Pentag: The Brisbane AgTech AI Putting Smart Tags on Australian Livestock
Australia’s agricultural sector runs on scale — millions of livestock across vast properties where manual monitoring is impractical and expensive. Brisbane-based Pentag is addressing that challenge with AI-powered smart tags that track the health, location, and behaviour of individual animals in real time, giving farmers the kind of granular visibility that previously required either significant labour or was simply unavailable.
What Pentag Does
Pentag builds IoT smart tags for livestock that combine GPS tracking, biometric monitoring, and AI-powered analysis. Each tag attaches to an individual animal and continuously monitors movement patterns, temperature, feeding behaviour, and location. The AI layer analyses this data to detect early signs of illness, identify animals in distress, flag unusual behaviour patterns, and automate mustering and headcount.
The platform surfaces insights through a cloud dashboard accessible on mobile devices — practical for farmers checking on mobs remotely without needing to ride out or deploy drones. Alerts can be configured for specific threshold events: an animal that hasn’t moved for 12 hours, a temperature spike suggesting illness, or animals that have strayed outside a defined boundary.
Why It Matters for Australian Farmers and Agribusiness
The economics of livestock monitoring in Australia are driven by scale and remoteness. On a property running thousands of head of cattle across tens of thousands of hectares, the labour cost of regular manual checks is significant — and the financial impact of missing an injured or sick animal can be substantial.
AI-powered monitoring reduces that labour burden while improving animal welfare outcomes. Early illness detection, in particular, can significantly reduce mortality rates and veterinary costs. The technology is also relevant for biosecurity — tracking animal movements in real time is valuable for managing disease outbreak response.
For smaller producers, the cost-per-tag economics need to be weighed against the scale of the operation. But as unit costs fall — as they consistently do with IoT hardware — tools like Pentag’s become viable for progressively smaller properties. The Australian Department of Agriculture has also been supporting AgTech adoption through grant programs that can offset initial implementation costs.
Company Background
Pentag is a Brisbane-based AgTech company operating in the intersection of IoT hardware and AI software. The company is part of a growing Australian AgTech ecosystem that includes players across precision agriculture, drone technology, and farm management software. Australia’s agricultural conditions — large properties, remote locations, variable connectivity — make it both a challenging and ideal test environment for this kind of technology.
Key Takeaways for Australian Farmers and Agribusiness
- Pentag uses AI-powered smart tags to track livestock health, location, and behaviour in real time
- Early illness detection and automated alerts reduce labour costs and improve animal welfare
- Relevant for cattle, sheep, and other livestock operations — particularly at larger scale
- Australian government AgTech grants may offset implementation costs
- Part of a growing Brisbane and Australian AgTech ecosystem worth watching
Sources and Further Reading
- Pentag — Official Website
- Australian Government — AgTech Programs
- AgriFutures Australia — Research and Innovation
📋 Browse all Australian AI company profiles: Australian AI Companies: The Complete Guide by Industry (2026) →
Related: Australian AI Companies: The Complete Guide by Industry (2026) | Aginic: The Brisbane Data and AI Consultancy Helping Australian Businesses Use Their Data