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Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to France

With the right preparation, your pet clears French customs without delay and settles into their new life in France while you focus on the journey itself.

Our perspective

Paws en route Notes

Moving a pet from Canada to France sits within one of the most rigorous regulatory frameworks in the world: the European Union's harmonized animal health system. France, as a full EU member state, applies EU law uniformly, which means your dog, cat, or ferret must satisfy requirements designed not merely to protect French animals, but to uphold biosecurity standards across all twenty-seven member states simultaneously. The CFIA administers the export side of this process, and their role is to verify that your animal genuinely meets EU criteria before issuing the official health certificate that French authorities will scrutinize on arrival. What makes this corridor distinct is that Canada is a recognized third country under EU rules, meaning Canadian pets can enter the EU without quarantine, provided every document and procedure is executed in precisely the right sequence. The word 'sequence' matters enormously here: it is not simply a matter of completing the right steps, but completing them in the correct order and within specific time windows.

The foundation of the entire process is the ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip, and the CFIA is unambiguous on one point that catches many owners off guard: the microchip must be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered. If a veterinarian vaccinates the animal first and chips it afterward, the EU will treat the animal as unvaccinated, because there is no way to trace that vaccination to a positively identified animal. This is not a bureaucratic technicality that inspectors overlook on a case-by-case basis; it is the governing logic of the entire traceability system. Once the microchip is confirmed and the rabies vaccination is given, a waiting period applies before the animal is considered protected, and the clock on the vaccine's validity begins from the date of that first administration. Owners who assume their pet's existing Canadian rabies vaccination simply 'counts' toward EU entry are often surprised to discover that the vaccination record must be tied to the microchip number in the official documentation, and any gap in that chain must be resolved before the health certificate can be issued.

For most Canadian pets travelling to France, the rabies antibody titre test is a critical consideration, though its necessity depends on the specific route and the animal's documented vaccination history. The EU's general rule for pets entering from listed third countries like Canada is that a valid rabies vaccination may be sufficient, but owners should understand that 'valid' under EU law means administered after microchipping, within the manufacturer's recommended interval, and documented in a format that a CFIA-accredited veterinarian can certify. Where the titre test does become mandatory is in certain transitional scenarios, for animals with incomplete vaccination histories, or when the specific EU member state of entry imposes additional requirements. France itself follows the EU baseline, but because travel itineraries can involve connections through other EU countries, the most conservative approach is always to ensure the vaccination record is unimpeachable. A titre test, when required, involves a blood draw that must be sent to an EU-approved laboratory, and the animal cannot travel until thirty days have elapsed after the blood was drawn and the result confirmed as adequate, meaning the practical lead time for this pathway extends to several months minimum.

The official health certificate is the document that ties every other requirement together, and its timing is among the most operationally sensitive elements of the process. The certificate must be issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian, endorsed by a CFIA office, and it carries a strict validity window of ten days from the date of the veterinary examination to the date of entry into the EU. This ten-day window is not generous, and it means the examination, endorsement, and travel must be coordinated almost simultaneously. A certificate that was perfectly correct when issued becomes invalid if the flight is delayed beyond the ten-day window, which is why experienced pet transport professionals build contingency time into the booking. The certificate must accompany the animal throughout the journey and be presented to the official border inspection post at the EU point of entry. France has designated border inspection posts at major international airports, and the animal will be held there briefly for documentary inspection before being cleared into the country.

One aspect of the Canada-to-France corridor that owners frequently underestimate is the distinction between non-commercial and commercial movement under EU law. The EU classifies a movement as commercial if the animal is being sold, rehomed, transferred to a new owner, or transported separately from its owner. Even a relocation where the owner and pet travel on different flights can be scrutinized under commercial movement rules, which carry additional certification requirements. For owners relocating with their pets as genuine companions, the non-commercial pathway is typically the correct one, but it requires honest disclosure and accurate documentation; misclassification is taken seriously by EU authorities. France does not impose quarantine on pets arriving correctly documented under the non-commercial pathway from Canada, which is one of the genuine advantages of this corridor over routes from countries with more restricted status. However, if documentation is incomplete or the animal cannot be verified against its microchip on arrival, French customs has the authority to detain the animal at the owner's expense until the situation is resolved, or in serious cases, to refuse entry entirely. Starting the process early, with professional guidance at every step, is not merely convenient; it is the only reliable way to ensure your animal arrives in France without incident.

Entry Requirements

What your pet's journey to France requires

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

  • ISO MicrochipLong lead time

    Your pet must be identified by an ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip implanted before any rabies vaccination is administered. If the microchip is implanted after the rabies vaccination, the EU will consider the animal unvaccinated and the vaccination series must be restarted.

  • Rabies Vaccination

    A valid rabies vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian after microchip implantation and must remain current throughout travel. The vaccination record must reference the animal's microchip number and must be within the manufacturer's recommended validity period at the time of EU entry.

  • Rabies Antibody Titre Test (if applicable)Long lead time

    For animals with incomplete or unverifiable vaccination histories, an EU-approved laboratory titre test confirming adequate rabies antibody levels may be required. The animal cannot travel until at least thirty days after the blood draw, and the test must be conducted at an EU-listed laboratory.

  • EU Health CertificateLong lead time

    An official health certificate must be completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by a CFIA regional office. The certificate is valid for ten days from the date of veterinary examination to the date of EU entry, and the animal must be presented at a designated EU border inspection post on arrival.

  • Tapeworm Treatment for Dogs

    Dogs entering certain EU member states, and when travelling onward from France to the United Kingdom or Ireland, must be treated against Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm by a veterinarian between one and five days before entry. Confirm whether your specific itinerary or onward travel triggers this requirement.

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

    As early as possible; minimum before rabies vaccination

    Microchip Implantation

    The ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip must be implanted and confirmed readable before any rabies vaccination is given, as EU law requires the vaccination to be traceable to the identified animal.

  2. 2

    After microchip implantation is confirmed

    Rabies Vaccination

    The primary rabies vaccination begins the official vaccination clock; the date and microchip number must be recorded precisely, as this record forms the backbone of the EU health certificate.

  3. 3

    At least 30 days before intended travel date, and no sooner than 30 days after primary rabies vaccination

    Rabies Antibody Titre Test (if required)

    Blood must be drawn and sent to an EU-approved laboratory, and travel cannot occur until thirty days have elapsed after the sample date and an adequate result has been confirmed.

  4. 4

    No more than 10 days before EU entry

    Veterinary Health Examination

    A CFIA-accredited veterinarian conducts the official examination and completes the EU health certificate, which carries a strict ten-day validity window from examination to entry.

  5. 5

    After veterinary examination, within the 10-day validity window

    CFIA Endorsement

    The completed health certificate must be submitted to a CFIA regional office for official endorsement before travel; allow sufficient time for this step within the ten-day window.

  6. 6

    Between 1 and 5 days before EU entry

    Tapeworm Treatment for Dogs (if applicable)

    If your itinerary requires tapeworm treatment, it must be administered by a veterinarian within this narrow window and documented in the health certificate.

  7. 7

    On arrival at the designated EU entry point

    Border Inspection Post Clearance in France

    All documentation, including the endorsed health certificate, must be presented at the designated border inspection post at the French port of entry for official verification before the animal is released.

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 France 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 दुनिया भर में पालतू जानवरों की यात्रा और स्थानांतरण में विशेषज्ञता रखता है। हमारे IATA-प्रमाणित विशेषज्ञ 150 से अधिक गंतव्यों तक अंतरराष्ट्रीय पेट ट्रांसपोर्ट की व्यवस्था करते हैं — कुत्तों और बिल्लियों के परिवहन से लेकर पशु चिकित्सा अनुपालन, कस्टम क्लियरेंस और वैश्विक डोर-टू-डोर कंसीयर्ज डिलीवरी तक।

IPATA: The Pet Shipping Experts