Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Russia
With the right preparation and the correct Eurasian Economic Union health certificate in hand, your pet can make the journey from Canada to Russia with confidence and without delay at the border.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Russia does not stand alone as a destination when it comes to pet import regulations. It is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union, a customs bloc that also includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan, and that membership is the single most important thing to understand before you begin planning. What this means in practice is that the health documentation your pet needs is not a standard Canadian export certificate written for Russia specifically. Instead, the CFIA issues a certificate that conforms to the EAC, the Eurasian Economic Union's unified animal health standard. This is a meaningful distinction because the requirements, the language, the attestations, and the format of that certificate are all governed by EAC standards rather than by any individual country's preferences. If you begin your preparation thinking purely in terms of what Russia wants, you may find yourself looking at the wrong forms or asking your veterinarian the wrong questions.
The CFIA's focus on this corridor is consistent with its broader approach to fur-bearing animal, rabbit, dog, and cat exports: the agency is primarily concerned with disease status, vaccination currency, and the integrity of the health certificate itself. For cats and dogs travelling to Russia, the certificate must be issued and signed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and then endorsed by the CFIA, which adds a layer of federal oversight that a simple private veterinary letter cannot replicate. This endorsement process takes time, and it is one of the first places where pet owners underestimate the logistics. The certificate is valid for a defined window relative to departure, and if your travel date shifts, the entire endorsement cycle may need to restart. Planning your travel dates firmly before initiating the certificate process is not just advisable; it is effectively required.
Vaccination requirements for this corridor are non-negotiable and sequenced in a way that surprises many owners. Rabies vaccination is mandatory, and critically, the animal must be vaccinated before the health certificate is issued, not concurrently. The timing of when that vaccination was administered relative to the date of export matters, and a vaccine given too close to travel may not satisfy the requirement if the animal has no prior vaccination history. This is the corridor's most common compliance failure point: an owner books travel, takes their dog to the vet a week before departure for a quick rabies shot, and discovers that the certificate cannot lawfully attest to the animal's protected status in the way the EAC standard demands. Beyond rabies, other vaccinations may be required depending on species and age, and your CFIA-accredited veterinarian will need to review the animal's full vaccination record, not just the most recent entry.
Microchipping is a prerequisite for the entire documentation chain on this route. The EAC framework requires that animals be individually identified by an ISO-standard microchip before any health examination or certificate issuance begins, because the chip number is the anchor that ties the animal's identity to every document that follows. An animal that is chipped after vaccination creates a traceability problem: the records do not align in the sequence the EAC requires, and a CFIA veterinarian may be unable to certify the animal. If your pet was microchipped years ago, confirm that the chip is still readable and that the number appears correctly on all existing veterinary records before any new documentation is initiated. Lost or migrated chips discovered at the CFIA endorsement stage are extraordinarily disruptive to a travel timeline.
One overarching truth about this corridor that no checklist fully captures is that the geopolitical and logistical environment surrounding Canada-to-Russia travel adds complexity that is entirely separate from the regulatory requirements themselves. Airline options, routing through third countries, cargo acceptance policies, and the practical realities of customs presentation at Russian entry points all require careful advance research. The EAC health certificate will meet the legal standard at the border, but the journey to get the animal there involves coordination between your accredited veterinarian, the CFIA regional office, your chosen carrier, and potentially a ground handler on the Russian side. Paws en route manages each of these relationships as a matter of course, because the certificate alone, however correctly prepared, does not move the animal. The full logistical chain must be intact before departure day arrives.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Russia requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
ISO Microchip
All dogs and cats must be identified with an ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip prior to any vaccination or health examination recorded on the EAC export certificate. The chip number must appear consistently across all accompanying veterinary records.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
A valid rabies vaccination is mandatory and must be administered after microchip implantation. The vaccination must be current and within its validity period at the time of export, and must appear on the health certificate with the product name, batch number, and administration date.
EAC Health Certificate (CFIA-Endorsed)Long lead time
Export requires an EAC-format veterinary health certificate completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and formally endorsed by the CFIA. The certificate must be issued within the validity window relative to the departure date, typically not more than five days before travel.
Additional Vaccinations
Depending on species and age, additional core vaccinations such as distemper, parvovirus, and other EAC-specified diseases may be required and must be documented on the certificate. Your accredited veterinarian must review the full vaccination history against current EAC requirements.
Clinical Health Examination
A physical examination by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian is required to confirm the animal is free of signs of infectious or contagious disease at the time of certification. This examination must occur within the certificate's validity window and cannot be backdated.
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 any vaccinations are recorded for export purposes
Microchip implantation
The ISO-compliant microchip must be implanted first so that every subsequent vaccination and health record is linked to the chip number in the correct sequence.
- 2
After microchip, with sufficient time before travel for the vaccination to be within its valid period
Rabies and core vaccinations
Rabies vaccination must be current and must have been administered after microchipping; a first-time vaccine given too close to travel may not satisfy EAC attestation requirements.
- 3
At least 3 to 4 weeks before travel
Veterinary record review
Your CFIA-accredited veterinarian should review the complete vaccination history and microchip records to confirm everything aligns before initiating the certificate process.
- 4
Within 5 days of departure
Clinical health examination and certificate preparation
The accredited veterinarian conducts the formal health examination and completes the EAC certificate, which is time-sensitive and must remain valid through the animal's arrival.
- 5
Immediately after certificate completion, within the 5-day validity window
CFIA endorsement
The completed certificate must be submitted to the appropriate CFIA regional office for federal endorsement; this step requires advance scheduling and cannot be done the day of travel.
- 6
Confirmed well in advance of travel, ideally 3 to 4 weeks out
Airline and cargo confirmation
Carrier acceptance policies for live animals on Canada-to-Russia routings require early confirmation, as options may involve connections through third countries, each with their own transit rules.
- 7
Day of travel
Departure and border presentation
The endorsed EAC health certificate and full vaccination documentation must be presented to Russian border veterinary authorities upon arrival; all documents should travel with the animal, not checked separately.
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
For dogs and cats arriving with a correctly completed and CFIA-endorsed EAC health certificate that meets all vaccination and identification requirements, quarantine is not typically required at the Russian border. However, border veterinary authorities retain discretion, and any deficiency in the documentation can result in detention or additional inspection. Ensuring every element of the certificate is accurate and current is the most reliable way to avoid any delay.
The EAC framework sets a short validity period for health certificates to ensure that the clinical examination reflects the animal's current condition as close to travel as possible. This is a genuine constraint that requires careful coordination: your CFIA-accredited veterinarian appointment, the CFIA endorsement appointment, and your departure date must all fall within a narrow sequence. Paws en route plans this sequence deliberately so that no step is left to chance or last-minute scheduling.
It depends on the vaccine used and the validity period specified by the manufacturer, as recorded in your dog's vaccination records. If the current rabies vaccination is still within its valid period on the date of export and was administered after the microchip was implanted, it may be sufficient. Your CFIA-accredited veterinarian will confirm this during the record review, which is why that review should happen several weeks before travel rather than the week of departure.
The CFIA source for this corridor does not specify breed-based restrictions within the EAC health certificate framework itself. However, certain breeds may face airline-level restrictions based on carrier policies for brachycephalic or otherwise designated breeds, and Russia's own domestic legislation may impose additional considerations for specific breeds. We recommend confirming breed-specific airline policies and Russian import regulations directly as part of the planning process for your specific dog.
If your departure date moves beyond the certificate's validity window, the entire process must effectively restart: a new clinical examination, a new certificate, and a new CFIA endorsement are required. This is one of the most disruptive scenarios in pet transport logistics, and it is why we strongly advise clients to confirm travel dates firmly before initiating the certificate process rather than beginning paperwork while flights are still tentative.
Because the EAC is a unified customs territory, the health certificate framework is shared across member states, and movement within that territory for commercial or accompanied pet purposes may be governed by the same underlying standards. However, each member state may have additional domestic requirements layered on top of the EAC minimum, and intra-EAC movement rules differ from import rules at the external border. We treat each destination as its own compliance review to ensure nothing is assumed.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Russia 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.
