Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - What can I take to Australia by plane? What can't I bring?

What can I take to Australia by plane? What can't I bring?

1. Some articles with restricted entry and exit.

Alcohol and tobacco: 200g cigarettes or 50 cigars or 250g cut tobacco, 1 bottle (no more than 0.75l).

2. Items that must be declared

These articles must be declared and checked for signs of insects or diseases. Some items may need to be handled before they are allowed to be brought in.

Cooked food, raw food and cooking materials

Dried fish, salted fish, fresh fish and seafood, including scallops, shark wings, squid and fish maw.

Dried fruits and vegetables include Hericium erinaceus, dried longan, dried litchi, dried tangerine peel, preserved plum and dried ginseng.

Noodles and rice

The set meal includes food and soup on the plane.

Seasoning herbs and spices (fennel, cinnamon, cloves)

Traditional Chinese herbal medicines, medicines, tonics and herbal tea (tangerine peel, chrysanthemum, bark, ganoderma lucidum and codonopsis pilosula)

Snacks (ginkgo, peanuts, fried watermelon seeds, meat floss), biscuits, cakes and sweets (almond cakes with pork, egg cakes with pork and cakes with sausages are prohibited).

Tea, coffee and other milk-containing beverages (three-in-one coffee, tea and malt extract)

Tea and spices containing citrus components

3. Prohibited items

These items are prohibited and will be detained and destroyed by the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Bureau (AQIS). Or you can throw them in the isolation box at the airport. Dairy products, eggs and egg products

(1) All whole eggs, dried eggs and egg powder. Egg products include egg noodles, moon cakes containing eggs (salted eggs, processed eggs and preserved eggs), salted duck eggs, salted quail eggs, preserved eggs made from duck eggs and quail eggs, eggs and mayonnaise instant noodles.

(2) All dairy products (unless from countries classified as free of foot-and-mouth disease) contain more than 10% of full-fat and dry products of dairy products, including three-in-one milk coffee, tea and malt extract, milk powder and ready-to-eat cereals containing dairy products. Babies are allowed to carry infant formula and New Zealand dairy products.

(3) Non-canned meat

(4) All kinds of animals-fresh meat, dried meat, frozen meat, cooked meat, bacon, bacon, bacon or packaged meat.

(5) Sausage and Sausage

(6) salted duck, duck liver, duck stomach, duck intestines, poultry offal, beef strips, beef jerky, shredded beef, minced pork, moon cakes with minced meat, instant noodles with meat, pig's trotters and lard residue.

(7) Pet food (including fish food and bird food)

(8) Live animals

All mammals, birds, eggs and nests, fish, reptiles (turtles), snakes, scorpions, amphibians, crustaceans and insects.

(9) Living plants

All potted/bare-rooted plants, bamboo, bonsai, cuttings, roots, bulbs, bulbs, rhizomes, stems and other feasible plant materials and soil.

(10) Banana leaves-cooked, dried, fresh or frozen.

(1 1) Herbs and traditional medicines

Cornu Cervi, Cornu Cervi Pantotrichum, Cornu Cervi Pantotrichum essence, penis Cervi, colla Corii Asini. It is allowed to import deer products marked with New Zealand products from New Zealand.

The nest of edible swift

(12) Cordyceps lucidum

(13) Oviductus Ranae/ointment, dried earthworm, any kind of dried animal, placenta hominis, dried lizard, duck intestine, duck stomach, tendon, turtle and oxtail.

(14) seeds and nuts: grains, popcorn, raw nuts, raw chestnuts, fresh peanuts, pine cones, bird food, fruit and vegetable seeds.

Unknown seeds, bean decorations packaged by some merchants, hawthorn, red beans and mung beans.