Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark at Hamilton Island on Saturday, left, and right, Prince Frederik in full royal regalia

Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark at Hamilton Island on Saturday, left, and right, Prince Frederik in full royal regalia

QUEENSLAND'S liquor laws have become an international farce after Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, the husband of Princess Mary, was turned away from a Brisbane bar.

The Crown Prince was left stunned when he was told he and his entourage needed ID to enter a pub.

In an international embarrassment for the Queensland Government, Prince Frederik, 49, and his entourage were barred from entering Jade Buddha bar at the Eagle St Pier just before midnight on Friday.

The shocked group, who were in Brisbane ahead of the Hamilton Island Race Week yachting regatta, left the venue but returned 15 minutes later.

The Crown Prince and his entourage were forced to enlist the help of seven Queensland police officers from the "dignitary protection unit'' to assure the venue manager they had the authority to override the ID requirements.

The officers reportedly told the venue they had received the green light from Office of Liquor and Gaming bureaucrats to allow the Danish royal entourage to bypass the ID laws.

Jade Buddha co-owner Phil Hogan, who intervened in an attempt to sort out the mess, said foreign dignitaries should be excluded from the ID legislation.

"It's a stupid law. We always thought it was going to be a nightmare,'' Mr Hogan said.

"It's happening all the time and the whole thing has been a nightmare from a tourist point of view. It's just a nonsense. It's a real overreaction.

"This is just the tip of the iceberg with the Prince. It's happening all the time with normal people."

Jade Buddha owner Phil Hogan has blasted the ‘stupid law’.

The ID scanning regime, which came into effect on July 1, requires anyone entering a venue in a Safe Night Precincts after 10pm to have their ID, such as a driver's licence or passport, scanned.

Prince Frederik famously met his future wife, a commoner from Tasmania then known as Mary Donaldson, in a Sydney pub during the 2000 Olympics.

The cringe-inducing incident involving the Crown Prince is the latest blunder for the draconian lockout laws, which are regularly catching out backpackers, foreign tourists and business travellers.

A dozen respected French winemakers without the necessary ID were turned away in July from The Gresham, which has won awards as one of Australia's best bars.

Gresham manager Ryan Lane at the time described the laws as "embarrassing".

The industry has been up in arms since the ID scanners were introduced, saying they were catching out tourists and long line ups were turning patrons away. The machines cost $8000 each.

The machines cost $8000 each and 31 licensees inside Safe Night Precincts had applied to reduce their hours from 2am or 3am to midnight to avoid using the scanners.

A Cairns nightclub owner said he was left out of pocket last month after international passports failed to fit the ID scanners and he was forced to turn away dozens of visiting US sailors.

Attorney-General Yvette D'Ath earlier this month said the Government understood there would be "teething problems" and would consult with licensed venues to review the rollout.