Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Spain
Your pet crosses the Atlantic with every document in order, every regulation met, and every detail quietly handled before you ever reach the airport.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Spain is a member of the European Union, and that membership is the single most important fact shaping how your pet's journey from Canada is regulated. The EU operates one of the most rigorous pet import frameworks in the world, and Canada sits outside it as a third country, meaning your dog, cat, or ferret does not benefit from any simplified or reciprocal arrangement. Every animal entering Spain from Canada must satisfy a layered set of conditions established by EU regulation and administered, on the Canadian side, by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. Understanding that you are navigating two separate regulatory systems simultaneously, one that governs what Canada certifies before your pet departs and one that governs what Spain will accept upon arrival, is the foundational reality of this corridor. Neither system is forgiving of gaps, and the consequences of a missing step are not a fine or a delay at the desk but rather the potential refusal of your animal's entry into the country.
The CFIA's role in this process is to issue an official export health certificate that attests, on behalf of the Government of Canada, that your pet meets the EU's entry conditions. This certificate is not a form you fill out yourself, nor is it something your private veterinarian can sign and have accepted. It must be completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian, reviewed, and then officially endorsed by a CFIA veterinary inspector before your pet travels. The certificate is time-sensitive once issued, and Spain's border authorities will check not only that it exists but that it was issued within the validity window the EU prescribes. What this means in practice is that the certificate appointment, the CFIA endorsement, and your departure date must be coordinated with precision, because a certificate issued even a few days too early may be invalid by the time your pet lands in Madrid or Barcelona. This is one of the most common points where well-prepared owners encounter last-minute complications, and it is why working with a transport specialist who understands the exact window is so important.
Before any certificate can be issued, your pet must satisfy the underlying health conditions the EU requires, and the sequence in which those conditions are met matters enormously. The microchip comes first, always. Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785-compliant microchip before the rabies vaccination is administered, because the EU will only recognize a rabies vaccination if the microchip was already in place at the time the vaccine was given. If your pet was vaccinated before being chipped, or if the chip was implanted after the vaccine date recorded in the health record, the vaccination is considered invalid for the purposes of EU entry, and your pet will need to be re-vaccinated and the waiting period restarted from that point. This sequencing requirement catches a surprising number of pet owners who adopted animals from shelters or rescues where the vaccination history predates the microchip, and it is worth reviewing your pet's records carefully before assuming the history on file will be accepted.
The rabies vaccination itself must be current and must have been administered according to the manufacturer's schedule, meaning a booster given outside the recommended interval is treated as a primary vaccination, restarting any applicable waiting periods. For pets traveling from Canada to Spain, the EU does not currently require a rabies antibody titre test as a standard entry condition for animals coming from Canada, which distinguishes this corridor from routes originating in countries the EU classifies as higher risk. However, this should not be taken as an invitation to approach the vaccination record casually. Your pet's vaccine must be documented with the product name, batch number, date of administration, and the veterinarian's details, and any ambiguity in that record will be scrutinized at the point of CFIA certification and again at the EU border. Animals arriving without a clearly compliant vaccination history face the real possibility of being held in an EU-approved facility at the owner's expense while their status is resolved.
There is a broader truth about this corridor that no checklist can fully convey, which is that the regulations are administered by human officials working under time pressure at busy border points, and the margin for documentation ambiguity is effectively zero. Spain's border inspection posts are responsible for verifying that every animal entering the EU meets the full suite of requirements, and they do not have the authority to waive conditions even when an error is obviously unintentional. The practical implication is that the preparation for this journey should begin at least three to four months before your intended travel date, not because every step takes that long individually, but because the steps are sequential, appointments with CFIA-accredited veterinarians have lead times, and the CFIA endorsement process requires its own scheduling. Pets traveling to Spain deserve a preparation timeline that builds in contingency, and owners who approach the process with that patience will find that the journey itself, whether their animal travels in-cabin or as accompanied baggage in the hold, is a straightforward and well-managed experience.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Spain requires
Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.
MicrochipLong lead time
Your pet must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or ISO 11785-compliant microchip. Critically, the microchip must be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered, or the vaccination will not be recognized by EU authorities.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
A valid rabies vaccination administered after the microchip is in place is required. The vaccine record must include the product name, batch number, date of administration, and administering veterinarian's details. Boosters given outside the manufacturer's recommended interval are treated as primary vaccinations.
Official EU Export Health CertificateLong lead time
An official health certificate must be completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and endorsed by a CFIA veterinary inspector before departure. The certificate has a strict validity window and must be timed precisely relative to the travel date.
EU Border Inspection Post Check
Upon arrival in Spain, your pet will be inspected at a designated EU Border Inspection Post where officials verify the health certificate, microchip, and vaccination records. Entry can be refused if any document is incomplete, invalid, or outside the prescribed timeframes.
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
At least 3 to 4 months before departure
Microchip implant
The microchip must be ISO 11784 or 11785-compliant and must be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered for the vaccination to be recognized by EU border authorities.
- 2
After microchip implant, as soon as possible
Rabies vaccination
The vaccination must be administered with the microchip already in place, and all product details including batch number and administration date must be fully documented in the health record.
- 3
Immediately after vaccination, at least 8 to 10 weeks before departure
Veterinary record review
Have a CFIA-accredited veterinarian review your pet's complete health history to confirm that the microchip-vaccination sequence is compliant and that no records will be flagged at the CFIA endorsement stage.
- 4
Approximately 10 days before departure
CFIA-accredited veterinarian appointment
The official EU export health certificate must be completed by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian within the validity window prescribed by EU regulations, so this appointment must be timed precisely relative to your flight date.
- 5
Immediately following the veterinarian appointment, before departure
CFIA endorsement
The completed health certificate must be submitted to and officially endorsed by a CFIA veterinary inspector before your pet can travel, and scheduling this step requires advance coordination as appointment availability varies by region.
- 6
On travel day and upon landing in Spain
Departure and EU Border Inspection Post arrival check
Your pet will be presented to a designated EU Border Inspection Post upon arrival in Spain, where officials will verify the endorsed health certificate, scan the microchip, and confirm vaccination compliance before clearing your animal for entry.
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
Provided all entry requirements are fully met, including a compliant microchip, a valid rabies vaccination administered in the correct sequence, and an officially endorsed EU health certificate, your pet will not be subject to quarantine in Spain. The EU border inspection is a document and identity check, not a holding period. If documentation is found to be deficient, your pet could be held at an EU-approved facility at your expense while the issue is resolved, which underscores the importance of getting every step right before departure.
Canada is not currently classified by the EU as a high-risk rabies country, so a rabies antibody titre test is not a standard entry requirement for pets traveling directly from Canada to Spain. However, your pet's vaccination record must be impeccably documented, and any ambiguity about the timing or validity of the vaccination may prompt additional scrutiny at the border inspection post. If your travel route involves transit through a country with different EU classification, you should verify whether that transit introduces any additional testing requirements.
A preparation window of three to four months before your intended travel date is the minimum we recommend, and earlier is always better. The steps involved are sequential rather than parallel: the microchip must come before the vaccination, the vaccination history must be reviewed and confirmed compliant, and the health certificate must be completed and endorsed within a specific validity window before departure. Building in this time also allows for contingency if a CFIA-accredited veterinarian or endorsement appointment is not immediately available in your area.
This is one of the most common compliance problems on the Canada-to-EU corridor, and it has a straightforward but time-consuming solution. If the microchip postdates the vaccination, the EU will not recognize that vaccination as valid, and your pet will need to be re-vaccinated with the microchip already in place. Any applicable waiting periods then restart from the date of the new vaccination. This situation frequently arises with rescue animals or pets adopted from shelters, so reviewing the full documented history with a CFIA-accredited veterinarian early in the process is essential.
Whether your pet travels in-cabin or as accompanied baggage in the hold depends on the policies of your specific airline and your pet's weight and breed, not on EU or CFIA regulations. Regardless of how your pet travels on the aircraft, the same health certificate and documentation requirements apply in full. We recommend confirming your airline's pet policy well in advance, as space in-cabin is limited and booking procedures vary significantly between carriers.
A Border Inspection Post, or BIP, is a designated facility at EU points of entry where trained officials verify that animals and animal products entering the EU comply with all import conditions. When your pet arrives in Spain, you or the receiving agent will present the animal and the full documentation package, the official will scan the microchip to confirm it matches the certificate, review the vaccination record, and check that the health certificate is within its validity period. The process is typically efficient when documentation is in order, and your pet will be cleared to continue to its final destination once the inspection is complete.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Spain 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.
