act_entire_male_dog_rules

ACT — Entire Male (Stud) Dog: Legal & Registration Guide



BreedBuddies Knowledge Base — Australia
Last verified: 8 July 2026



Quick Answer: Do You Need a Breeding Licence?

No — not just to stand him at stud. Once you hold a licence to keep a dog sexually entire and he’s registered accordingly with Domestic Animal Services, that’s all you need. A separate breeders licence is only required if you plan to breed a litter yourself.



Quick Summary



Question

Answer

Desexing mandatory?

Yes, over 6 months old — unless you hold an entire-dog licence.

Can you keep an entire male?

Yes, with a licence to keep a dog sexually entire.

Does that licence let you breed?

No — it only covers staying entire. A separate breeders licence is needed to breed a litter yourself.



What the Law Says

  • Dogs over 6 months must be desexed, unless the owner holds an entire-dog licence from Domestic Animal Services.
  • Selling an undesexed dog over 6 months old is unlawful without a permit.
  • Planning to breed a litter yourself (not just stud services)? You need a separate breeders licence too.



Can You Keep an Entire Male?

Yes, with the right licence. He must already be registered and microchipped before you apply. Expect a possible site inspection and a check of any welfare convictions in the last 10 years.



If you’re only offering stud services (not breeding litters yourself), you just need the entire-dog licence — no separate breeders licence required.



Registering With Council

  • Register and microchip before applying for an entire-dog licence.
  • Apply for the 'licence to keep a dog sexually entire'.
  • Also apply for a breeders licence if you’ll personally breed litters.
  • Renew registration yearly; keep licence conditions (e.g., fencing) in place.



[!WARNING]
Keeping a dog entire without this licence past 6 months is an offence.



Official Sources



Source

Authority

Link

Responsible dog ownership

City Services ACT

cityservices.act.gov.au

Pets fact sheet

Canberra Community Law

canberracommunitylaw.org.au



Disclaimer: General information only, not legal advice. Rules change — always confirm with your local council before registering or advertising a dog.



Questions about what applies to you and your dog? Reach out any time — we’re here to help.



Just WOOF 🐾
BreedBuddies

Updated on: 08/07/2026

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