Please visit Liquor Control Victoria’s website for liquor licensing, compliance, and regulatory information.
Certain restrictions apply to liquor and gambling activities on ANZAC Day.
The Liquor Control Reform Act 1998 (the LCR Act) includes restrictions on the supply of liquor on ANZAC Day (25 April).
Section 15A restrictions
While there are some exemptions, section 15A of the LCR Act generally prohibits the supply of liquor between 3am on the morning of ANZAC Day and 12 noon on ANZAC Day, for the following licence categories:
Section 15A of the LCR Act also prohibits the supply of liquor between 5am on the morning of ANZAC Day and 12 noon on ANZAC Day, for the following licence categories:
Additionally, section 15A prohibits liquor from being possessed or consumed between 3am on the morning of ANZAC Day and 12 noon on ANZAC Day, in relation to a premises where a BYO permit applies.
Liquor licences will have specific trading hours listed for ANZAC Day that account for the restrictions outlined in section 15A of the Act. Refer to your liquor licence for trading hours in the first instance. ANZAC Day trading hours for the different licence categories are:
The above are ANZAC Day trading hours that generally apply to the different licence categories, however, you may have different hours on your licence. It is therefore important for you to check your own liquor licence to see what hours you can supply liquor on ANZAC Day.
If you hold a licence category listed above, you must consider both the trading hours on your licence – noting that most licences have specific trading hours for ANZAC Day – and the restrictions under section 15A to determine your ANZAC Day trading hours (unless you meet an exemption outlined further below). Whichever hours are less, that is the time you can trade on ANZAC Day.
Below are some examples of how this works:
Example 1
ANZAC Day falls on a Thursday and you hold a restaurant and cafe licence with the following trading hours on the licence:
Good Friday & ANZAC Day Between 12noon and 1am the following morning
On any other day Between 7am and 1am the following morning
Considering the trading hours on your licence and the restrictions in section 15A, this means that:
Example 2
ANZAC Day falls on a Saturday and you hold a late night (on-premises) licence that authorises the supply of liquor “on any day between 7am and 4am the following morning”. Considering the trading hours on your licence and the restriction in section 15A, this means that:
Exemption to section 15A restrictions
Restrictions on the supply of liquor between the hours outlined in section 15A in relation to ANZAC Day do not apply in certain circumstances. Specifically, an exemption applies to:
If an above exemption applies to you, you may supply liquor between 3am and 12noon on ANZAC Day if the trading hours on your licence allow you to do so. If the trading hours on your licence do not allow you to supply liquor between 3am and 12noon on ANZAC Day, and you wish to trade during these hours (for example, commence supplying liquor before 12 noon on ANZAC Day), you will need to apply for a temporary limited licence (see below).
Supplying liquor before 12 noon on ANZAC Day
If you wish to supply liquor before 12 noon on ANZAC Day, you will need to apply for a temporary limited licence. Unless you are an RSL Club or sub-branch, we can only grant a temporary limited licence for the supply of liquor between 3am and 12noon on ANZAC Day if the supply of liquor:
When submitting a temporary limited licence application:
Temporary licences can take up to six weeks for processing, please ensure you lodge your application in plenty of time.
Note: where a gambling Venue Operator has been granted a temporary limited licence for ANZAC Day, they are permitted to operate gaming machines for the times covered by the temporary limited licence.