A1314 - Permitting small dogs and cats in aircraft cabins

Published

On 26 June 2025, the FSANZ Board approved Application A1314 to amend the Australia New Zealand Food Standards Code (the Code) to permit food to be served when pet cats and dogs are present in an aircraft cabin.

Australian food ministers now have 60 days to consider FSANZ's decision. If no review is requested, the changes will be gazetted and take effect.

The application, submitted by Virgin Australia Pty Ltd, sought approval to allow airline businesses operating in Australia to continue serving food to customers as part of in-flight service when pet cats and dogs are onboard.

We assessed the microbiological food safety risks and found that, with appropriate risk management controls in place, the presence of pet cats and dogs in aircraft cabins presents a low risk to passengers.

Risk management measures include:

  • secure containment of animals
  • preventing contact between animals and food handlers
  • maintaining food hygiene.

The amendment to the Code gives airlines operating in Australia and serving food in-flight the discretion to allow pet cats and dogs in aircraft cabins, provided all relevant food safety requirements are met.

 

Consultation and assessment

The application was assessed under FSANZ’s general procedure and included one round of public consultation. We released a public call for submissions in March 2025.

Read our media release 

Feedback from this consultation, along with our scientific assessment and engagement with stakeholders, informed our final decision and the development of the updated standard.

Read our full assessment and the approved changes in the approval report.

Approval report

Call for submissions

Click here to view consultation papers and submissions.

Administrative assessment

Air transportation of animals

This application to FSANZ relates only to allowing pet cats and dogs in aircraft cabins from a food safety perspective.

Other matters, such as airline-specific safety measures, cabin crew enforcement of hygiene requirements and animal health during travel, fall outside the scope of food regulation.

These responsibilities sit with civil aviation and border control agencies, and states and territories. In Australia, this includes the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA), the Department of Home Affairs and jurisdictional health authorities.