ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø drug checking trial

​​​The ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Government introduced a 12-month trial drug checking program at selected music festivals. The trial started in early 2025.

The drug checking services allow people attending selected music festivals to test small samples of substances intended for personal use. Qualified health staff provide a rapid evaluation of the main components of the substance and an indication of potency where possible.

Midnight Mafia on 3 May 2025 will be the second music festival to participate in the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø pill testing trial.

The purpose of drug checking services at festivals is to reduce risks and harms associated with illicit drug use.

Trained peers and health workers provide people with information along with a harm reduction advice. This information can help people make informed decisions and minimise drug related harms and deaths.

The trial will be independently evaluated to inform future program development.

On ​this page

Accessing drug checking services during the trial

Where and when are drug checking services available?

The trial provides drug checking services at up to 12 music festivals and events in ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø for 12 months.

​Midnight Mafia on 3 May 2025 will be the second music festival to participate in the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø pill testing trial.

Yours and Owls Festival on 1 and 2 March was the first music festival to participate in the trial.

ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Health is currently consulting with the music festival industry and harm reduction organisations to select the next events to include in the trial.

Who is delivering the services?

​The services are staffed by a combination of trained peer workers and qualified health staff, including analytical scientists and clinicians.

Is it a free service?

Yes. The service is free for people attending festivals included in this trial.

The program is funded by ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Health.

How drug checking services work

What happens at a drug checking service?

When a person enters a festival drug checking area, they will speak to a trained harm reduction worker who will explain the process.

They will be required to sign a waiver noting the limitations of testing and that no level of illicit drug consumption is safe.

The person then provides a small sample of the substance to be tested, and an analytical scientist tests the sample.

The sample is tested, and after a short time the person has a conversation with the peer worker, and health worker if needed, to discuss the test results, potential dangers and how to reduce their risk and appropriate harm reduction and health services they can access.

Amnesty bins are available for safe disposal of drugs within the drug checking service.

Will service users ever be told drugs are safe?

No. Staff at drug checking services will not tell people if it is safe to use a drug. Staff can offer tailored and general information on how to reduce harms from these drugs.

How are the drugs tested?

The trial uses a mix of technologies to test for the main components of the substance and an indication of potency (strength) where possible.

How accurate is the drug checking service?

Drug checking services do not provide a guarantee of safety.

The combination of equipment that is used in the trial can identify a wide range of drugs including those commonly seen at music festivals. A limitation of on-site testing capability is that low levels of drugs in a sample may be difficult to detect. So if a sample contains low level of fentanyl or nitazenes it may not show up in the analysis.

If the main components of a substance cannot be identified using the equipment available on-site, the person is asked if they will surrender the sample for confirmatory testing.

Confirmatory testing is conducted by ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Health Pathology Forensic & Analytical Science Service.

Regardless of the result of the drug testing, people are provided with harm reduction advice.

Safety, privacy and wellbeing

Is the service anonymous?

People are asked a set of questions by the peer staff when they use the service. Information about people’s drug use, and information about the drug sample/s they provide for testing, are not linked to their personal identity.

Analytical results from the drug checking services are integrated into ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø's existing rapid drug surveillance, early warning and response system. This work can alert the community when there is a public health risk related to substances circulating in the community.

What other support is provided?

Harm reduction peer workers are available to provide information and harm reduction advice to help people make informed decisions, and can support people to access harm reduction and health services they may need.

Amnesty bins are available for safe disposal of drugs within the drug checking service.​

Are there any legal issues with using drug checking services at festivals?

It is not illegal to use the drug checking services that are part of this trial.

Are there police or sniffer dogs at the drug checking sites?

ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Health and ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Police are working together to ensure that patrons can access the drug checking service without concern.

The trial operates alongside other harm reduction and medical services at the selected festivals.

Where can people go for more information and support?

Current as at: Tuesday 29 April 2025