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Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Australia

Australia is one of the most rewarding relocations you can make with a pet, and with the right preparation begun early enough, your dog or cat will arrive healthy, compliant, and ready to settle into their new home alongside you.

Our perspective

Paws en route Notes

Australia occupies a category of its own when it comes to travelling with a pet from Canada. It is one of a small number of countries in the world that maintains what biosecurity authorities classify as a disease-free status for rabies and a range of other serious animal diseases, and the entire import framework for dogs and cats flows from that single, overriding concern. The Australian Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry treats every arriving animal as a potential vector for diseases that do not currently exist on the continent, and the regulations reflect that vigilance without apology. What this means for a Canadian pet owner is that the process is not simply a matter of gathering paperwork in the weeks before departure. It is a sequenced, months-long preparation that must begin with a clear understanding of what Australia is trying to protect and why the rules are structured the way they are.

The cornerstone of the Australian entry requirement is the rabies neutralising antibody titre test, often referred to as the RNATT. This blood test must be conducted at an approved laboratory, and it must demonstrate that your pet has achieved a satisfactory antibody level of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre following a valid rabies vaccination. The timing sequence here is where most families run into difficulty. The rabies vaccination must be given after the microchip has been implanted, not before, because the microchip is what links every subsequent document and test result to your individual animal. Once the vaccination has been administered, your pet cannot have the titre test performed until a waiting period has elapsed to allow the immune response to develop. After the titre test returns a passing result, a further waiting period applies before your pet is eligible to travel. If you add these intervals together and account for laboratory processing times, you are looking at a minimum preparation window that stretches to several months, and that is under ideal conditions where every result comes back satisfactory on the first attempt. A failed titre test resets part of the clock, which is why we counsel every client on this route to begin as early as possible.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency plays a specific and important role in this process from the export side. The CFIA is responsible for issuing the export health certificate that accompanies your pet on the journey, and this certificate must be completed and signed by an accredited veterinarian in Canada before being endorsed by a CFIA veterinarian. The certificate documents compliance with Australian import conditions, and it has a validity window that must align precisely with your travel date. Timing the issuance of this certificate is an exercise in coordination: it must be recent enough to satisfy Australian authorities upon arrival, but the veterinary examination and all the underlying treatments documented within it must themselves fall within the timeframes that Australian import conditions specify. A health certificate that is technically complete but whose internal dates fall outside the permitted windows is as problematic as no certificate at all, which is one reason this route benefits so greatly from professional oversight.

Australia also requires specific parasite treatments to be administered within defined windows before departure. Treatments targeting tapeworm and other internal parasites must be given by a veterinarian and recorded with precision, as the documentation of these treatments forms part of the health certificate package reviewed by Australian biosecurity officers upon arrival. It is worth understanding that Australian border biosecurity is among the most rigorous in the world, and officers are trained to identify gaps in documentation that might seem minor to an untrained eye. Pets that arrive with incomplete or inconsistent records are not simply waved through with a cautionary note. They may face extended holds, additional testing at the owner's expense, or in serious cases, rejection and return to the country of origin. The practical consequence of this is that every document in your pet's file must be internally consistent: dates, microchip numbers, vaccination lot numbers, and veterinarian signatures must all align across every piece of paper.

Mandatory quarantine is perhaps the most emotionally significant aspect of this corridor for families. Upon arrival in Australia, all dogs and cats from Canada must complete a period of quarantine at an approved government facility. This is not negotiable, and it applies regardless of how thoroughly the pre-departure preparation was completed. The quarantine period exists as a final biological buffer, allowing Australian authorities to observe animals for signs of disease that may not yet have been detectable at the time of the health examination in Canada. Owners should plan for this period in their travel and accommodation arrangements, and they should understand that the quarantine facility staff are professionals who take the welfare of the animals in their care seriously. What we tell our clients is that a clean, well-prepared pet with complete documentation will move through quarantine as smoothly as the process allows. The preparation you do in Canada is the most direct thing you can do to give your pet the calmest possible arrival experience in Australia.

Entry Requirements

What your pet's journey to Australia requires

Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.

  • ISO Microchip

    Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before any vaccinations or tests are administered. This microchip number becomes the permanent identifier linking every document, vaccination record, and test result to your individual animal. Implantation must be performed and recorded by a veterinarian.

  • Rabies VaccinationLong lead time

    A rabies vaccination must be administered by a veterinarian after the microchip is in place, using an approved inactivated vaccine. The vaccination must be current and valid at the time of the titre test and at the time of travel. The microchip must be verified as readable immediately before or at the time of vaccination.

  • Rabies Neutralising Antibody Titre Test (RNATT)Long lead time

    A blood sample must be taken after a waiting period following the rabies vaccination and tested at an approved laboratory to confirm an antibody level of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre. After achieving a passing result, a mandatory waiting period applies before your pet may travel to Australia. A failed result requires revaccination and retesting, resetting the relevant waiting period.

  • Parasite TreatmentLong lead time

    Dogs and cats must receive approved treatments for internal parasites, including tapeworm, administered by a veterinarian within the timeframes specified in Australian import conditions. The treatment product, dose, date, and administering veterinarian must be precisely recorded and reflected in the health certificate documentation.

  • CFIA Export Health CertificateLong lead time

    An accredited Canadian veterinarian must complete the required health certificate confirming compliance with all Australian import conditions, and the certificate must then be endorsed by a CFIA veterinarian before departure. The certificate has a defined validity window that must align with the actual travel date. All dates and microchip numbers recorded within it must be internally consistent with underlying veterinary records.

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 180 days ahead

Nothing is left to chance. Here is how we stage your pet's documentation, step by step.

  1. 1

    At least 6 months before intended travel date, as the first step

    Microchip implantation

    The ISO-compliant microchip must be implanted and verified as readable before any vaccinations or blood tests are performed, as it is the identifier that anchors every subsequent document.

  2. 2

    After microchip implantation, at the start of the preparation sequence

    Rabies vaccination

    The rabies vaccination must be given after the microchip is confirmed in place, using an approved inactivated vaccine, and the microchip number must be recorded on the vaccination certificate.

  3. 3

    After the required waiting period following rabies vaccination

    Rabies neutralising antibody titre test

    Blood must be drawn only after the immune system has had sufficient time to respond to the vaccination, and the sample must be submitted to an approved laboratory; allow additional time for laboratory processing and result return.

  4. 4

    After laboratory confirmation of a passing titre result of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre

    Mandatory waiting period after passing titre test

    A prescribed waiting period must be observed after a satisfactory titre result before the pet is eligible to travel to Australia; this period is fixed and cannot be shortened.

  5. 5

    Within the specific windows before departure as defined by Australian import conditions

    Parasite treatments

    Tapeworm and other parasite treatments must be administered by a veterinarian within the exact timeframes specified, with full product and dosage documentation retained for inclusion in the health certificate.

  6. 6

    Shortly before departure, within the certificate validity window

    CFIA export health certificate issued

    An accredited veterinarian completes the health certificate following a physical examination, and a CFIA veterinarian endorses it; the certificate must be valid on the date of arrival in Australia.

  7. 7

    Upon arrival at the approved Australian port of entry

    Arrival quarantine in Australia

    All dogs and cats entering Australia from Canada must complete a mandatory quarantine period at a government-approved facility, regardless of the completeness of their pre-departure documentation.

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

Carriers

Airlines serving this corridor

These carriers operate between Canada and Australia 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.

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.

Paws en route ofrece servicios especializados de transporte de mascotas y traslado internacional en todo el mundo. Nuestros especialistas certificados por IATA coordinan el transporte de mascotas a más de 150 destinos, incluyendo el traslado de perros y gatos, cumplimiento veterinario, gestión aduanera y servicio de entrega puerta a puerta a nivel global.

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