Country Corridor
Travelling from Canada to Peru with Your Ferret
Your ferret can make this journey safely and in full compliance, provided the timing sequences are understood and respected well before your departure date.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Of all the companion animals we help relocate from Canada, ferrets travelling to Peru represent one of the most technically precise corridors we manage. Peru's national agricultural authority, SENASA, has established import conditions for ferrets that are specific, non-negotiable, and built around disease concerns that differ in important ways from those governing dogs and cats. The governing document on the Canadian side is a dedicated Veterinary Health Certificate issued by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, form HA3153, and every single line of that certificate must be completed correctly before an official CFIA veterinarian can endorse it. What this means in practice is that the preparation for this journey is not something that can begin in the final weeks before travel. It requires deliberate planning across a window of several months.
The disease framework at the heart of this certificate centres on two illnesses that are particularly dangerous to ferrets: rabies and canine distemper. The rabies vaccination requirement contains one of the most consequential double-sided timing windows we see in any export corridor. The rabies vaccine must be administered no fewer than 30 days before the date of export, and no more than 180 days before that same date. This means you cannot vaccinate too early, and you cannot vaccinate too close to departure. A ferret vaccinated on day 29 before travel, or one vaccinated more than six months prior, would fail to meet the requirements. The canine distemper vaccination carries its own condition: it must be current, meaning administered within the 12 months preceding the date of export. Both vaccines must be approved in Canada specifically for use in ferrets, which is a narrower pool of licensed products than most pet owners initially assume.
Beyond the vaccinations, Peru requires that the ferret's premises of origin show no clinical or epidemiological evidence of canine distemper for the 120 days prior to export. This is not a standard veterinary check during a single appointment; it is a premises-level declaration that your attending veterinarian must be in a position to certify based on the history of the location where your ferret has lived. Separately, the CFIA certificate requires that the ferret be kept at that same premises, separated from animals not intended for export, for the 30 days immediately before the departure date. This isolation requirement is easy to overlook but is a meaningful compliance step, particularly for households with multiple animals or for ferrets that have recently been in contact with others in a shelter or breeding environment.
The parasite treatment requirement adds another time-sensitive layer to the preparation. Both internal and external parasites must be treated with products approved for use in Canada, and this treatment must occur within the 10 days immediately prior to export. The clinical health examination must also take place within that same 10-day window, and it is during this examination that the licensed veterinarian completes and signs the health certificate. That certificate is then submitted to a CFIA official veterinarian for endorsement, and the endorsed certificate is valid for only 10 days from the date it is signed by the licensed veterinarian. This is a very narrow window, and it means the final veterinary appointments and the CFIA endorsement must be coordinated with precision relative to your actual flight date. There is no buffer for delays.
There are two arrival realities that every client travelling to Peru must understand before they book their flight. First, all ferrets arriving in Peru are subject to a mandatory quarantine of at least 15 days in a SENASA-approved facility. This is not discretionary, and it is not something that can be waived by presenting an especially thorough certificate. Your ferret will spend a minimum of two weeks in quarantine upon arrival, and planning for this period, including understanding the conditions, location, and cost of the approved facility, is part of responsible preparation for this journey. Second, SENASA does not permit any food or bedding that accompanies the ferret to enter Peru. Whatever your ferret travels with in terms of familiar smells and comfort items, none of that material clears the border. We flag this not only as a compliance matter but as a welfare consideration, because it affects how you set up the travel crate and what your ferret experiences on the other side of the flight. The CFIA source material is also explicit that the ferret must have been born and raised in Canada, or alternatively, must have been legally imported into Canada and resided there for the six months immediately prior to export. If your ferret has a more complex residential history, this residency certification requires careful documentation from the outset.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Peru requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
Permanent Microchip Identification
Each ferret must be permanently identified with a microchip, and the chip number and location must be recorded on the CFIA health certificate in Section V. The microchip must be in place prior to any vaccinations that will be cited on the certificate, so that all records can be linked to the correct animal.
Canadian Residency or OriginLong lead time
The ferret must either have been born and raised in Canada, or must have been legally imported into Canada and have resided there continuously for the six months immediately prior to the date of export. This residency declaration is certified by the attending licensed veterinarian and must be supportable by documentation.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
The ferret must be vaccinated against rabies using a vaccine approved in Canada for use in ferrets. The vaccination must have been administered no fewer than 30 days and no more than 180 days before the date of export. Both boundaries are strict: vaccinating too early or too close to departure will disqualify the animal.
Canine Distemper VaccinationLong lead time
A current canine distemper vaccination is required, administered within the 12 months prior to the date of export, using a vaccine approved in Canada for use in ferrets. The premises of origin must also show no clinical or epidemiological evidence of canine distemper in the 120 days before export.
Internal and External Parasite Treatment
The ferret must be treated for both internal and external parasites using products approved for use in Canada, within the 10 days immediately prior to export. Full treatment records including product name, manufacturer, active ingredient, dosage, and date of administration must be documented on the health certificate.
CFIA Veterinary Health Certificate and SENASA QuarantineLong lead time
Form HA3153 must be completed by a licensed Canadian veterinarian following a clinical health examination within 10 days of export, then endorsed by a CFIA official veterinarian. The certificate is valid for only 10 days from the date of the licensed veterinarian's signature. Upon arrival in Peru, a minimum 15-day quarantine in a SENASA-approved facility is mandatory for all ferrets.
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 210 days ahead
Nothing is left to chance. Here is how we stage your pet's documentation, step by step.
- 1
At least 6 months before travel, if ferret was imported into Canada
Confirm Canadian residency documentation
If your ferret was not born and raised in Canada, you must be able to demonstrate continuous legal residency in Canada for the full six months prior to your export date, so this window defines the earliest possible departure.
- 2
Before any vaccinations cited on the health certificate
Microchip implantation
The microchip must be in place so that all vaccination and treatment records are tied to a verified individual animal identification number.
- 3
Between 30 and 180 days before the date of export
Rabies vaccination
This is the most precisely bounded timing window in the entire process: the vaccine must be administered early enough to satisfy the 30-day minimum but not so early that it falls outside the 180-day maximum.
- 4
Within 12 months before the date of export, and at least 30 days before for scheduling purposes
Canine distemper vaccination
If the ferret's distemper vaccination is due for renewal, it should be scheduled in conjunction with the rabies vaccine to consolidate appointments and confirm currency well ahead of travel.
- 5
Beginning 30 days before the date of export
Premises isolation period
The ferret must be kept at its premises of origin, separated from all animals not intended for export, during the 30-day period leading up to departure.
- 6
Within 10 days immediately before the date of export
Parasite treatment and clinical health examination
Both the internal and external parasite treatments and the clinical examination by the licensed veterinarian must occur within this window, after which the veterinarian completes and signs the health certificate.
- 7
After the licensed veterinarian signs, and no more than 10 days before the date of export
CFIA official veterinarian endorsement
The endorsed certificate is valid for only 10 days from the date of the licensed veterinarian's signature, so the endorsement appointment and the flight date must be aligned with no margin for rescheduling.
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 is mandatory for all ferrets arriving in Peru, regardless of how thorough the documentation is. SENASA requires a minimum of 15 days in an approved facility, and this cannot be shortened or bypassed by presenting additional certifications or letters. Planning for this period, including identifying the SENASA-approved facility in advance and understanding the associated costs, is an essential part of preparing for this journey.
The requirement that rabies vaccination occur no fewer than 30 days and no more than 180 days before export creates a scheduling corridor that is narrower than it initially appears, particularly for owners who begin planning their move many months in advance. If the vaccine is administered too early because travel plans shift, the animal may age out of the valid window before departure. We recommend waiting until a firm travel date is established before scheduling the rabies vaccine, and then working backward to ensure both the 30-day minimum and 180-day maximum are respected.
SENASA explicitly prohibits any food or bedding accompanying the ferret from entering Peru. This applies regardless of whether the items are commercially packaged or handmade. We advise clients to source appropriate food and bedding locally in Peru before the animal arrives, and to consider how the ferret's travel crate is set up given that familiar comfort items will not be available at the destination.
CFIA official veterinarians are government employees whose availability varies by region, and appointment windows are not always immediate. We typically recommend contacting the relevant CFIA office at least two to three weeks before the health examination appointment to confirm availability and submission requirements. Since the endorsed certificate is valid for only 10 days from the licensed veterinarian's signature, the sequencing of the examination appointment and the endorsement appointment must be tightly coordinated.
The CFIA health certificate for Peru does not reference any breed restrictions for ferrets or impose a cap on the number of animals per shipment, though the certificate requires that the total number of animals be declared. Each animal must be individually identified by microchip and listed with its own vaccination and treatment records. For shipments of multiple ferrets, every entry on the certificate must correspond to a specific identified individual.
Ferrets that were not born and raised in Canada can still be exported to Peru, provided they were legally imported into Canada and have resided there continuously for the six months immediately prior to the export date. Your licensed veterinarian will certify which of the two origin conditions applies and will delete the inapplicable option on the health certificate. If there is any gap in your ferret's residency history or any uncertainty about the legality of the original import, those questions should be resolved before beginning the vaccination and documentation process.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Peru 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.
