Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Japan
With preparation beginning up to six months before departure, Japan rewards careful planning with a straightforward arrival for your pet.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Japan is widely regarded as one of the most demanding destinations in the world for pet importation, and that reputation is entirely earned. The Japanese government takes a preventative approach to rabies control that is unlike almost any other country Canadian pet owners are likely to encounter: the framework is not simply about proving your dog or cat is vaccinated, but about proving, through a blood test conducted at an approved laboratory, that the vaccination has actually worked. This distinction matters enormously in practice. A pet that has received every required vaccination on schedule but whose owner has not arranged the rabies titre test, or has arranged it at the wrong time relative to the vaccinations, may still face a mandatory quarantine period of up to 180 days upon arrival in Japan. The entire regulatory architecture of this corridor is built around that blood test, and understanding why Japan requires it is the first step toward planning a move that goes smoothly.
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency plays a specific role in this corridor that is worth understanding clearly. The CFIA is responsible for issuing the export health certificate that accompanies your pet on the journey, and the requirements encoded in that certificate must align precisely with what the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries expects to see. Canada is not on Japan's list of high-risk rabies countries, which is genuinely helpful, but it does not exempt Canadian pets from the titre test requirement. What it does mean is that the overall timeline, while still substantial, is somewhat more navigable than it would be for pets originating from certain other regions. The CFIA's focus in this corridor is on ensuring that the sequence of events, microchipping first, then vaccination, then testing, then waiting, is documented accurately and in the correct order, because Japan's quarantine authority will scrutinize that sequence in detail upon arrival.
The timing requirements are where this corridor consistently catches people off guard, and it is worth walking through them carefully. The microchip must be implanted before any rabies vaccinations are given, because Japan will not recognize vaccinations administered before a microchip was in place. Following the primary vaccination or booster, the rabies titre test, which measures the level of virus-neutralizing antibodies in the blood, cannot be conducted until at least 30 days have passed since that vaccination. The blood sample must then be sent to a laboratory that Japan has specifically approved for this purpose, and the result must show an antibody level at or above 0.5 IU per millilitre. Once a passing result is confirmed, there is a mandatory waiting period of 180 days before your pet can enter Japan without facing an extended quarantine. That 180-day clock begins on the date the blood was drawn for the titre test, not the date the result arrives, and not the date of vaccination.
In practical terms, the 180-day waiting period is the single most important timeline constraint in this corridor, and it has real consequences for families who discover it late. A family that learns they are relocating to Tokyo with three months of notice will find it mathematically impossible to meet the 180-day requirement before their departure date. In those situations, the options are limited: the pet can travel later with a trusted escort or through a professional transport service, the pet can enter Japan and serve the balance of the waiting period in a government-designated quarantine facility at the owner's expense, or travel plans can be restructured if circumstances allow. The Japanese quarantine facility experience is not the casual overnight stop that some countries offer; it is a formal, government-supervised process with real costs and emotional weight for both pet and owner. Beginning the preparation process at least seven to eight months before your intended travel date is the only way to give your pet a genuine chance of arriving in Japan and coming directly home with you.
Beyond the titre test and waiting period, Japan also requires a health certificate issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA itself within a specific window before travel, and it is worth confirming the exact timing requirements for that certificate with both your veterinarian and the Japanese embassy or consulate well in advance of your departure. Dogs must also meet any applicable airline requirements regarding crate dimensions and breed restrictions, and it is worth noting that certain brachycephalic, or flat-faced, breeds face restrictions or outright prohibitions on many airlines that serve the Tokyo routes, a constraint that operates entirely separately from the Japanese government's import requirements. Japan's quarantine authority also requires advance notification of your pet's arrival, typically through an online pre-inspection application submitted some weeks before the flight. Missing that pre-notification window can result in a quarantine period regardless of how perfectly every other requirement has been met. The precision that Japan demands of this process is significant, but it is also entirely navigable for a family that starts early, works with experienced professionals, and treats every deadline as a firm commitment rather than a general guideline.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Japan requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
Microchip
Your dog or cat must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip. The microchip implantation must occur before any rabies vaccinations are administered, as Japan will not accept vaccinations recorded prior to a confirmed microchip implant.
Rabies Vaccination
A valid rabies vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian after the microchip has been confirmed in place. The vaccination record must include the product name, lot number, date administered, and the date the next vaccination is due.
Rabies Antibody Titre TestLong lead time
A blood sample drawn at least 30 days after the rabies vaccination must be tested at a Japan-approved laboratory, with results showing antibody levels at or above 0.5 IU per millilitre. Once a passing result is confirmed, a mandatory 180-day waiting period begins before the pet may enter Japan without extended quarantine.
CFIA Export Health CertificateLong lead time
A health certificate must be completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA within the required timeframe before travel. The certificate must reflect all vaccination and titre test records in the precise sequence Japan requires.
Advance Notification to Japan Quarantine AuthorityLong lead time
An advance import application or pre-inspection notification must be submitted to the Animal Quarantine Service of Japan before your pet's arrival. Failure to submit this notification within the required window can trigger a mandatory quarantine period regardless of documentation status.
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 210 days before intended entry into Japan
Microchip Implantation
The ISO-compliant microchip must be confirmed in place before any rabies vaccination is given, as Japan invalidates vaccinations administered before a chip was recorded.
- 2
Any time after microchip confirmation, at least 210 days before travel
Primary or Booster Rabies Vaccination
The vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian and fully documented with product name, batch number, and validity dates.
- 3
At least 30 days after the rabies vaccination
Rabies Antibody Titre Test (Blood Draw)
The blood sample must be sent to a Japan-approved laboratory and return a result of 0.5 IU per millilitre or higher; the 180-day waiting period begins on the date the blood was drawn, not the date the result is received.
- 4
Begins on the date of the titre test blood draw
180-Day Waiting Period
Your pet cannot enter Japan without extended quarantine until 180 days have elapsed from the blood draw date, making this the defining constraint of the entire timeline.
- 5
Several weeks before departure; confirm exact window with the Japanese Animal Quarantine Service
Advance Notification to Japan Animal Quarantine Service
The pre-inspection application must be submitted and acknowledged before travel, and missing this window is an independent ground for quarantine on arrival.
- 6
Within the required days before departure; confirm exact window with CFIA and the Japanese consulate
CFIA Export Health Certificate
The certificate is completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA, and must reflect the full vaccination and titre test history in the correct documented sequence.
- 7
On travel day and upon arrival in Japan
Departure and Arrival Inspection
Upon arrival, Japan's Animal Quarantine Service will inspect all documentation and the microchip; pets with complete, correctly sequenced paperwork are typically released within a short inspection period rather than held for extended quarantine.
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
If all requirements have been met in the correct sequence and the 180-day waiting period following the titre test has elapsed before your arrival date, your pet's quarantine inspection upon arrival is typically brief, often resolved within a few hours at the airport facility. However, if any requirement is incomplete, out of sequence, or if the 180 days have not fully passed, Japan may hold your pet in a government quarantine facility for the balance of that period. The length and cost of that stay depends on how much of the waiting period remains at the time of entry.
We advise clients to begin the process at least seven to eight months before their intended travel date, and ideally longer if there is any uncertainty about the titre test outcome. The 180-day waiting period that begins after a passing titre test result is the controlling constraint, and it cannot be shortened or waived. Families who discover a relocation to Japan with less than six months of notice will almost certainly need to arrange for their pet to travel separately at a later date.
The titre test is a blood test that measures the concentration of rabies-neutralizing antibodies in your pet's bloodstream, confirming that the vaccination has produced a genuine immune response rather than simply that an injection was administered. Japan requires this test as a core part of its rabies prevention framework, and the sample must be analyzed at a laboratory specifically approved by the Japanese government. A result at or above 0.5 IU per millilitre is required, and the test must be performed at least 30 days after the most recent rabies vaccination.
Yes, and this is a sequencing requirement that Japan enforces without exception. If a rabies vaccination was given before the microchip was implanted and confirmed, Japan will treat that vaccination as invalid for the purposes of the titre test and the 180-day waiting period. In practice, this means the vaccination sequence would need to begin again from the point of microchipping, which can add months to an already long timeline. Confirming the microchip before any vaccinations are given is one of the most important steps in this entire process.
Japan itself does not maintain a blanket list of prohibited dog breeds at the national import level in the way some countries do, but individual airlines that operate routes into Japan may impose their own restrictions on brachycephalic breeds or specific breeds classified as dangerous. These airline policies are entirely separate from Japanese government import requirements and must be confirmed directly with your chosen carrier well in advance of booking. Paws en route works closely with airlines to identify the right routing and carrier for every dog's breed and physical profile.
If your pet's titre test returns a result below 0.5 IU per millilitre, the vaccination will need to be boosted and the test repeated at least 30 days after the booster, and the 180-day waiting period will not begin until a passing result is achieved. This possibility is one reason we recommend beginning the process as early as possible: a failed titre test is not common in pets with up-to-date vaccinations, but it does occur, and discovering it late in a compressed timeline leaves very few options. Your veterinarian may be able to adjust the vaccination protocol to improve the likelihood of a strong antibody response on the first attempt.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Japan 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.
