Objectives: To characterise the national epidemiology of tick-induced mammalian meat allergy (MMA) in Australia, including temporal trends in Gal specific IgE testing and case detection, geographic distribution, demographic risk factors, and longitudinal antibody dynamics. Design: Retrospective analysis of Gal sIgE ImmunoCAP test results from 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2024. Setting, Participants: Deidentified laboratory records from 14,075 individuals tested across Australia, with residential postcodes mapped to Statistical Areas Level 3 (SA3). A subset of 1,515 individuals with repeat testing contributed to longitudinal analyses. Main outcome measures: Test volumes, suspected MMA case counts, positivity rates, spatial clustering metrics, demographic risk ratios, and longitudinal Gal sIgE trajectories. Results: Overall, 35.7% (5,025) of individuals tested positive. Testing volume increased 331% over the study period, with case detection accelerating sharply from 2020. Decomposition analysis attributed 59-81% of case growth to expanded testing, with the remainder unexplained by surveillance expansion alone. Cases were concentrated along the eastern seaboard within the range of Ixodes holocyclus, with extreme spatial clustering: three SA3 regions accounted for over one-quarter of national cases. Females comprised the majority of positive cases, and MMA risk increased with age, peaking at 45-74 years. Among 1,515 individuals with serial testing, Gal sIgE levels antibodies declined predictably in 93% of people. Conclusions: This first national assessment of MMA in Australia reveals a substantial, geographically concentrated, and growing burden. The extreme spatial concentration of cases suggests that targeted public health interventions could efficiently address a large proportion of national disease burden. While testing expansion is the dominant driver of rising case numbers, it does not fully account for observed trends, and prospective studies are needed to disentangle surveillance effects from genuine disease emergence. Declining antibody levels support the utility of serial testing for clinical monitoring, though persistent sensitisation underscores the need for sustained risk mitigation and continued surveillance.