Background High-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGRs) have many distinct features from the current light water reactor (LWR) fleet, and potential decommissioning strategies should take them into consideration. The proper characterization of the shutdown dose rates can establish a suitable strategy. Methods This article introduces a new shutdown dose rate calculation capability that relies on the MCNP-ORIGEN activation automation tool and the MCNP repeated structures to explicitly model the TRistructural ISOtropic (TRISO) particles as decay radiation sources. Results Three exercises are conducted with this capability, and their results discussed. The first two exercises verify and demonstrate the workflow. The third exercise proposes a decommissioning strategy for a high-temperature gas-cooled microreactor and studies its feasibility from the shutdown dose rate standpoint. The calculations yield a dose rate map above at the reactor citadel after a three month cool-down, showing values above 40 mSv/h. Conclusions The findings imply that the decommissioning strategy based on placing the reactor in a safe shutdown state and allowing it to cool down for three months before removing various components and extracting the fuel assemblies, may not be sufficient to minimize unnecessary exposure of personnel.