Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Northern Ireland
Your pet joins you in Belfast or beyond, and the months of careful preparation behind that moment are exactly what we are here to manage on your behalf.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Northern Ireland occupies a singular position in the world of international pet travel that surprises even well-researched owners. Although Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom following Brexit, it continues to apply European Union animal health rules for the purposes of pet imports, which means the regulatory framework governing your dog, cat, or ferret travelling from Canada is the EU commercial movement standard, not the separate Great Britain framework. The CFIA administers this corridor under its EU-commercial pathway, and the requirements are among the most rigorous in the world. Understanding this distinction from the outset is essential, because the preparation timeline, the health certificate format, and the specific treatments required all follow EU logic rather than UK logic, and confusing the two is one of the most common and most costly errors we see.
The foundation of the entire process is the microchip, and it must be in place before anything else happens. Canada and the EU share the ISO 11784 and 11785 standard for fifteen-digit microchips, and your pet's chip must be implanted and verified before the rabies vaccination is administered. This sequencing is non-negotiable. If a vaccination is given before a readable microchip is confirmed, that vaccination is rendered invalid for the purposes of EU entry, and the entire clock resets. Following the microchip, your veterinarian administers a primary rabies vaccination, and then the thirty-day waiting period begins before a rabies titre test, formally known as the Fluorescent Antibody Virus Neutralisation test or FAVNT, can be drawn. That blood sample travels to an EU-approved laboratory, and the result must demonstrate a neutralising antibody level of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre. Only after that result is confirmed, and only after a waiting period of three months from the date the blood was drawn, may your pet travel. This waiting period alone accounts for the majority of the minimum preparation window.
The tapeworm treatment requirement is the detail that most frequently surprises Canadian owners who have researched the EU requirements but not read them all the way to the end. Dogs travelling to Northern Ireland must be treated for Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm by a licensed veterinarian using an approved praziquantel-based product, and this treatment must be administered no fewer than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before the scheduled time of arrival in Northern Ireland. That is a five-day window calculated backwards from the moment your dog clears the border, not from departure, which means the timing must account for layovers, connection cities, and any schedule irregularities. The treatment must be recorded in a specific section of the official health certificate with the exact date, time, product name, and dosage. Cats and ferrets are not subject to the tapeworm requirement, but dogs without this documentation will face immediate problems at the port of entry.
The official health certificate is the document that binds all of these requirements together, and it must be issued and endorsed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian against the EU-approved format for commercial or in-transit commercial movements. This is a distinct certificate from the non-commercial pet travel document, and the distinction matters because commercial movements include not only animals being sold or rehomed but also, in many interpretations, animals travelling as cargo unaccompanied by their owner or animals moving through the EU en route to another destination. The certificate has a defined validity window, and travel must occur within that window. Because the health certificate is issued close to departure, all of the underlying requirements, the titre test, the waiting period, and the tapeworm treatment, must already be complete before the certificate appointment is booked. A single missing date or an incorrectly recorded product name can result in the certificate being rejected, and reissuing a certificate takes time that is often not available in the final days before travel.
What the regulations collectively signal is that the EU and Northern Ireland treat pet import not as a bureaucratic formality but as a genuine biosecurity measure, and the entire framework is designed to ensure that no animal with undetected rabies exposure enters the territory. The three-month post-titre waiting period exists precisely because it allows time to confirm that an animal with a borderline immune response does not pose a risk. For a Canadian owner, this means that the decision to move a pet to Northern Ireland must be made at least five to six months before the intended travel date, and ideally earlier to allow for the possibility that the titre test must be repeated. Animals that fail the titre test, meaning their antibody level falls below the 0.5 IU threshold, must be revaccinated and the entire post-vaccination waiting and testing sequence begins again. There is no shortcut and no appeal process at the border. The time to discover and resolve a compliance gap is in the months before departure, not at the check-in counter.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Northern Ireland 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 implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before the rabies vaccination is administered. If the chip is implanted after vaccination, that vaccination is invalidated for EU and Northern Ireland entry purposes. The microchip number must be recorded on all subsequent documentation.
Rabies Vaccination
A primary rabies vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian after the microchip is confirmed. The vaccination date is the starting point for the titre test eligibility window. Booster vaccinations must remain current throughout travel and the pet must not be out of vaccination coverage at any point.
Rabies Titre Test (FAVNT)Long lead time
A Fluorescent Antibody Virus Neutralisation Test must be performed at an EU-approved laboratory no sooner than 30 days after the primary rabies vaccination. The result must show a neutralising antibody level of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre. Travel to Northern Ireland may not occur until three months have elapsed from the date the successful blood sample was drawn.
Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs Only)Long lead time
Dogs must be treated for Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm by a veterinarian using an approved praziquantel product between 24 and 120 hours before the scheduled time of arrival in Northern Ireland. The exact date, time, product name, and dose must be recorded in the official health certificate. Cats and ferrets are exempt from this requirement.
Official EU Commercial Health CertificateLong lead time
An official health certificate in the EU-approved format for commercial movements must be issued and endorsed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian prior to departure. The certificate must reflect all completed requirements including microchip, vaccination, titre test result, and tapeworm treatment where applicable. Travel must occur within the certificate's defined validity window.
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
Day 1, before any vaccinations
Microchip Implant
The ISO-compliant 15-digit microchip must be implanted and verified by your veterinarian before the rabies vaccination is given, as any vaccination administered without a confirmed microchip on record is invalid for EU entry.
- 2
Day 1 or shortly after microchip confirmation
Primary Rabies Vaccination
Once the microchip is confirmed, the primary rabies vaccination is administered, and this date starts the mandatory 30-day minimum waiting period before the titre blood sample may be drawn.
- 3
No sooner than 30 days after rabies vaccination
Rabies Titre Test Blood Draw
The blood sample for the FAVNT titre test must be sent to an EU-approved laboratory and return a result of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre; if the result is below threshold, the vaccination and testing sequence must begin again.
- 4
Begins on the date of the successful blood draw
Three-Month Post-Titre Waiting Period
EU and Northern Ireland rules require that three full months elapse from the date of the qualifying blood sample before the animal may enter, and this waiting period cannot be shortened under any circumstances.
- 5
Close to departure, within the certificate validity window
Official Health Certificate Issuance
The CFIA-accredited veterinarian completes and endorses the official EU commercial health certificate after all underlying requirements are satisfied, recording the microchip, vaccination history, titre test result, and, for dogs, the planned tapeworm treatment details.
- 6
Between 24 and 120 hours before scheduled arrival in Northern Ireland
Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs Only)
A veterinarian must administer the approved praziquantel treatment within this precise five-day window calculated from the time of arrival, not departure, and the exact time of treatment must be recorded on the health certificate.
- 7
Within health certificate validity, after all steps are complete
Travel and Border Presentation
All original documentation, including the endorsed health certificate and any supporting laboratory results, must accompany the pet and be presented to authorities upon arrival in Northern Ireland.
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 every requirement in the EU commercial pathway is met correctly and documented in full, your pet does not face mandatory quarantine upon arrival in Northern Ireland. The entire framework, particularly the titre test and its three-month waiting period, is designed to serve as the pre-entry verification that makes quarantine unnecessary. An animal arriving with incomplete or incorrect documentation, however, may be detained or refused entry at the border.
The minimum preparation period is driven almost entirely by two mandatory waiting periods that cannot be shortened. First, the rabies vaccination must be given at least 30 days before the titre test blood draw. Second, three full months must elapse from the date of that successful blood draw before travel is permitted. Added together, and accounting for laboratory processing time and the health certificate appointment, a realistic minimum is five to six months, and we recommend beginning the process earlier to allow a margin if the titre test must be repeated.
If the FAVNT result falls below 0.5 IU per millilitre, your veterinarian will need to administer a booster vaccination and the post-vaccination waiting period before a new blood sample can be drawn. The three-month waiting period then begins again from the date of the new qualifying blood draw. This is why we emphasise beginning preparations well in advance, because a single failed titre test can add three to four months to the overall timeline.
Under the arrangements that followed Brexit, Northern Ireland continues to apply EU single market rules for goods, including live animals, meaning pet import requirements follow the EU framework rather than the separate rules that apply to England, Scotland, and Wales. This is a genuine source of confusion for Canadian owners, and it means the health certificate format, the titre test requirement, and the tapeworm treatment obligation all apply as they would for any EU destination, not as they would for Great Britain.
The tapeworm treatment for Echinococcus multilocularis applies to dogs only. Cats and ferrets are not subject to this requirement when travelling to Northern Ireland. Dogs, however, must receive the treatment from a veterinarian using an approved praziquantel product within the 24 to 120 hour window before arrival, and the treatment must be precisely documented on the official health certificate.
The EU commercial health certificate has a defined validity window from the date of issue, and travel must be completed within that period. If your travel date shifts beyond the validity window, a new certificate will need to be issued, which requires another appointment with a CFIA-accredited veterinarian. For dogs, this also means the tapeworm treatment timing must be recalculated against the new arrival time. We coordinate directly with your veterinarian to ensure the certificate issuance and treatment schedule align precisely with your confirmed itinerary.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Northern Ireland 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.
