Australia’s dental lab industry faces significant structural pressures: high technician salaries, increasing cost of materials, competition from corporate dental chains with centralised lab arrangements, and a growing gap between what dentists can charge and what labs can produce for. Offshore outsourcing has emerged as a strategic response — but it requires careful navigation of regulatory, quality, and logistical factors that differ from outsourcing in other markets.

Why Australian Dental Labs Outsource
The economics are compelling. A dental technician in Australia earns AUD $60,000–$90,000+ per year. A zirconia crown that costs AUD $120–$180 to produce in-house can be outsourced for AUD $30–$60 — freeing margin for business investment, price competitiveness, or profit.
Australian labs outsource for three primary reasons:
- Cost reduction: Per-unit production cost is 60–75% lower with offshore outsourcing at comparable quality
- Capacity expansion: Handling volume spikes without hiring additional technicians
- Access to specialist skills: Full-arch implant prosthetics, surgical guide design, and DSD veneer cases that require specialist capability
TGA Compliance for Imported Dental Devices
The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) regulates medical devices in Australia, including dental restorations. Custom-made dental devices (crowns, bridges, implants, dentures) fall under TGA regulation.
Key requirements for Australian labs importing custom dental restorations:
- The importing lab (not the offshore manufacturer) is the responsible party under Australian law for patient safety
- Custom-made devices must be accompanied by a Statement of Custom-Made Device for each patient
- The offshore lab must meet quality standards equivalent to ISO 13485 — though TGA does not require formal ISO 13485 certification for custom devices
- The importing lab must maintain records of the device, patient, and prescribing dentist
Importantly, Australian labs are not required to register custom dental devices on the ARTG (Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods) — this requirement applies to mass-produced medical devices, not patient-specific custom restorations.

Shipping: Vietnam to Australia
Vietnam to Australia is one of the faster international shipping routes for dental lab work:
- DHL Express: 3–5 business days, door-to-door
- FedEx International Priority: 3–4 business days
- Customs: Dental restorations (custom-made medical devices) are typically duty-free under AUS-AFTA trade agreements
- Documentation: Commercial invoice with HS code 9021.29 for dental restorations
End-to-end turnaround for a standard crown case from World Dental Lab to Australia: 3–5 days production + 3–5 days shipping = 6–10 business days.
Selecting an Offshore Lab Partner: Australian-Specific Checklist
- ☐ Does the lab have ISO 13485 certification or equivalent documented quality management system?
- ☐ Does the lab understand Australian TGA documentation requirements?
- ☐ Can the lab provide ADA-compatible shade systems (VITA Classical / 3D-Master)?
- ☐ Does the lab accept all major Australian scanner formats (3Shape TRIOS, iTero, Medit)?
- ☐ Is DHL or FedEx shipping available with tracking?
- ☐ Does the lab offer a warranty that covers remakes?
- ☐ Can the lab provide references from other Australian clients?

World Dental Lab and Australia
World Dental Lab currently serves dental labs and practices across Australia — including in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide. Our team has experience with Australian clinical preferences, shade requirements, and documentation needs.
We ship to Australia via DHL Express and FedEx International Priority with full tracking. All restorations include a 2-year warranty. White-label packaging is available for lab partners who outsource confidentially.
For a broader overview of our outsourcing model, see our guide: Partnering with a Vietnam Dental Laboratory.
Start Outsourcing From Australia
World Dental Lab ships to all major Australian cities. Open a lab account with no minimum order and submit your first trial cases.
