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Under-18s at licensed venues or locations

It's against the law to supply alcohol to people under the legal drinking age of 18 years.

The legal drinking age in Victoria is 18 years. Anyone under 18 is considered a minor.

It is against the law to:

  • supply alcohol to a minor
  • allow a minor to be given alcohol or drink alcohol at a licensed venue or location
  • sell alcohol to a customer if you suspect they will give it to a minor. This is called secondary supply.

There are serious penalties for breaching these laws, including fines of more than $24,000.

Find out how to check IDs to identify minors.

Minors at licensed venues

A minor is allowed at a licensed venue if they are in the company of a responsible adult.

Unaccompanied minors

If a minor is not in the company of a responsible adult they are called an unaccompanied minor.

Unaccompanied minors can be at your licensed venue if any of these apply:

  • Your licence has a condition that allows minors to be there (for example, you might be a junior sports club with a restricted club licence).
  • You have a restaurant and cafe licence or an on-premises licence with restaurant conditions (until 11 pm).
  • The minor is having a meal.
  • The minor is staying at the accommodation, if the licensed location is an accommodation provider.
  • The minor is employed by the licensee but not involved in the supply of alcohol.
  • The minor is completing an approved training course in hospitality that we have approved.

Compliance checklist

Check if you are doing these things to help you comply with the law:

  • Our staff check ID for anyone who looks under 25.
  • Our staff know about the approved forms of ID, including security staff.
  • Our staff check for fake IDs and know what to do if an ID is fake.
  • Our staff look who is in the group to see if anyone looks under 18 before we serve or sell alcohol.
  • Our staff check outside to see if any people who may be under 18 are waiting nearby.
  • Our delivery drivers ask for ID when required.
  • Our venue or location has a ‘we don’t deliver to minors‘ message on our website.
  • We follow the Responsible Alcohol Advertising and Promotion Guidelines:
Responsible Alcohol Advertising and Promotion Guidelines
PDF 825.51 KB
(opens in a new window)
A minors checklist for managers and staff
PDF 114.06 KB
(opens in a new window)

Underage events

Depending on the event, you must notify us or apply to hold an event that minors can attend at your licensed venue.

Employing minors

A minor can be employed at a licensed venue or location to do tasks that are not associated with the supply of alcohol.

Tasks they can do

For example, a minor is allowed to:

  • prepare food
  • take orders for anything other than alcohol (they cannot take combined orders of food and alcohol)
  • take payment for anything other than alcohol
  • clear empty glasses, bottles, cans or other containers used for alcohol. Whether a glass is empty is a matter of common sense. If you're not sure, ask adult staff to do this task.
  • move sealed alcohol (for example, bottles of wine) if the alcohol is not in view of customers. For example, they can stock shelves in a storeroom. Make sure an adult staff member supervises them.
  • take alcohol to a customer's car, if they work in a bottle shop.

Tasks they cannot do

A minor must not do these tasks:

  • sell alcohol through a checkout
  • take orders or serve alcohol from a bar
  • take orders or serve alcohol to a customer’s table, including when clearing empty drinks
  • clear the table of glasses that have any alcohol in them
  • stock display fridges or shelves with alcohol, if these are within public view.

Minors in training programs

Minors can only be involved in the supply of alcohol if they are part of a Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA) training program that we have approved.

Training providers can ask for our approval to allow a minor to supply alcohol as part of their hospitality training program.

To request this, email lcv.education@justice.vic.gov.au and include details of the training program, including its location.

If you are under 18, you can complete RSA training but must wait until you are 18 to serve alcohol.

Updated