Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog from Canada to the United States
With the right preparation in place, crossing the border with your dog is a straightforward journey, and we are here to guide you through every step.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
The Canada-to-United States corridor is, by global standards, one of the more accessible pet travel routes available to Canadian dog owners. The two countries share a long-standing animal health relationship, and because the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the USDA APHIS both recognize Canada as a low-risk country for rabies and other controlled diseases, the baseline documentation requirements are relatively streamlined compared to routes into the United Kingdom, Australia, or Japan. That said, straightforward does not mean casual. The CFIA is the Canadian authority responsible for issuing the export health certificate that the United States requires at the port of entry, and that certificate must be completed correctly, signed by an accredited veterinarian, and timed precisely relative to your travel date. Understanding what that process actually looks like in practice is the difference between a confident border crossing and a stressful one.
The single most important document for this corridor is the CFIA export health certificate, which must be issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and, critically, must be issued no more than ten days before your dog arrives in the United States. This ten-day window is the detail that trips up more Canadian pet owners than almost any other requirement on this route. Many people book their travel months in advance, confirm their airline cargo reservations, and then assume a visit to their regular vet two or three weeks before departure will be sufficient. It will not be. The certificate must be dated within that narrow ten-day window, which means your veterinary appointment must be scheduled with surgical precision relative to your actual travel date, not your booking date. If your plans shift and your departure moves by even a few days beyond the certificate's validity window, you will need a new certificate, a new veterinary appointment, and potentially a new CFIA endorsement, all of which take time to arrange.
Rabies vaccination is the other foundational requirement, and here the timing logic works in the opposite direction: your dog must be vaccinated against rabies before the health certificate can be issued, and the vaccine must be current and valid at the time of travel. For adult dogs receiving a booster, this is usually uncomplicated, but for puppies or dogs receiving their first-ever rabies vaccination, there is a crucial detail embedded in the CFIA guidance that owners often overlook. The United States requires that dogs be at least twelve weeks of age before receiving a rabies vaccine, and the vaccine must have been administered at least thirty days before entry into the United States. This means a puppy that receives its very first rabies vaccination cannot enter the US until a full thirty days have passed. If you are relocating with a young dog, that thirty-day waiting period must be factored into your departure planning from the very beginning, because there is no workaround or waiver available at the border.
Beyond the health certificate and rabies vaccination, the CFIA guidance for this corridor is notably free of the additional layers that complicate other international routes. There is no mandatory tapeworm treatment required for entry into the United States from Canada, no rabies titre test, and no government-mandated quarantine period upon arrival, which is a meaningful distinction from routes into rabies-free island nations. What the CFIA does emphasize, however, is that dogs arriving in the United States must appear healthy and show no signs of communicable disease at the port of entry. USDA APHIS inspectors at the border have the authority to assess arriving animals, and a dog that appears visibly unwell may be subject to additional examination, treatment requirements, or in serious cases, refusal of entry. This is not a common outcome for dogs travelling from Canada, but it is a reminder that the health certificate is not simply a bureaucratic formality: it is a declaration of your dog's actual physical condition at a specific point in time.
One area of the regulatory landscape that Canadian owners moving to the United States should be particularly attentive to involves dogs that were imported into Canada from high-risk countries before this trip. The United States has its own rules about dogs that originated in countries where canine rabies is not controlled, and if your dog was born or previously vaccinated in such a country, USDA APHIS may apply additional requirements regardless of how long the dog has lived in Canada. This is a nuance that a standard checklist will not surface, and it is precisely the kind of situation where working with an IPATA-certified pet transport professional pays dividends. The overall message from the CFIA for this corridor is one of manageable compliance: know your dates, schedule your veterinary appointment in the final ten days before departure, confirm your dog's vaccination record is complete and current, and ensure the health certificate is properly endorsed. The paperwork is real, the timing is specific, and the consequences of getting it wrong at the border are serious, but with proper planning, this is a route that thousands of Canadian families navigate successfully every year.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to the USA requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
All dogs must have a current and valid rabies vaccination administered by a licensed veterinarian. For dogs receiving their first-ever rabies vaccine, the vaccination must have been given at least 30 days before the date of entry into the United States, and the dog must be at least 12 weeks of age at the time of vaccination.
CFIA Export Health CertificateLong lead time
A health certificate issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian is required for entry into the United States. This certificate must be issued no more than 10 days before the dog arrives at the US port of entry, and it must accurately reflect the dog's current vaccination status and health condition.
Healthy Appearance at Port of Entry
Dogs must appear healthy and free of signs of communicable disease upon arrival in the United States. USDA APHIS inspectors at the port of entry have authority to assess arriving animals and may detain or refuse entry to dogs that appear unwell.
Minimum AgeLong lead time
Dogs must be at least 12 weeks of age to receive a rabies vaccination, which is a prerequisite for US entry. Combined with the 30-day post-vaccination waiting period for first-time vaccinations, puppies may not be able to travel until they are approximately 16 weeks old or more.
Every requirement, handled
These are the steps we manage, start to finish.
Share your travel dates and your pet's details. We build the compliance timeline, confirm lab approvals, and coordinate every appointment.
Preparation Timeline
Plan 30 days ahead
Nothing is left to chance. Here is how we stage your pet's documentation, step by step.
- 1
As early as possible, at least 6 weeks before travel
Confirm dog's age and vaccination history
Determine whether your dog has previously received a rabies vaccination, as first-time recipients face a mandatory 30-day waiting period before US entry is permitted.
- 2
At least 30 days before the planned US arrival date
Rabies vaccination (first-time recipients)
Dogs receiving their very first rabies vaccination must have it administered a minimum of 30 days before entering the United States, and the dog must be at least 12 weeks of age.
- 3
Confirm vaccine is current and will not expire before travel date
Rabies booster (previously vaccinated dogs)
For dogs with an existing rabies vaccination record, confirm with your veterinarian that the vaccine will remain valid throughout the travel period and will be current at the time of the health certificate.
- 4
No more than 10 days before the US arrival date
Schedule accredited veterinary appointment for health certificate
The CFIA export health certificate is only valid for 10 days from the date of issue, so this appointment must be timed carefully to fall within that window relative to your actual departure date.
- 5
Within 10 days of US arrival
CFIA export health certificate issued
A CFIA-accredited veterinarian completes and signs the health certificate confirming the dog is healthy, vaccinated, and fit to travel; this document must be presented at the US port of entry.
- 6
On travel day
Travel and US port of entry inspection
Present the CFIA health certificate to USDA APHIS inspectors at the US port of entry; the dog will be assessed for visible signs of illness and documentation will be reviewed for compliance.
Start today
The sooner we begin, the smoother each deadline becomes.
Tell us your travel window and your pet's current vaccination status. We stage everything from there.
FAQ
Questions about this corridor
No, there is no government-mandated quarantine period for dogs arriving in the United States from Canada, provided all documentation requirements are met and the dog appears healthy at the port of entry. Canada is considered a low-risk country by US authorities, which is why this route avoids the quarantine requirements that apply to many other international corridors. Dogs that arrive without proper documentation or appear unwell may be subject to additional inspection, but routine quarantine is not part of this process.
The health certificate must be issued within 10 days of your dog's arrival in the United States, which means your veterinary appointment must fall within that narrow window. We recommend booking the appointment as soon as your travel date is confirmed, and then scheduling it for approximately 7 to 8 days before departure to give yourself a small buffer without risking the certificate expiring before you travel. If your travel dates shift after the certificate is issued and the move pushes beyond the 10-day validity window, you will need a new appointment and a new certificate.
Not immediately. The United States requires that dogs receiving their first-ever rabies vaccination wait a full 30 days after that vaccination before entering the country. Your puppy must also have been at least 12 weeks old at the time the vaccine was administered. Once the 30-day period has passed and a CFIA health certificate has been issued within 10 days of travel, your puppy will meet the entry requirements.
It can, depending on the country of origin. The United States has specific requirements for dogs that originated in countries where canine rabies is not controlled, and USDA APHIS may apply additional documentation or inspection requirements to those animals even if they have been living in Canada. If your dog was born or vaccinated in a country that appears on USDA's high-risk list, we strongly recommend contacting us before you begin planning so we can assess whether any additional steps apply to your specific situation.
No, a rabies titre test is not required for dogs entering the United States from Canada. This is a meaningful distinction from routes into countries like the United Kingdom, Japan, or Australia, where a titre test and extended waiting periods are mandatory. For this corridor, a current and valid rabies vaccination combined with the CFIA health certificate is sufficient.
If USDA APHIS inspectors find that documentation is incomplete or expired, or that the dog appears unwell, they have the authority to detain the animal, require treatment at the owner's expense, or in serious cases refuse entry entirely. A dog refused entry would need to return to Canada and could not re-attempt entry until all requirements were met with freshly issued documentation. This outcome is uncommon for dogs travelling from Canada with proper paperwork, but it is a real possibility when timing errors occur, which is why working with a professional to manage the certificate window is worthwhile.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and the USA with known pet transport policies. We verify current breed restrictions and cargo availability before every booking.
Related Routes
City routes within this corridor
Looking for a specific city pair? Each route page has carrier-specific notes, compliance timelines, and booking guidance for that exact origin and destination.
City-pair routes for this corridor are being added. Check back soon.
Ready to travel?
Every requirement, handled before you even think to ask.
Tell us your travel dates and your pet's details. We take care of the rest, from health certificates to airline coordination.
