Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Portugal
Portugal welcomes pets who arrive with the right paperwork in the right order, and our job is to make sure yours do.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Moving a dog, cat, or ferret from Canada to Portugal means entering the European Union's animal health system, one of the most rigorous and thoroughly documented regulatory frameworks for pet travel anywhere in the world. Portugal, as a full EU member state, applies the same entry standards as every other country in the bloc, which means your pet's admissibility is governed not by Lisbon alone but by a harmonised set of rules that the EU enforces at its external borders with considerable seriousness. What this means in practice is that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, which issues the export health certificate your pet must carry, must certify that your animal meets every EU requirement before departure. There is no appeals process at the border, no sympathetic customs officer who will wave your pet through on good faith, and no opportunity to complete a missing step once you have landed. The preparation happens entirely on the Canadian side, and it happens in a specific sequence that cannot be rearranged.
The foundation of the entire process is the microchip. Before any other step can be taken, your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785-compliant 15-digit microchip, and the EU is explicit that the microchip must have been implanted before the rabies vaccination was administered. This sequencing requirement is the single most common failure point we see, because many pets who are already vaccinated against rabies were chipped after the fact, or the documentation does not clearly establish the order of events. If the veterinary records cannot confirm that the chip preceded the vaccine, the EU will treat the vaccination as invalid from their perspective, and the entire rabies protection timeline resets from the date of re-vaccination. This is not a technicality that can be argued away at the border, and it is the reason we review vaccination histories so carefully before any planning begins.
The rabies vaccination itself must be current, administered by a licensed veterinarian, and must have been given after the microchip was in place. For most pets travelling to Portugal who do not require a rabies antibody titre test, a valid in-date rabies vaccination is sufficient, but the certificate must record the vaccine product name, the batch number, the date of administration, and the date of expiry. Portugal, like all EU destinations, sits within the framework of countries that Canada can export to under the commercial movement rules, and the CFIA-issued health certificate captures all of this information in a format that EU border inspection posts are trained to read and verify. The health certificate itself is valid for a very short window: it must be issued within ten days of your pet's arrival in the EU, which means the appointment with a CFIA-accredited veterinarian must be timed with precision relative to your departure date, not simply completed as early as convenient.
The ten-day certificate validity window is where well-intentioned preparation most often unravels for people who are managing this independently. If your travel dates shift, if a flight is rescheduled, or if the certificate is issued slightly too early, you may find yourself with a document that was valid when it was signed but has expired by the time your pet reaches the EU border inspection post. The certificate cannot be amended after issuance; it must be reissued, which requires a new veterinary appointment and new CFIA endorsement. This is also why we counsel clients against booking the veterinary appointment and the flight entirely independently of one another. The timing coordination between the vet clinic, the CFIA regional office, the airline, and the destination country's entry point is a logistical sequence, not a set of parallel tasks, and treating it as such is what keeps the process from falling apart in the final week before travel.
One practical reality of the Canada-to-Portugal corridor that is worth naming directly is that Portugal does not currently impose a quarantine requirement on dogs, cats, and ferrets arriving from Canada, provided all documentation is in order and the animal is fit for travel. This is genuinely good news, and it reflects Canada's strong animal health standing in the eyes of the EU. However, the absence of quarantine makes the documentation requirements more, not less, important: because there is no holding period during which a discrepancy might be resolved, the border inspection post will either admit your pet immediately or flag a problem that results in your animal being held at the port of entry, potentially returned to Canada at your expense, or in the most serious cases, subjected to measures you would not want to contemplate. The path to a calm, uneventful arrival in Lisbon or Porto is a file that is complete, correctly sequenced, and presented by an animal that is visibly healthy and travel-ready.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Portugal requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
ISO-Compliant MicrochipLong lead time
Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or ISO 11785-compliant 15-digit microchip. Critically, the microchip must be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered; if the order cannot be confirmed in the veterinary record, the EU considers the vaccination invalid and the timeline resets.
Rabies Vaccination
A current rabies vaccination administered by a licensed veterinarian after microchip implantation is required. The vaccine record must include the product name, batch number, date of administration, and expiry date. The vaccination must be valid on the date of arrival in Portugal.
CFIA-Endorsed EU Health CertificateLong lead time
A health certificate in the EU-prescribed format must be issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by the CFIA. The certificate is valid for a maximum of ten days from the date of issue to the date of arrival in the EU, making precise timing essential.
Clinical Examination and Fitness for Travel
The issuing veterinarian must confirm through a clinical examination that the animal is free from signs of infectious or contagious disease and is fit for the intended journey. This examination forms part of the health certificate and must occur within the ten-day issuance window.
Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs Only)Long lead time
Dogs entering certain EU countries must be treated for Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm by a veterinarian between 24 and 120 hours before arrival. Portugal currently falls within the EU's non-exempt zone, so this treatment and its timing must be recorded in the health certificate by the administering 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 30 days ahead
Nothing is left to chance. Here is how we stage your pet's documentation, step by step.
- 1
Before any other step, at least 21 days before rabies vaccination if the pet is unvaccinated
Microchip Implantation
The microchip must be in place and its number recorded in the veterinary record before the rabies vaccine is administered, as the EU treats any vaccination given beforehand as invalid.
- 2
After microchip implantation; must be valid on the date of EU arrival
Rabies Vaccination
Ensure the vaccine record includes the product name, batch number, administration date, and expiry date, as all four fields are required on the CFIA health certificate.
- 3
No more than 10 days before the scheduled date of arrival in Portugal
Pre-Travel Veterinary Appointment
This is the appointment at which the CFIA-accredited veterinarian conducts the clinical examination, confirms all requirements are met, and prepares the EU health certificate for CFIA endorsement.
- 4
Between 24 and 120 hours before arrival in Portugal
Tapeworm Treatment for Dogs
The treating veterinarian must record the product name, dose, and exact time of administration in the health certificate, and the timing window is strictly enforced at the EU border inspection post.
- 5
After veterinary examination, before departure; allow 1-3 business days
CFIA Endorsement of Health Certificate
The completed health certificate must be submitted to the regional CFIA office for official endorsement, and processing times vary by office, so this step should not be left to the day before travel.
- 6
Confirmed alongside veterinary appointment scheduling
Airline Booking and Crate Compliance Confirmation
Airline pet policies, crate dimension requirements, and breed-specific restrictions must be confirmed with the carrier before the health certificate is issued, as the certificate references the travel arrangement.
- 7
On the day of arrival in Portugal
Arrival at EU Border Inspection Post
Pets entering the EU must be presented at a designated Border Inspection Post with all original documentation; Portuguese customs authorities will verify the microchip against the certificate before the animal is released to the owner.
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
Portugal does not impose a quarantine period on dogs, cats, or ferrets arriving from Canada, provided all documentation is complete and correctly sequenced. The absence of quarantine is contingent on your pet presenting with a valid CFIA-endorsed health certificate, a readable microchip, and a current rabies vaccination. If any document is missing or out of sequence, the animal may be held at the border inspection post while the matter is reviewed, which is a situation best avoided entirely through careful preparation.
For a pet that is already microchipped and has a current, valid rabies vaccination, the practical preparation window is approximately three to four weeks before departure. The most time-sensitive element is the health certificate, which must be issued within ten days of your arrival date in Portugal, so the final veterinary appointment needs to be scheduled with the travel date firmly confirmed. For pets that are not yet microchipped or vaccinated, the preparation period is longer, as you need to allow the vaccination to be administered after the chip is in place and confirmed by the vet.
If your veterinary records clearly show that the rabies vaccination was given before the microchip was implanted, the EU will not accept that vaccination as valid for entry purposes. In this situation, the pet will need to be re-vaccinated after the microchip is confirmed in place, and the new vaccination date becomes the starting point for the compliance timeline. This is one of the most common and most avoidable complications we encounter, and it is why we recommend reviewing your pet's full vaccination and implantation history before making any travel commitments.
The EU health certificate issued by your CFIA-accredited veterinarian is valid for a maximum of ten days from the date it is issued to the date your pet arrives in Portugal. This window is calculated from issuance to arrival, not from issuance to departure, so layovers and transit time must be factored into the scheduling. If your travel dates change after the certificate has been issued and the new arrival date falls outside the ten-day window, a new certificate will need to be issued.
Yes. Dogs travelling to Portugal must receive a treatment against Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm administered by a licensed veterinarian within a window of 24 to 120 hours before their scheduled arrival time in Portugal. The product used, the dosage, and the precise date and time of administration must be recorded on the health certificate. This step is particularly logistically sensitive because it must happen after the health certificate is otherwise complete but within the strict timing window, so it requires close coordination between your veterinarian and your travel schedule.
Portugal itself does not maintain a federal list of banned breeds under EU entry regulations, but individual airlines impose their own restrictions on brachycephalic breeds such as French Bulldogs, English Bulldogs, and Persian cats, particularly for cargo or checked-baggage travel. Portuguese domestic legislation may also apply once your pet is in the country, so if you own a breed that is subject to restriction in some EU jurisdictions, it is worth confirming the current rules with the Portuguese authorities before your trip. We always recommend verifying breed-specific policies with your chosen airline at the time of booking, as these policies can change independently of the government regulations.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Portugal 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.
