Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog, Cat, or Ferret from Canada to Finland
Finland welcomes your pet when the paperwork is right, and we make certain every document, timing window, and veterinary step is handled with the care your animal deserves.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Finland is a member of the European Union, which means that bringing your dog, cat, or ferret from Canada into the country falls under the EU's unified animal import framework rather than any Finland-specific bilateral agreement. This is an important distinction for Canadian pet owners to understand from the outset. The EU treats all incoming pets from third countries through a single, harmonized lens, and Canada is classified as a listed third country, meaning our animals are recognized as originating from a jurisdiction with an acceptable animal health status. That recognition is genuinely good news, but it does not simplify the process as much as one might hope. The EU's standards are detailed, sequentially ordered, and carry real consequences if any single step is missed or performed out of order.
The regulatory framework that governs this corridor is administered on the Canadian side by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which issues the official health certificate required for EU entry. This certificate, often referred to by its EU designation, must be completed and signed by an accredited veterinarian and then endorsed by the CFIA before your pet departs. The certificate is not a formality. It is the primary document that Finnish border authorities will examine upon arrival, and it must confirm that every underlying requirement, from microchipping to vaccination to any applicable testing, has been fulfilled in the correct sequence and within the prescribed timeframes. One of the most common points of confusion for clients is the validity window on this certificate. It must be issued no more than ten days before your pet enters the EU, which means the timing of your pre-travel veterinary appointment must be coordinated carefully around your actual departure date.
The microchip is the foundation upon which every other requirement rests, and this sequencing is enforced strictly. Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before the rabies vaccination is administered. If the vaccination was given before the chip was implanted, or if the chip number recorded on the vaccination certificate does not match the chip read at the border, the vaccination is considered void for the purposes of EU entry. The animal would then need to be revaccinated and, depending on the destination country's rules, potentially wait out an additional compliance period before travel is permitted. This is not a bureaucratic technicality. It is one of the most frequent reasons that otherwise well-prepared pets are delayed or turned away at EU ports of entry, and it is entirely avoidable with proper planning.
The question of whether a rabies antibody titre test is required depends on the specific circumstances of your pet's vaccination history and, in some cases, on any countries through which the animal may transit. For pets travelling directly from Canada to Finland with a current and properly documented rabies vaccination, the titre test is not always mandatory. However, if there is any gap in the vaccination record, if your pet has previously been in a non-listed country, or if your itinerary involves a transit point that triggers additional requirements, the titre test becomes relevant and its timeline is significant. The test must be performed at an EU-approved laboratory, a result of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre is required, and travel cannot take place until at least three months after the date of the blood draw that yielded a satisfactory result. That three-month waiting period, layered on top of the time required to establish a valid vaccination before the blood draw can even occur, means that a pet starting from scratch could be looking at a preparation window of five to six months or more.
What all of this means in practice is that the Canada-to-Finland corridor rewards early planning in a way that very few travel preparations do. A client who contacts us six months before their intended departure date has genuine flexibility. A client who contacts us six weeks before their flight is already working within a compressed timeline that may require difficult decisions about travel dates or interim arrangements for their pet. Our role as your concierge is to map the exact sequence of steps required for your specific animal, coordinate between your veterinarian and the CFIA, ensure the health certificate appointment falls within the ten-day validity window, and confirm that Finnish customs authorities will see a complete and coherent document package when your pet arrives. Finland's border process is professional and efficient, and animals arriving with correct paperwork clear without incident. The entire experience, for your pet and for you, is determined almost entirely by the quality of the preparation that happens in the months before you ever arrive at the airport.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Finland 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 implanted with an ISO 11784 or ISO 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before the rabies vaccination is administered. If the chip was implanted after the vaccination, the vaccination record is considered invalid for EU entry purposes and the animal must be revaccinated.
Rabies Vaccination
A valid rabies vaccination administered by a licensed veterinarian after microchip implantation is required. The vaccine must be current at the time of travel, and if it is a first-ever vaccination, the pet cannot travel until the vaccination is considered valid per the manufacturer's protocol.
CFIA-Endorsed EU Health CertificateLong lead time
An official health certificate completed by an accredited veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA is required for EU entry. This certificate must be issued no more than ten days before the pet enters the European Union, including Finland.
Rabies Antibody Titre Test (if applicable)Long lead time
If your pet's vaccination history is incomplete, has lapsed, or if the animal has previously resided in or transited through a non-EU-listed country, a rabies neutralising antibody titre test conducted at an EU-approved laboratory is required. Travel is not permitted until at least three months after the date of the blood draw that produced a satisfactory result of 0.5 IU per millilitre or greater.
Tapeworm Treatment for Dogs (Echinococcus)Long lead time
Finland, along with several other EU member states, requires that dogs be treated against Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm by a veterinarian using an approved praziquantel-based product. Treatment must be administered no less than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before the scheduled time of entry into Finland.
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
At least 21 days before rabies vaccination, and as early as possible in the preparation process
Microchip implantation
The microchip must be implanted and recorded before the rabies vaccination is given; any reversal of this order invalidates the vaccination for EU entry purposes.
- 2
After microchip implantation; if a titre test is required, at least 30 days before the blood draw
Rabies vaccination
The vaccination must be documented with the microchip number confirmed at the time of administration, and must remain current through the date of entry into Finland.
- 3
At least three months before intended travel date; blood draw at an EU-approved laboratory
Rabies antibody titre test (if applicable)
The three-month waiting period begins on the date of the blood draw, not the date results are received, making early scheduling essential.
- 4
No more than 10 days before the pet enters Finland
CFIA-endorsed EU health certificate
The certificate must be signed by an accredited veterinarian and then endorsed by the CFIA within this tight window, so the veterinary appointment and CFIA submission must be coordinated carefully around the flight date.
- 5
No less than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before scheduled entry into Finland
Tapeworm treatment for dogs
This treatment must be administered by a licensed veterinarian and recorded in the pet's documentation; the timing window is precise and cannot be estimated loosely.
- 6
At the designated EU border inspection post upon arrival
Arrival and document inspection in Finland
Finnish customs authorities will verify the microchip, health certificate, vaccination records, and tapeworm treatment entry; pets arriving with complete and correctly ordered documentation clear without 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
No quarantine is required for dogs, cats, and ferrets entering Finland from Canada, provided all documentation is complete and every requirement has been met in the correct sequence. Finland follows the EU's third-country import rules, which allow for immediate clearance at the border inspection post when the health certificate, microchip, and vaccination records are in order. If documentation is found to be incomplete or non-compliant at the point of entry, the animal may be held at the border post while the issue is reviewed, which is a situation we work very carefully to prevent.
For most pets with an established vaccination history, a preparation window of approximately twelve weeks is the practical minimum, though we recommend beginning at least six months before your intended travel date whenever possible. If a rabies antibody titre test is required, the three-month waiting period that follows a satisfactory blood draw means the process cannot be compressed below roughly five months regardless of how quickly other steps are completed. Starting early gives you genuine flexibility and eliminates the risk of needing to postpone your travel date because a document window was missed.
Unfortunately, yes. The EU requires that the microchip be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered, and if the order was reversed, that vaccination cannot be used to satisfy the entry requirement. Your dog will need to be revaccinated after the chip is confirmed to be functioning correctly, and in some cases a titre test and its associated waiting period may then be required before travel is permitted. We encounter this situation with some regularity, and it is one of the reasons we encourage clients to reach out to us before visiting the veterinarian rather than after.
The health certificate must be issued no more than ten days before your pet enters the European Union, which in practice means the veterinary appointment that produces the certificate must be scheduled very close to your departure date. The CFIA endorsement process adds additional time that must be factored in, so the appointment typically needs to occur within the first few days of that ten-day window. We manage this scheduling on behalf of our clients to ensure the certificate remains valid through the date of actual entry, accounting for any potential flight delays.
Yes. Finland is one of a small number of EU member states that maintains an approved national control programme for Echinococcus multilocularis, the fox tapeworm, and as a result all dogs entering the country must be treated with an approved praziquantel-based product by a veterinarian. The treatment must be given no less than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before the scheduled time of arrival in Finland, and it must be recorded in your dog's documentation. This requirement does not apply to cats or ferrets.
Finland does not maintain a federal list of prohibited breeds at the EU level, but it is important to be aware that individual airlines operating the Canada-to-Finland route may carry their own restrictions on certain breeds, particularly brachycephalic or flat-faced dogs and cats. These airline policies are separate from Finnish government requirements and can affect whether your pet travels in cabin, as checked baggage, or as air cargo. We review the specific policies of every carrier on your route as part of our transport planning to ensure there are no surprises at check-in.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Finland 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.
