Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Kazakhstan
Your pet crosses one of the world's most regulation-specific corridors and arrives at your side, with every document exactly where it needs to be.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Kazakhstan sits within the Eurasian Economic Union, a customs bloc that includes Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia, and this membership is the single most important fact shaping how Canada's federal government approaches the export of your dog or cat to Almaty or Astana. The CFIA does not write a bespoke set of rules for Kazakhstan alone; instead, it applies the harmonized veterinary import standards that the entire EEU has agreed upon, which means the certificate your pet travels on, the sequence of procedures your veterinarian must follow, and the disease-control logic behind every requirement all derive from EEU-wide regulation rather than from a purely bilateral Canada-Kazakhstan agreement. For a Canadian pet owner, this is actually reassuring in one respect: the standards are codified, consistent, and well understood by accredited veterinarians and CFIA offices alike. What it also means, however, is that there is very little flexibility at the border. The EEU takes a unified position on animal imports, and a document that does not conform precisely to that position will not be accepted regardless of how healthy your pet visibly is.
The procedural architecture for this corridor begins, as it does for almost every serious international route, with the microchip. Your dog or cat must be identified by an ISO-compliant microchip before any other step in the process is meaningful, because every subsequent document, every vaccination record, and the health certificate itself will reference that chip number as the animal's unique identifier. If a rabies vaccination was administered before the microchip was implanted, the vaccination is effectively invisible to the EEU's verification system and will need to be repeated after the chip is in place. This is the single most common and most costly timing error we see on this corridor, and it is entirely avoidable. Once the microchip is confirmed, the rabies vaccination sequence can begin, and it is worth understanding that the EEU framework is particularly attentive to rabies status, reflecting the genuine epidemiological concerns that exist across much of the union's territory. Canada, as a country with an excellent rabies-control record, is in a relatively favourable position, but the documentation must still be immaculate.
The health certificate is the document that ties everything together, and on the EEU corridor it carries a weight that goes beyond a simple declaration of fitness to fly. The certificate must be issued by an accredited veterinarian, endorsed by the CFIA, and it must accurately reflect the animal's microchip number, vaccination history, and clinical examination findings at the time of travel. Critically, the certificate has a defined validity window, and travel must occur within that window or the entire endorsement process must begin again. Owners who book flights before the certificate is issued, or who experience delays at the airport and miss their travel date by even a day, can find themselves in the position of needing to restart the CFIA endorsement, which requires time and, in busy seasons, a CFIA appointment that may not be immediately available. Our strong advice is always to confirm the flight before initiating the final veterinary examination, and to build a buffer of at least a day or two between the certificate's issue date and the scheduled departure.
Because Kazakhstan is reached from Canada almost exclusively via connecting cities, the routing of your pet's journey deserves careful thought. Common connections run through European hubs or through cities in the Gulf region, and each of those transit points carries its own set of airline policies regarding pets in cabin versus cargo, breed restrictions for snub-nosed animals, and crate dimension requirements. The EEU health certificate governs what happens at Kazakhstan's border, but it does not govern what happens at Frankfurt or Dubai, and an animal that is denied boarding at the connection point because of an airline's brachycephalic policy will still have a certificate that is ticking down toward its expiry. Working with a transport specialist who knows which airlines and which routing combinations are viable for your specific pet is not a luxury on this corridor; it is a genuine risk-management decision. The documentation is only as useful as the journey it accompanies.
One final dimension of this corridor that owners sometimes underestimate is the importance of consulting the receiving country's current import portal or embassy directly in the weeks before travel, because EEU member states do occasionally update their implementing regulations or introduce temporary measures that post-date the CFIA's published guidance. The CFIA page for this corridor covers the harmonized EEU standard faithfully, but Kazakhstan's own customs and veterinary authority, the Ministry of Agriculture, retains the right to impose additional conditions at the point of entry. Engaging a local contact in Almaty or Astana who can confirm current practice at the specific port of entry your pet will use is a step that separates a smooth arrival from an unexpected complication. At Paws en route, we treat the research process as ongoing right up until departure day, and we encourage every client on this route to do the same.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Kazakhstan requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
ISO MicrochipLong lead time
Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785-compliant microchip before any vaccinations are administered. If the microchip is placed after a rabies vaccination, the vaccination record will not be recognized and the vaccination must be repeated post-implant.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
A valid rabies vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian after the microchip is confirmed in place. The vaccine must be current at the time of travel, and the vaccination record must reference the microchip number to be considered valid under EEU standards.
CFIA-Endorsed Health CertificateLong lead time
An accredited veterinarian must conduct a clinical examination and issue a health certificate, which must then be endorsed by the CFIA before departure. The certificate has a strict validity window, and travel must occur within that window or the process must be restarted.
EEU Harmonized Standards
Kazakhstan's import requirements are governed by Eurasian Economic Union harmonized veterinary regulations, not by a standalone bilateral agreement with Canada. All documentation must conform to EEU standards, and any discrepancy may result in refusal of entry at the Kazakhstani border.
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, before any other step
Microchip implantation
The ISO-compliant microchip must be in place and confirmed before vaccinations are given, as the chip number anchors every subsequent document in the EEU verification chain.
- 2
After microchip is confirmed
Rabies vaccination
The rabies vaccination must be administered and recorded with the microchip number referenced; a vaccination given before the chip was implanted is not recognized under EEU import rules.
- 3
Before scheduling the final veterinary examination
Confirm flight and routing
Locking in the travel date and verifying that your chosen airline and routing are compatible with your pet's species, size, and breed prevents the health certificate from expiring before travel can occur.
- 4
Close to the departure date, within the certificate's validity window
Accredited veterinarian examination and certificate issuance
The accredited vet conducts the clinical examination, verifies the microchip and vaccination records, and issues the health certificate that will be submitted to the CFIA for endorsement.
- 5
After veterinary certificate is issued, before departure
CFIA endorsement
The CFIA must officially endorse the health certificate; this appointment should be booked in advance, particularly during peak travel seasons when processing times can extend.
- 6
One to two weeks before departure
Verify current Kazakhstan import conditions
Kazakhstan's Ministry of Agriculture may have issued implementing measures or temporary requirements that post-date the CFIA's published guidance, and confirming current conditions at the specific port of entry protects against last-minute complications.
- 7
Day of departure
Travel day document review
Confirm that the CFIA-endorsed certificate is within its validity window, that the microchip is readable with a scanner, and that all documents are organized and accessible for both airline check-in and Kazakhstani border inspection.
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
Quarantine requirements for pets entering Kazakhstan depend on the completeness and accuracy of the documentation presented at the border. Pets arriving with a properly endorsed CFIA health certificate, a valid rabies vaccination referencing the microchip number, and all EEU-compliant paperwork are not subject to a mandatory holding period under the harmonized EEU framework. Any gap in documentation, however, gives the receiving veterinary authority grounds to detain the animal pending resolution, which is why precision at every step matters.
The minimum realistic preparation window for this corridor is approximately 30 days, assuming your pet is already microchipped and has a current rabies vaccination on record. If the microchip has not yet been implanted or the rabies vaccination needs to be repeated post-chip, the timeline extends accordingly, since a new rabies vaccination must have had time to be recorded and verified before the health certificate is issued. We recommend beginning the process at least six to eight weeks before your intended departure to allow for CFIA appointment availability and any unexpected veterinary scheduling constraints.
Under EEU harmonized import rules, a rabies vaccination is only valid if the animal was already microchipped at the time of vaccination, because the chip number is the identifier that links the vaccination record to the specific animal. A vaccination administered before microchipping is not recognized, and the vaccination will need to be repeated after the chip is confirmed in place. This is one of the most common preparation errors on this corridor, and catching it early prevents a significant delay.
The CFIA-endorsed health certificate has a defined validity window, and your pet must complete travel and arrive in Kazakhstan before that window closes. If a flight delay, missed connection, or rebooking pushes travel past the expiry date, the certificate is no longer acceptable and the endorsement process must begin again. Booking flights with a sensible buffer between the certificate issue date and the scheduled departure date is one of the most practical protections you can build into your planning.
The EEU harmonized veterinary standards that govern Kazakhstan's pet import rules do not enumerate breed-specific prohibitions in the same way that some countries do, but Kazakhstan itself may have domestic legislation that restricts the import or ownership of certain dog breeds. We recommend verifying current breed regulations with the Kazakhstani embassy or the Ministry of Agriculture before booking travel, particularly for breeds that are commonly subject to national restrictions in Central Asian jurisdictions. Separately, airline breed restrictions for snub-nosed animals apply at the point of boarding in Canada and at any transit hub, regardless of what the destination country permits.
The CFIA's published guidance for the EEU corridor does not identify a rabies titre test as a standard requirement for pets travelling from Canada to Kazakhstan, reflecting Canada's recognized rabies-control status. However, EEU member states retain the ability to impose additional conditions, and it is worth confirming directly with the Kazakhstani veterinary authority whether a titre test is currently required for your pet's specific species or travel circumstances. If a titre test does become relevant, it must be conducted at an approved laboratory following a valid post-chip rabies vaccination, and the results take several weeks to return, so early clarification is essential.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Kazakhstan 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.
