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Divorce can be an emotionally and legally overwhelming experience, especially when disputes arise over shared responsibilities, finances, and beloved pets. At QFLP, we’re here to guide you through every step of the Family Law process, including complex issues like property division, parenting arrangements, and pet custody in divorce. Whether you’re seeking a fair outcome for your children or trying to retain custody of your furry companion, our experienced team can help you navigate the legal system with clarity and confidence.

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Who gets to keep the family pet under Australian family law

Separation and divorce can turn a loved pet into a painful point of conflict. People often search for pet custody laws in Australia, but in Australian family law a companion animal is usually dealt with through property settlement, not like a child custody matter. That difference affects what evidence matters, what an agreement should cover, and what the Federal Circuit and Family Court can make orders about in family law proceedings. This explainer gives general information, not personal legal advice, and is designed to help you take practical steps early.

In Australian family law, a family pet is usually dealt with as property in a property settlement. The court can make orders about who owns the companion animal (including transfer or sale), but it cannot order shared care like a parenting schedule.

If you want background on separation timing and what “separation” means in practice, see Separation vs divorce in Australia or the Divorce and separation guide.

Definition and why it matters

Pet custody is a common phrase for deciding who keeps the pet after a relationship breakdown. In family law, that wording can blur two different ideas, parenting orders for children and property interests for assets. The law can recognise the importance of pets in family life while still treating pets as property for the purpose of resolving a dispute.

This is why the best interests test is not the test for custody of a pet. Best interests is a child focused concept in parenting cases, while pets in family law are handled using a different framework. When people keep using child custody language, they sometimes chase outcomes family law does not provide and miss the steps that do help.

Clear language also reduces repeat conflict. If you frame the issue as ownership of a companion animal and how it fits within property settlement, you can focus on evidence, logistics, and safety. That usually gets you closer to a workable outcome for pets and their owners.

pet custody in divorce - Pet Custody in Divorce: Best Legal Guide in Australia (2025)
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How it works in Australian family law

In Australian family law, disputes about a family pet usually sit within family law matters dealing with property settlement. That approach can apply to married and de facto couples, because both can have property settlement rights and obligations after separation or divorce. Most family law proceedings are heard in the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, which deals with applications and orders in this area.

In practice, a pet custody dispute is often handled alongside other law property issues. The pet may be discussed during negotiations about overall property settlement, or included in court documents when agreement cannot be reached. Family lawyers often treat the pet as a specific property interest and help you work out which pathway fits the conflict level and any safety concerns.

You may see summaries about recent family law changes relating to companion animals. Whether any change affects your situation depends on when your matter started and your specific facts. If you’re relying on any reform, confirm applicability with legal advice (and keep a copy of the source you’re reading).

For practical property context, see Property settlement and What happens in a property settlement.

What is typically taken into account

When the Federal Circuit and Family Court considers pets, it looks at practical factors rather than who feels more attached. The court can take into account evidence about ownership of the pet, the care history, the ability to care for and maintain the animal, and any history of family violence that affects safety. This list is not exhaustive and is intended to help you gather documents that support a clear story.

  • How the animal was acquired and who paid, including when the pet was acquired during the relationship.
  • Registration and microchip details, including whose name appears as the pet owners on records.
  • Who has had day to day care, such as feeding, walking, cleaning, and dog training where relevant.
  • Veterinary history, including who booked appointments and paid vet bills, medication, and vaccinations.
  • Ongoing costs, such as food, grooming, insurance, and boarding, and who has paid those costs.
  • Current living arrangements and practical capacity, including rental rules, yard access, and time at home.
  • Any risk issues, including threats, cruelty or abuse, or a history of family violence connected to the pet.
  • Whether the pet has an established routine tied to a particular home (for example, work hours, yard access, or other animals).
Family Law Changes for Pet Custody

Documents that often help clarify pet ownership

  • Council registration and microchip confirmation documents.
  • Adoption paperwork, purchase receipts, or breeder documents that show when the animal was acquired.
  • Vet invoices and account history, including who paid and who was the account holder.
  • Training invoices, grooming invoices, and insurance records.
  • Written messages that show routine care arrangements, kept factual and not inflammatory.
  • Photos can show care history, but they rarely settle ownership of the pet on their own.

If family violence is present, do not use the pet as a reason to keep meeting or messaging. Safety planning comes first, especially if there are threats involving the animal kept at a home. Consider safer communication methods and get support quickly if you are worried about urgent risk.

For general court guidance on family pets: Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia information on family pets.

What to do first if the pet is disputed

  1. Prioritise safety and avoid handovers if there’s any family violence risk.
  2. Stabilise the pet’s routine (food, medication, vet needs).
  3. Collect ownership and care documents (microchip, registration, vet invoices, receipts).
  4. Put your proposal in writing in neutral terms (who keeps the pet, costs, registration update).
  5. If you can’t agree, use mediation or lawyer led negotiation to finalise terms.
  6. Formalise the outcome where appropriate (for example, through property settlement documentation) so the dispute doesn’t restart.

Common ways couples resolve pet disputes without court

Most couples can resolve custody disputes about a family pet without court if they focus on practical outcomes. Negotiation can be direct, through family lawyers, or through mediation. The key is to move from positions to workable terms that reduce ongoing contact where contact is unsafe or volatile.

If you reach agreement, document it in a way that matches the seriousness of the dispute and the wider property settlement. Some people record terms in writing for clarity and later reference. Others formalise the arrangement through property settlement documentation, including Consent Orders or a Binding Financial Agreement, depending on what else is being resolved and what advice they receive.

What a strong pet agreement should cover

  • Who will retain ownership and who will keep the pet in the primary home.
  • Whether there will be any contact for the other person, and whether it is practical and safe.
  • How costs are paid, including vet bills and unexpected medical decisions.
  • What happens if one person moves interstate, changes housing, or cannot keep the pet in the future.
  • How registration and microchip details will be updated to reflect ownership of the pet.
  • A contingency plan if communication breaks down so the agreement does not become a repeat dispute.

An informal shared custody plan can sound fair but fail quickly when emotions rise. If you are considering joint custody or pet custody arrangements that involve handovers, test whether you can actually cooperate for months, not just for a week. If you cannot, a single stable arrangement is often kinder for the pet and more realistic for you.

Practical guide: If the pet issue is simple and low conflict, a written agreement may be enough. If it’s tied to a broader property settlement or you want enforceability, ask about formalising it (for example, through consent orders) based on legal advice.

For support on structured negotiation, see Family law mediation.

Pet Custody & Law

When the court gets involved and what orders may look like

The court generally becomes involved when negotiation and mediation do not resolve the dispute or when safety and urgency triggers make informal steps unsafe. In that situation, the companion animal issue may be dealt with as part of property settlement in family law proceedings. The court can make orders about who is to own the companion animal, can order transfer of ownership to the other party, can order transfer to another person with that person’s consent, or can order that the animal be sold.

There are also limits. The court cannot make orders for shared care for a companion animal, so you should not expect a court ordered shared custody schedule. If you want shared time, it needs to be an agreement you can run yourselves, and it should include clear contingency terms.

Court outcomes depend on facts and evidence, not internet stories. Case law can guide how principles are applied, but it does not guarantee a result in your circumstances. If you are considering court, family lawyers can help you present clear evidence and avoid tactics that backfire.

Common failure modes and fixes

  • Failure mode hiding the pet or refusing all contact to gain leverage. Fix focus on evidence and get legal advice on safe, lawful next steps.
  • Failure mode relying on informal joint custody that requires ongoing interaction in a high conflict breakup. Fix choose one primary home and build a contact plan only if it is safe and stable.
  • Failure mode sending angry messages to create a record. Fix keep communication minimal, factual, and directed to solutions and safety.
  • Failure mode ignoring family violence red flags because the pet feels like the only link left. Fix prioritise safety and use support services and legal pathways that reduce risk.
What Courts Actually Consider in Pet Custody

This page is general information and does not cover state based animal rules in detail. For example, a Companion Animals Act or local council rules may affect registration, dangerous dog requirements, or practical restrictions, but those rules are separate from federal family law decisions about property settlement. If you are dealing with rental restrictions, council issues, or animal welfare enforcement, you may need separate advice.

Decision guide

This decision guide helps you choose between informal agreement, mediation, and court steps for a pet custody dispute. Start with safety, then assess conflict level, then choose the path that is most likely to hold up over time. The goal is to reduce pressure, protect the animal, and avoid a dispute that keeps restarting.

Choose your path based on conflict, safety and practicality
SituationOften suitsNext step
Low conflict and both agree who keeps the petInformal agreementWrite clear terms about ownership, costs, and what happens if circumstances change.
Moderate conflict and you agree on the goal but argue about detailsMediation or lawyer led negotiationUse mediation to finalise terms and document the outcome properly.
High conflict and the pet is being used as leverageFormal pathway within property settlementGet legal advice early, gather documents, and avoid escalating contact.
Safety concerns or a history of family violence involving the petUrgent, safety first approachAvoid handovers, minimise contact, and seek urgent legal advice and support.
Housing instability or travel makes shared custody unrealisticSingle stable home with contingenciesChoose one home base and include a future transfer of ownership plan if needed.

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Frequently asked questions

Pets are considered differently from children and are commonly treated like property for resolving a dispute, often within property settlement. Outcomes still depend on facts and evidence. If you want advice on how this applies to your matter, speak with a lawyer.

The court cannot make orders for shared care for a companion animal. If you want shared time, it must be an agreement you can manage yourselves, and it should include contingency terms. Many people find a single stable home is more workable than a handover schedule.

Documents like registration, microchip records, adoption or purchase paperwork, and vet bills can help show pet ownership. Evidence of who has provided care and maintain tasks over time can also be relevant. Photos and social posts may show connection, but they usually do not prove ownership on their own.

It can matter as part of the context, especially if the pet was acquired by one person and kept in that person’s name. The court may still look at what happened during the relationship, including care history and who met ongoing costs. Get legal advice if timelines and contributions are complex.

Start by stabilising the pet’s routine and gathering key documents like microchip records, registration, and vet invoices. Avoid escalations, especially if family violence is a risk, and keep messages factual. If you cannot agree quickly, consider mediation or legal advice so the dispute does not harden.

If your situation also involves children and parenting arrangements, see Children and parenting arrangements. If you are dealing with a parenting dispute pathway, you may also find Section 60I certificate and family dispute resolution useful background.

Summary and next step with Queensland Family Law Practice

  • Pet custody is everyday language, but pets in family law are usually dealt with through property settlement.
  • A companion animal issue is handled differently from parenting cases and the best interests test for children.
  • The Federal Circuit and Family Court can make orders about ownership of a companion animal, transfer, or sale.
  • The court cannot order shared care, so shared custody is only an informal agreement if it is safe and workable.
  • Strong evidence includes acquisition records, registration, microchip details, vet bills, and care history.
  • Family violence and safety concerns can change what steps are appropriate and how urgent action should be.
  • Clear agreements with contingencies reduce repeat disputes and help pets and their owners move forward.

If you are dealing with a pet custody dispute during separation or divorce, Queensland Family Law Practice can help you understand your options and take practical steps. Call (07) 3172 3777, email enquiries@qflp.com.au, or use the online consultation booking to book your consultation. QFLP has offices in Brisbane at 70 Prospect Terrace, Kelvin Grove QLD 4059 and on the Sunshine Coast at 2 Innovation Pkwy, Birtinya QLD 4575, and can also work via electronic communication for interstate and overseas clients. You can also ask about the complimentary 10 minute chat with a family lawyer as shown on the website.

Tracey McMillan
Tracey McMillanCEO Queensland Family Law Practice
Tracey McMillan is CEO of Queensland Family Law Practice and an experienced barrister, focusing on Family Law and delivering strong results for her clients.

Reviewed by: Tracey McMillan, Principal at Queensland Family Law Practice.

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and not legal advice.