Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog, Cat, or Ferret from Canada to Norway
Norway welcomes Canadian pets warmly, and with the right preparation your companion crosses the Atlantic with every document in order and every official requirement met well before departure day.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Moving a dog, cat, or ferret from Canada to Norway sits at a fascinating regulatory intersection. Norway is not a member of the European Union, but it participates in the EU pet travel framework through the European Economic Area agreement, which means it mirrors EU rules almost exactly. The governing instrument for this journey is the CFIA veterinary certificate designated HA3152, a document jointly shaped by Canadian federal requirements and the EU pet movement regulations, principally EU Regulation 576/2013 and its implementing counterpart 577/2013. What this means in practical terms is that your pet does not enter a looser bilateral arrangement between two friendly countries. It enters one of the most rigorously documented pet travel frameworks in the world, one designed to protect Norway's disease-free status from threats including rabies and, specifically for dogs, the tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis. Understanding that framework from the outset is the single most important thing a Canadian pet owner can do before making any appointments.
Canada occupies a privileged position within this framework, and that privilege has real consequences for your timeline. Because Canada is listed in Annex II to EU Implementing Regulation 577/2013, it is considered a low-risk third country for rabies. This means that, unlike pets travelling from unlisted countries, Canadian pets do not automatically require a rabies antibody titration test, the blood test commonly called a rabies titre that adds roughly three to four months to preparation time. However, this exemption applies only if your pet travels directly from Canada, or transits exclusively through other Annex II-listed countries, on the way to Norway. If your routing takes your pet through any country that is not on that approved list, the titre test becomes mandatory, and it must be taken at least 30 days after the relevant rabies vaccination, with the result confirmed at least three months before the certificate is issued. The routing decision is therefore not merely a logistical preference; it is a regulatory choice with significant timeline implications.
The health certificate itself is the document around which everything else orbits, and its validity window is deliberately short. Once an official veterinarian signs the HA3152 certificate, it is valid for only ten days from the date of issue until the moment of documentary and identity checks at the designated EU border inspection post. If your pet travels by sea, that ten-day window is extended by the duration of the sea voyage, but for air travellers the window is fixed and firm. This means the veterinary appointment cannot happen weeks in advance. The certificate must be issued close enough to departure that it remains valid on arrival, which in practice means coordinating the vet visit, any required treatments, and the CFIA endorsement all within a narrow final window before travel. Once the pet has cleared the border inspection post and entered the EU or EEA, the same certificate then serves as a movement document valid for four months, or until the rabies vaccination expires, or until any applicable age-based conditions cease to apply, whichever comes first.
Dogs travelling to Norway face one additional requirement that cats and ferrets do not: treatment against Echinococcus multilocularis, a tapeworm that Norway, along with a specific list of EU member states, has worked hard to keep out of its territory. This treatment must be administered by a veterinarian, and the precise product name, manufacturer, date, and time of treatment must be recorded in the certificate to the hour. The treatment window is also strict: it must be administered no fewer than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before the scheduled time of entry into Norway. That five-day window sounds generous until you factor in flight schedules, transit times, and the possibility of delays. Owners who book the tapeworm treatment too early, even by a few hours relative to actual arrival time, risk having an otherwise perfect set of documents rejected at the border. This is one of the most frequently misunderstood timing requirements on this corridor, and it warrants a precise, written calculation before the veterinary appointment is confirmed.
The non-commercial nature of the movement also carries its own formal requirements that are easy to overlook amid the focus on vaccinations and treatments. The CFIA certificate attests that the animals are accompanying their owner, or an authorised person, within a window of no more than five days of the owner's own travel. If a trusted friend or professional courier is carrying your pet rather than you personally, a written authorisation from the owner must accompany the shipment, and that authorisation must comply with the specific model set out in Part 3 of Annex IV to EU Implementing Regulation 577/2013. The movement must also not involve any sale or transfer of ownership. Separately, a limit of five animals applies to a standard non-commercial movement certificate. If you are travelling with more than five animals, a different attestation pathway applies, requiring evidence that the animals are registered to participate in competitions, exhibitions, or sporting events, and that all animals are over six months of age. For most families moving with a beloved companion, none of these provisions will apply, but knowing they exist helps clarify that the certificate is a legal attestation, not merely a health record, and every line carries weight.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Norway requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
Microchip
Your pet must be identified by an ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip or a clearly readable tattoo applied before 3 July 2011. The microchip must be implanted before, or on the same day as, the rabies vaccination for that vaccination to count toward entry requirements.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
The pet must be at least 12 weeks old at the time of vaccination, and at least 21 days must have elapsed since completion of the primary vaccination before the animal can travel. Any booster must have been administered within the validity period of the preceding vaccination, or the sequence is treated as a new primary course.
Rabies Antibody Titre Test (conditional)Long lead time
A titre test is not required for pets travelling directly from Canada, since Canada is listed in Annex II to EU Implementing Regulation 577/2013. However, if the routing includes transit through any non-Annex II country, the test must show a result of at least 0.5 IU/ml, be taken at least 30 days after the rabies vaccination, and be completed at least three months before the certificate is issued.
Tapeworm Treatment for DogsLong lead time
Dogs entering Norway must be treated against Echinococcus multilocularis by a veterinarian no fewer than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before arrival. The product name, manufacturer, date, and exact time of treatment must be recorded in the certificate.
CFIA Veterinary Health Certificate (HA3152)Long lead time
An official veterinarian must complete and sign form HA3152, which must then receive CFIA endorsement. The certificate is valid for only 10 days from the date of issue to the border inspection post check, making timing of the veterinary appointment critical.
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
Before or on the same day as the first rabies vaccination
Microchip implant
The microchip must be in place before the rabies vaccination is administered for that vaccination to be legally recognised toward entry into Norway.
- 2
At least 21 days before travel, with the pet aged 12 weeks or older
Primary rabies vaccination
The 21-day countdown begins only after the final injection of the primary course, not from the first dose in a multi-dose protocol.
- 3
Before booking flights
Confirm routing through Annex II countries only
If all transit points are in Annex II-listed countries, the rabies titre test is not required; if any transit country is outside that list, the titre test must be completed and results confirmed at least three months before the certificate is issued.
- 4
No more than 10 days before arrival at the EU/EEA border inspection post
CFIA veterinary certificate issued (HA3152)
The certificate must be signed by an official veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA within this narrow window to remain valid on arrival.
- 5
Between 24 and 120 hours before scheduled arrival in Norway
Echinococcus tapeworm treatment (dogs only)
The treating veterinarian must record the product, date, and exact time of treatment in the certificate; treatment outside this precise window will invalidate entry.
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 quarantine is required for pets that arrive with a fully compliant set of documents, including a valid HA3152 certificate, proof of microchip, and an up-to-date rabies vaccination. Norway's entry framework is documentation-based rather than quarantine-based, which is precisely why each document must be complete and precisely timed before you travel.
For a straightforward Canada-to-Norway journey with no transit through non-approved countries, the minimum preparation window is roughly 30 days, to allow time for microchipping, the primary rabies vaccination, the mandatory 21-day post-vaccination waiting period, and the CFIA certificate. If your routing passes through a country not listed in EU Annex II, you should plan for at least five months to accommodate the titre test requirements.
Yes, the Echinococcus multilocularis treatment requirement applies only to dogs travelling to Norway and certain other listed EU and EEA countries. Cats and ferrets are not subject to this treatment on this corridor. For dogs, the timing of that treatment, between 24 and 120 hours before arrival, must be calculated precisely against your actual arrival time, not your departure time from Canada.
It means the veterinary appointment cannot be a comfortable three or four weeks before departure. The official veterinarian must sign the certificate, and the CFIA must endorse it, close enough to travel day that it will still be within its 10-day validity window when your pet is presented at the Norwegian border inspection post. We typically work backward from the confirmed arrival time to identify the exact booking window for the certificate appointment.
Yes, but the arrangement requires careful documentation. The person carrying your pet must hold a written authorisation from you as the owner, and that authorisation must comply with the model set out in Part 3 of Annex IV to EU Implementing Regulation 577/2013. The pet must also travel within five days of your own movement, and the certificate must name the responsible party correctly. A professional courier contracted by the owner is a recognised option under the regulation.
The CFIA veterinary certificate for this corridor does not itself impose breed restrictions, and Norway's entry framework is focused on disease risk rather than breed classification. However, Norway does have national legislation regarding certain dog breeds that is separate from the pet travel framework, and we recommend confirming your specific breed's status with Norwegian authorities before finalising travel arrangements.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Norway 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.
