Paws en routePaws en route
All routes

Country Corridor

Flying Your Dog, Cat, or Ferret from Canada to Switzerland

With the right preparation, your pet clears Swiss entry with confidence, and you arrive together without delay at the border.

Our perspective

Paws en route Notes

Switzerland occupies a unique position in European pet travel: though not a member of the European Union, it has adopted the EU's pet movement regulations wholesale, meaning your dog, cat, or ferret must satisfy the same health attestation framework that governs entry into France, Germany, or any other EU member state. The governing document for travel from Canada is the CFIA's Form HA 3151, a bilaterally recognised veterinary certificate that must be completed and signed by an official veterinarian or a veterinarian authorised by the competent authority. Canada is listed among the third countries that may qualify for the standard rabies vaccination pathway under EU Implementing Regulation No 577/2013, which is genuinely good news for Canadian pet owners, as it means that in most circumstances you are not automatically required to undergo the more demanding rabies antibody titration process. That said, the regulatory framework is layered and conditional, and understanding which pathway applies to your specific pet on your specific journey requires careful reading, not a casual glance at a checklist.

The single most important timing fact on this route is the 10-day validity window of the health certificate itself. The HA 3151 is valid for only 10 days from the date the official veterinarian signs it until the moment your pet passes documentary and identity checks at the designated EU travellers' point of entry. This is not a soft deadline that border officials treat flexibly; it is a hard regulatory cutoff, and a certificate signed even one day too early relative to your travel date will be rejected. The practical implication is that your veterinary appointment must be scheduled with surgical precision around your flight date, and any itinerary change after signing can invalidate the document entirely. The one relief valve the regulations provide is for sea transport: if part of your journey involves a ship crossing, the 10-day window is extended by the duration of that sea voyage, though that provision is rarely relevant for Canadian travellers flying directly to Zurich or Geneva.

Rabies vaccination is the heart of this certificate, and the rules around it are more nuanced than most owners initially appreciate. For the standard pathway, your pet must have been at least 12 weeks old at the time of the rabies vaccination, and a minimum of 21 days must have elapsed since the completion of that primary vaccination series before the certificate can be issued. Revaccinations are accepted without restarting the clock, but only if they were administered within the period of validity of the preceding vaccination; a lapsed booster is treated as a new primary vaccination, which resets the 21-day wait entirely. For very young animals, a separate and more restricted pathway exists: pets under 12 weeks old, or between 12 and 16 weeks old where the 21-day post-vaccination period has not yet been met, may potentially travel under a declaration that they have had no contact with wild animals susceptible to rabies, but this pathway requires explicit confirmation that Switzerland has authorised such movements, and owners should not assume that permission is in place without verifying it directly before travel.

The rabies antibody titration test, sometimes called the FAVN or titre test, deserves its own discussion because it represents the most time-consuming and emotionally taxing element of this route for those who need it. While Canada's listing on the approved third-country annex means most Canadian pets travelling directly to Switzerland will not be required to undergo titration, the certificate makes clear that any pet coming from, or scheduled to transit through, a country not on that approved list must have a titre test result of at least 0.5 IU/ml, taken no earlier than 30 days after the rabies vaccination and at least three months before the certificate is issued. That three-month waiting period after a successful blood draw is the detail that consistently catches pet owners off guard: it means the entire titration pathway, from vaccination through blood sampling through the waiting period, requires a minimum of roughly four to five months of lead time before you can even book your certificate appointment. If your pet's travel history involves a third country not on the EU's approved list, or if there is any ambiguity about prior vaccination records, titration may be required regardless of Canada's own listed status.

Two additional compliance points complete the picture for this corridor. First, if your dog is destined for Switzerland via a member state listed in the annex to EU Implementing Regulation 2018/878, the certificate requires attestation regarding treatment against Echinococcus multilocularis, the tapeworm parasite that certain northern and central European countries require dogs to be treated for before entry. The administering veterinarian must record the exact product name, manufacturer, date, and time of treatment, and that timing must fall within the specific window prescribed by the regulation. Second, the certificate covers a maximum of five animals per movement; if you are travelling with more than five pets, the movement is automatically reclassified and the animals must be over six months of age and destined for a registered competition, exhibition, or sporting event. For the vast majority of families and individuals relocating to Switzerland with one or two beloved companions, none of these edge cases will apply, but knowing they exist ensures you are not caught off guard by a question at the border that your certificate was not prepared to answer.

Entry Requirements

What your pet's journey to Switzerland 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 identified by a transponder or tattoo, with the alphanumeric code recorded in Box I.28 of the HA 3151 certificate. ISO-standard microchips are the accepted norm for EU entry, and the chip must be implanted before, or at the time of, the rabies vaccination for that vaccination to count toward the certificate.

  • Rabies VaccinationLong lead time

    The pet must have been at least 12 weeks old at the time of vaccination, and a minimum of 21 days must have elapsed since the completion of the primary vaccination series before the certificate can be issued. Any revaccination administered outside the validity window of the prior vaccine is treated as a new primary vaccination, restarting the 21-day waiting period.

  • CFIA Health Certificate (HA 3151)Long lead time

    The official veterinary certificate must be completed and signed by a CFIA-authorised official veterinarian and is valid for only 10 days from the date of issue until documentary and identity checks at the EU point of entry. The certificate covers non-commercial movement of five or fewer dogs, cats, or ferrets travelling with their owner or an authorised representative.

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

    Pets transiting through or originating from a country not listed on the EU's approved third-country annex must demonstrate a rabies antibody titre of at least 0.5 IU/ml from a blood sample taken no fewer than 30 days after vaccination and at least three months before the certificate is issued. Canadian pets travelling directly without unapproved-country transit are generally exempt from this requirement.

  • Echinococcus (Tapeworm) Treatment for DogsLong lead time

    Dogs destined for member states listed in the annex to EU Implementing Regulation 2018/878 must be treated against Echinococcus multilocularis by an administering veterinarian within a prescribed window before entry. The product name, manufacturer, exact date, and time of treatment must be recorded on the certificate by the treating veterinarian.

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 120 days ahead

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

  1. 1

    Before rabies vaccination

    ISO microchip implantation

    The microchip must be in place before the rabies vaccination is administered so that the chip number can be tied to the vaccination record; implanting after the vaccine invalidates the linkage.

  2. 2

    After microchip; pet must be at least 12 weeks old

    Primary rabies vaccination

    The vaccine must be administered in compliance with the validity requirements of Annex III to EU Regulation 576/2013, and the pet must be a minimum of 12 weeks of age on the day of the injection.

  3. 3

    No earlier than 30 days after rabies vaccination

    Rabies antibody titre test blood draw (if required)

    If titration is required due to transit routing or travel history, the blood sample cannot be taken until at least 30 days post-vaccination, and the result must be at least 0.5 IU/ml before the three-month waiting period begins.

  4. 4

    Begins on the date of the blood draw

    Three-month titre waiting period (if applicable)

    The certificate cannot be issued until at least three calendar months have elapsed from the date of the titre blood sampling, making this the longest single delay in the entire process.

  5. 5

    Within the prescribed window before entry into the destination member state

    Echinococcus tapeworm treatment for dogs (if required)

    The administering veterinarian must record the exact product, date, and time on the certificate, so this step must be coordinated carefully with the certificate appointment.

  6. 6

    No more than 10 days before the date of documentary checks at the EU point of entry

    Official veterinary certificate (HA 3151) issued

    This appointment must be timed with precision relative to the travel date, as the certificate expires exactly 10 days after signing and border officials will not accept a document outside that window.

  7. 7

    Within 10 days of certificate issue date

    Arrival and documentary checks at EU designated travellers' point of entry

    The pet's identity, microchip, vaccination record, and certificate will be checked at the designated entry point, after which the certificate becomes valid for onward movement within the Schengen area for up to four months or until the rabies vaccination expires, whichever comes first.

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 Switzerland 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.

Paws en route は、世界中でペットの輸送・引越しサービスを提供しています。IATA認定のスペシャリストが、犬・猫を含む150以上の目的地へのペット国際輸送を手配し、獣医コンプライアンス対応、通関手続き、ドアツードアのコンシェルジュデリバリーをグローバルに対応します。

IPATA: The Pet Shipping Experts