In the guide
- Definition of home slaughter
- Is this different to private slaughter in an approved slaughterhouse?
- Slaughter outside a licensed slaughterhouse
- Can I slaughter the animals myself?
- Do I need a slaughter licence?
- Disposal of the carcase and waste material
- Extra requirements for home slaughter of cattle
- Further information
- Trading Standards
- In this update
- Key legislation
Although the United Kingdom left the European Union (EU) in 2021, certain pieces of legislation (known as 'assimilated law') continue to apply until such time as they are replaced by new UK legislation, revoked or permitted to expire. This means that our guidance still contains references to legislation that originated from the EU.
In this guide, the words 'must' or 'must not' are used where there is a legal requirement to do (or not do) something. The word 'should' is used where there is established legal guidance or best practice that is likely to help you avoid breaking the law.
This guidance is for Wales
The term 'home slaughter' has a specific definition. If you are planning on slaughtering your own livestock on-farm, there are welfare implications if you do not have the necessary skills, equipment and competency to do so.
On-farm slaughter of any livestock is an extremely difficult option to achieve legally in terms of food hygiene and transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) controls, as well as in terms of the application of humane methods of restraint, stunning and other operations related to the slaughter. You need to ensure that you dispose of the carcase and any animal waste in accordance with the Regulations.
Definition of home slaughter
Home slaughter means the slaughter of a livestock animal by the animal's owner, on their property, for their own personal consumption or that of members of their immediate family living there.
Home slaughter does not take place in an approved slaughterhouse. Carcases or parts of carcases from home-slaughtered livestock, excluding those being disposed of as animal by-products, cannot be removed to another premises for processing.
Back to topIs this different to private slaughter in an approved slaughterhouse?
Yes. This is when the owner of the animal sends it to an approved slaughterhouse to be slaughtered and the carcase is returned to the owner.
Back to topSlaughter outside a licensed slaughterhouse
Assimilated Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 laying down specific hygiene rules for food of animal origin states that in most cases meat for human consumption must be from animals slaughtered in an approved slaughterhouse (an approved slaughterhouse could include a licensed mobile slaughterhouse) where slaughter is, amongst other things, subject to inspection and verification by the Food Standards Agency (FSA). A full list of meat establishments that are approved to slaughter livestock and/or cut meat can be found on the FSA website. Contact details for those wanting further information about approved meat establishments across the UK are also available by following this link.
The FSA advises that advance notice of any home slaughter should be given to the local authority animal health and welfare team, nearest to where the farm is located. If for some reason this is not possible, then notification should take place within five days following the slaughter of the animal. Contact details for your local authority can be found on the Welsh Government website.
If you are not prepared to carry out the slaughter process yourself, then you can employ a licensed slaughterer to kill and dress the animal(s) on-farm, under your supervision and responsibility.
It is unlawful to have the animal slaughtered anywhere away from your property, other than in an approved slaughterhouse.
Under assimilated Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 it is an offence to sell, or to supply to another person (even if there is no exchange of money), meat that has not been slaughtered and health-marked in a licensed abattoir. It is for this reason that meat that has been slaughtered on-farm can only be consumed by the owner and their immediate family.
Back to topCan I slaughter the animals myself?
It is lawful for your animals to be slaughtered on your farm by you, as long as you observe certain requirements.
You may only do this if you have the necessary skills and training to ensure that you slaughter the animals humanely. You must also have the necessary equipment and be sure that you can use it competently.
It is an offence under the Animal Welfare Act 2006 to cause unnecessary suffering to any animal.
The Welfare of Animals at the Time of Killing (Wales) Regulations 2014 (WATOK) and assimilated Regulation (EC) No 1099/2009 on the protection of animals at the time of killing create offences for failing to comply with provisions relating to restraining, stunning and killing. Unless you are using a firearm to kill pigs, sheep, goats, deer or cattle, you must restrain them. The Regulations also make it an offence to cause or permit any avoidable excitement, pain or suffering to any animal or bird during the slaughter or killing process.
Under these Regulations, religious slaughter is only permitted in approved slaughterhouses, as all on-farm kills must be stunned before bleeding.
Detailed information relating to the practical considerations of captive bolt stunning, including equipment, restraint, and bleeding and pithing can be found on the Humane Slaughter Association website. Information on the humane killing of livestock using firearms is also available.
Back to topDo I need a slaughter licence?
A slaughter licence is not needed when slaughtering your own animal for your own consumption or consumption by your immediate family who live with you. However, certain operations require a Certificate of Competence (CoC), both in slaughterhouses and when carried out on farms for the purpose of killing animals. A WATOK Licence is required if you handle, stun or slaughter animals outside a slaughterhouse as part of your commercial business.
If you employ an itinerant slaughterer, they must hold a Certificate of Competence or a WATOK Licence for the relevant activities, which indicates that they have the knowledge and skill necessary to perform the tasks humanely and efficiently.
Further information on how to obtain a CoC or WATOK licence can be found on the GOV.UK website.
Back to topDisposal of the carcase and waste material
Animal by-products must be disposed of in accordance with the Animal By-Products (Enforcement) (Wales) Regulations 2014. This is all slaughter waste, including the horns, hides, hooves and blood, that is either or both:
- not destined for human consumption
- classed as specified risk material (SRM)
The routes available for the disposal and use of animal by-products vary by category. In general, the higher the risk category, the fewer are the options for use. More information on categories and disposal is available on the GOV.UK website.
See also 'Fallen stock and the disposal of animal by-products'.
Specified risk material
For cattle, sheep and goats, the owner must stain, store, dispose of, etc the SRM in accordance with the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (Wales) Regulations 2018.
Definitions of SRM depend on the age of the animal being slaughtered:
- cattle of all ages. The tonsils, the last four metres of small intestine, the caecum and the mesentery
- cattle aged over 12 months. The spinal cord and the skull, including the brain and eyes but excluding the mandible
- cattle aged over 30 months. The vertebral column, including the dorsal root ganglia but excluding the:
- vertebrae of the tail
- spinous and transverse processes of the cervical, thoracic and lumbar vertebrae
- median sacral crest
- wings of the sacrum
- sheep and goats aged 12 months or less. No SRM
- sheep and goats aged over 12 months, or permanent incisor erupted, or aged over 12 months as estimated by a method approved by the FSA. The spinal cord and the skull, including the brain and eyes but excluding the horns
The spinal cord must not be split; it must be removed whole and disposed of as SRM.
Back to topExtra requirements for home slaughter of cattle
Age of the cattle
Born before 1 August 1996
Cattle born before 1 August 1996 in the UK do not have passports, only certificates of registration, and they must not be slaughtered for human consumption. All cattle of this age have been restricted under the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (Wales) Regulations 2018 to the premises where they were located due to the consequent TSE risk.
Keepers of these cattle have been issued with restriction notices detailing the affected animals. Keepers wishing to move such animals must submit a movement licence application form, completed by both parties involved in the movement, to the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) One Health Customer Service Centre in Worcester. If you need help completing the form, please contact apha.cymruwales@apha.gov.uk.
Further information on cattle without passports can be found on the GOV.UK website.
Born since 1 August 1996
Cattle born on or after 1 August 1996 can be home slaughtered for your own and your immediate family's consumption whether there is a valid cattle passport or not. However, if an animal does not have a cattle passport, the keeper must notify its death (usually to the British Cattle Movement Service - BCMS) in writing within seven days, and include the ear tag number, the date of death and the holding on which it died.
When an animal is killed outside a licensed slaughterhouse, the keeper must notify its death by completing the death details in the passport and sending it to the BCMS within seven days.
If an animal does not have a cattle passport and is killed outside a licensed slaughterhouse, the keeper must notify its death to BCMS in writing within seven days; they must include the ear tag number, the date of death and the holding on which it died.
Slaughter in a licensed slaughterhouse can only be carried out if a valid cattle passport accompanies the beast.
Wherever cattle are slaughtered, cattle passports should be returned as normal following the death of the animal.
BSE testing
A person who has in their possession or under their control the body of a bovine animal that needs to be tested for BSE must, within 24 hours, either:
- make arrangements with another person for that person to collect it and to deliver it to an approved sampling site within 72 hours
or - identify an approved sampling site that will carry out the sampling and deliver the animal to that site so as to arrive at the site within 72 hours
If the head of the animal requires testing, the rest must be treated as SRM (see above).
Healthy cattle that were born in Romania or Bulgaria, and were over 30 months old when slaughtered for food, need to be tested for BSE. This does not apply to healthy cattle born in any other EU Member State or the UK.
The following cattle must also test negative for BSE prior to consumption of the meat:
- healthy cattle, born in any non-EU country other than the UK, and aged over 30 months when slaughtered for human consumption
- emergency-slaughter cattle (that is, an otherwise healthy animal that has suffered an accident that prevented its transport to the slaughterhouse), aged over 48 months
- emergency-slaughter cattle, aged over 24 months, and born in Romania, Bulgaria or any non-EU country other than the UK
Cattle requiring BSE testing must test negative before consumption. Meat from the animal should only be consumed if the BSE test is negative. If the test is positive, the carcase and all parts of the body must be disposed of as a category 1 animal by-product.
For more information on testing, see 'BSE testing of cattle'.
Back to topFurther information
Further guidance on home slaughter can be found on the Food Standards Agency website.
Back to topTrading Standards
For more information on the work of Trading Standards services - and the possible consequences of not abiding by the law - please see 'Trading Standards: powers, enforcement and penalties'.
Back to topIn this update
This guide has been combined with the 'Home slaughter of cattle' and 'Home slaughter of sheep' guides, which have been deleted.
Last reviewed / updated: July 2025
Back to topKey legislation
- assimilated Regulation (EC) No 999/2001 laying down rules for the prevention, control and eradication of certain transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
- assimilated Regulation (EC) No 853/2004 laying down specific hygiene rules for food of animal origin
- Animal Welfare Act 2006
- Food Hygiene (Wales) Regulations 2006
- Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (Wales) Regulations 2018
- assimilated Regulation (EC) No 1069/2009 laying down health rules as regards animal by-products and derived products not intended for human consumption (Animal by-products Regulation)
- assimilated Regulation (EC) No 1099/2009 on the protection of animals at the time of killing
- Animal By-Products (Enforcement) (Wales) Regulations 2014
- Welfare of Animals at the Time of Killing (Wales) Regulations 2014
Please note
This information is intended for guidance; only the courts can give an authoritative interpretation of the law.
The guide's 'Key legislation' links may only show the original version of the legislation, although some amending legislation is linked to separately where it is directly related to the content of a guide. Information on changes to legislation can be found by following the above links and clicking on the 'More Resources' tab.