Western Australia Act
Liquor Control Act 1988 (WA)
Liquor Control Act 1988 regulates alcohol licences and supply in Western Australia.
Plain-English explainers, not legal advice. Check the linked official source before you rely on a specific section, and get advice for your situation.
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Quick read
- Liquor Control Act 1988 is sector-specific, but for hospitality and venue businesses it can be existential.
- It affects licence type, responsible service, trading hours, minors, intoxication, incident records, venue management, advertising and enforcement.
Likely relevant if
- Businesses selling, supplying or serving alcohol in Western Australia
- Bars, restaurants, hotels, bottle shops, clubs, events and venues
- Hospitality groups, franchise operators and alcohol delivery businesses
Check first
- Hold the correct licence or approval before selling or supplying alcohol.
- Follow licence conditions, trading hours, responsible service and incident-record rules.
- Train staff and managers on intoxication, minors, refusal of service and venue procedures.
What happens if you get it wrong
Penalties & enforcement
Liquor breaches can lead to fines, licence suspension or cancellation, disciplinary action, trading restrictions, prosecution and serious reputational harm.
Enforced by WA Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries
When this shows up in real life
- 1
Opening a licensed venue
Choose the right licence category, check planning approvals, train staff and build incident, refusal and complaint procedures before opening.
- 2
Selling alcohol online or with delivery
Check whether the licence covers online sales, delivery timing, age verification, marketing and record-keeping.
- 3
Changing owners or managers
Do not assume the licence automatically follows the business sale. Regulator approvals and notifications can be critical completion steps.
Plain-English glossary
- Licence condition
- A condition attached to the liquor licence that can restrict how, when or where alcohol is sold or supplied.
- Responsible service
- Rules and training designed to reduce alcohol-related harm, including refusing service to intoxicated people or minors.
- Approved manager
- A person approved or recognised under local liquor rules to manage licensed operations where required.
Common questions
Does this matter if alcohol is only part of the business?
Yes. Cafes, restaurants, events and ecommerce models can still need the right licence or permission if alcohol is sold, supplied or included in a package.
Can I copy another venue's licence setup?
No. Licence categories, conditions, premises, hours and responsible-person requirements are local and fact-specific.