 10 or 15 digits), scanned at every vet visit and before every blood sample; the only accepted identification. Microchips starting with 999 are not accepted (not unique). If the chip cannot be read on arrival, the dog cannot be imported. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 3)
Rabies vaccination Required Approved vaccine given when the dog was at least 84 days old; must stay valid continuously from the RNATT up to the date of export. If the vaccination lapses, the dog is ineligible: it must be re-vaccinated, re-tested and the 180-day wait restarts. DAFF — Rabies vaccination and tests (Step 4)
Rabies antibody test (RNATT) Required (Group 3 / rabies-present origins) Blood taken ≥3–4 weeks after vaccination; FAVN or RFFIT result ≥0.5 IU/ml; sample taken between 12 months and 180 days before export. A mandatory 180-day residency wait runs from the date the sample reaches the lab — no exceptions. Group 1/2 (rabies-free) origins do not require the RNATT. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 4)
Disease tests & treatments Required (vary by origin) Group 3: Leptospira canicola (vaccinate or test), Leishmania infantum, Brucella canis (if not desexed), internal & external parasite treatments; canine influenza for USA/South Korea/Canada. Most disease tests must be done within 45 days of export by a government-approved vet; exact list is set on your import permit. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 7)
Veterinary health certificate Required Completed by a government-approved vet, then endorsed (signed and stamped on every page) by an official government veterinarian within 5 days before export. Must be an original document with wet-ink stamps; copies are not accepted. It travels with the dog. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 8)
Entry point & transport Melbourne only Dog must arrive directly at Melbourne International Airport as manifested cargo in an IATA-approved crate; no cabin travel, no domestic transfers. Transit (staying on the plane) is allowed anywhere; transhipment is allowed only in approved countries under competent-authority supervision. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 6)
Quarantine (Mickleham, Melbourne) Required Minimum 30 days at the Mickleham post-entry quarantine facility, reduced to a minimum of 10 days if identity was officially verified before the RNATT blood was taken. Booking and full payment are required; non-compliance can mean a longer stay, extra testing, re-export or euthanasia at the owner's cost. DAFF — Post entry quarantine facility (Mickleham)
Age & pregnancy limits Conditional The dog must not be under quarantine restrictions, more than 30 days pregnant, or nursing puppies at export. Because rabies vaccination needs the dog to be ≥84 days old plus the tests and 180-day wait, imported dogs are effectively well over 7 months old. DAFF — Group 3 step-by-step guide for dogs (Step 2)

🌍 Rules according to your dog's origin

From the EU

Group 1 — rabies-free, simplest path

Group 1 covers New Zealand, Norfolk Island and Cocos (Keeling) Islands — recognised as rabies-free. This is the simplest pathway: no rabies antibody test, and some Group 1 territories may not require an import permit. Follow the country-specific DAFF guide, as conditions and quarantine differ from other groups.

From a listed country

Group 2 — rabies-free approved countries

Group 2 covers approved countries recognised as rabies-free (such as Japan, Singapore, Hawaii, Fiji and others). No rabies antibody test is required, but you still need a BICON import permit, veterinary tests and treatments, a health certificate, and quarantine at Mickleham. Official identity verification before preparation can shorten quarantine to a minimum of 10 days.

From a non-listed country

Group 3 or non-approved — antibody test + 180-day wait

Group 3 covers approved countries where rabies is present but well controlled (including the USA, UK, Canada, EU countries and many more). Add a rabies antibody test (RNATT ≥0.5 IU/ml) with a mandatory 180-day residency wait, plus disease tests, before the permit, certificate and quarantine. A dog from a non-approved country cannot be imported directly — it must first live in an approved country for at least 180 days.

🛬 Arrival

Every dog arrives the same way: directly into Melbourne, then to the Mickleham quarantine facility.

  • Your dog must arrive directly at Melbourne International Airport as manifested cargo — domestic transfers (e.g. arriving in Sydney then flying to Melbourne) are not permitted.
  • A biosecurity officer collects your dog on arrival and transports it to the Mickleham post-entry quarantine facility; you are notified by email within 24 hours.
  • Officers check your dog's health and assess all import documents against the permit conditions to confirm compliance.
  • Quarantine lasts a minimum of 30 days, or a minimum of 10 days if identity was officially verified before the RNATT blood was taken; you must book and pay in full before release.
  • Only original documents with wet-ink stamps are accepted; no toys, medication or personal items may travel in the crate (they are destroyed as biosecurity waste).
  • If your dog does not comply with the permit, it may be held longer, subjected to extra testing, re-exported or euthanised — all at the owner's expense.

🧳 Real traveller experience

No reliable documented traveller feedback available.

🚫 Restricted dogs

Australia bans the import of certain dog breeds under customs and environment law (separate from the biosecurity rules). These prohibitions apply on top of the import scheme, and a mixed-breed dog may be investigated on arrival if it appears to be a prohibited breed.

Category 1

Pure-breed dogs banned from import: dogo Argentino, fila Brasileiro, Japanese tosa, American pit bull terrier (or pit bull terrier), and Perro de Presa Canario (Presa Canario). These are prohibited under customs law — contact the Department of Home Affairs (+61 2 6264 1111) for details.

Category 2

Banned hybrid (wolf-cross) dogs: Czechoslovakian wolfdog (Vlcak), Saarloos wolfdog (wolfhound), Lupo Italiano (Italian wolfdog) and Kunming wolfdog. These fall under environment law — contact the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water ([email protected]).

Mixed-breed dogs are allowed if they meet all other import conditions. If an imported dog is later identified as possibly a prohibited breed, the Department of Home Affairs may investigate further.

✈️ National airlines

Carriers registered in this country that accept dogs — see each airline's MyDogCanFly fiche.

🛂 Airports in Australia

Check where your dog can relieve itself at each airport — and whether it's before or after security.

🧾 Preparation checklist

  • Confirm your dog's origin is an approved country and identify its group (1, 2 or 3)
  • ISO-compliant microchip that scans reliably (not starting with 999)
  • Valid rabies vaccination (dog ≥84 days old at the shot), kept valid until export
  • Rabies antibody test (RNATT) ≥0.5 IU/ml, then the mandatory 180-day wait — Group 3 origins
  • Optional official identity verification before the RNATT to cut quarantine to 10 days
  • Import permit obtained via BICON before export
  • Required disease tests and parasite treatments completed within the correct windows
  • Endorsed original veterinary health certificate travelling with the dog
  • Mickleham quarantine booked and paid; flight arriving directly into Melbourne as cargo in an IATA crate
  • Confirm your dog is not a prohibited breed (pure-breed or wolf-hybrid list)
📦 Find the right IATA travel crate for your dog →
🗓️ Last verified: 2026-07-11 👤 Reviewer: MyDogCanFly Data Team Confidence: ★★★★☆