Federal Agriculture Minister Murray Watt said Beijing lifted the bans on Wednesday night (May 29), with immediate effect, for five different abattoirs.
"That is fantastic news for the cattle producers, for the meat processing industry and for the workers in those industries," Senator Watt told a parliamentary hearing on Thursday, May 30.
"The work that we've done to stabilise our relationship with China is paying real dividends."
Sanctions remain on two abattoirs and rock lobster.
The announcement precedes Chinese Premier Li Qiang's high-level talks with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, expected to take place in Canberra in mid-June.
Beijing slapped sanctions on Australia in 2020 at the height of a diplomatic spat between the two countries, after the former Morrison Government called for an independent inquiry into the origin of COVID-19.
China has progressively removed the trade barriers on Australian exports since Labor came to office in 2022.
With renewed access to Australia's largest trading partner, producers of barley, cotton, oaten hay and timber have had their exports swell by more than $3 billion over the past year and a bit.
The $3 billion figure does not include increased earnings from the resumption of wine sales to China, after Beijing dropped a tax of 220 per cent on Australian wine in March.
In 2019, Australian wine exports to China were worth $1.1 billion.
Even if all tariffs are eventually lifted, it is unlikely Australian trade with China will fully return to pre-COVID levels.
Impacted sectors have looked to diversify their export markets since the overnight drop in sales highlighted the pitfalls of placing all one's eggs in one basket.
China accounted for 43 per cent of all Australian exports at the time, but that figure had dropped below 30 per cent in 2022-23.
The government has helped producers expand their access to growing and emerging overseas markets, with $198.2 million in grants targeted at re-orienting the nation's trade.