Australia will end enforcing mandatory Covid isolation from next month, the government has said, BBC reported.
Currently anyone who tests positive to the virus must isolate for five days, but that will end from 14 October.
At times nicknamed "Fortress Australia", the country has had some of the strictest restrictions in the world since the pandemic began.
Mandatory isolation had been one of the few restrictions remaining.
Australia's chief medical officer, Professor Paul Kelly, said the decision "does not in any way suggest that the pandemic is finished".
Australia continues to record about 5,500 virus cases each day, according to the latest government figures. It is one of the world's most vaccinated countries.
After the pandemic began, Australia closed international borders for around two years and imposed strict limits on movement around the country, according to BBC.