Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog, Cat, or Ferret from Canada to EU Countries
Relocating to Europe with a pet is entirely achievable when the paperwork sequence is understood from the start and each deadline is treated with the same care as your own travel documents.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
The European Union operates one of the most structured and closely enforced pet import frameworks in the world, and Canada sits in a position that is both privileged and demanding within that system. Because the CFIA source material specifically addresses commercial and in-transit commercial movements, it is worth understanding at the outset that the EU draws a firm distinction between a pet travelling as a companion alongside its owner and an animal moving as a commercial shipment. The classification of your pet's journey determines which documentation pathway applies, which government authorities must be involved, and ultimately what happens when your animal arrives at the EU border inspection post. For families relocating permanently, for breeders sending animals to new homes, and for anyone whose pet is travelling on a different flight than they are, the commercial framework is likely the governing one, and it carries a more stringent set of requirements than the non-commercial pathway.
The foundational requirement for entry into any EU member state is an ISO-standard microchip implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered. This sequencing is not a formality, it is an enforcement point. EU border authorities verify that the microchip number recorded at the time of vaccination matches the chip currently in the animal. If the chip was implanted after the vaccination, the vaccination is legally considered invalid, the entire timeline resets, and the animal cannot enter. This is the single most common and most heartbreaking error that occurs on this route. The chip must comply with ISO standard 11784 or 11785, and the number must appear on every subsequent document, from the vaccination record to the health certificate to any laboratory results. Consistency of that number across all paperwork is something EU inspectors check methodically, and even a transcription error can trigger a hold at the border.
Rabies vaccination requirements for the EU are well established, but the specific rules around timing deserve careful attention. A primary vaccination is valid for entry, but only if the animal is old enough at the time of vaccination, only if it is administered by an accredited veterinarian after the microchip is confirmed, and only if the animal is travelling within the valid window of that vaccination as defined by the manufacturer and the issuing veterinarian. For ongoing travel and re-entry, booster vaccinations must be kept current without lapse, because a lapse in coverage requires the animal to be treated as unvaccinated and the waiting period begins again. Some EU member states also have their own additional disease controls layered on top of the union-wide baseline, particularly around tapeworm treatment for dogs entering Finland, Ireland, Malta, Norway, and the United Kingdom, which while no longer in the EU still shares certain regulatory expectations. Owners should verify the specific requirements of their destination country and any transit country, because the most restrictive rule along the entire route is the one that governs.
The official health certificate is the document that ties every other requirement together, and it is also the document with the shortest practical validity window. For commercial movements into the EU, the health certificate must be issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian and then endorsed by CFIA itself, which adds processing time that many owners underestimate. The certificate is only valid for a defined period from the date of the clinical examination, which means the examination cannot happen too early or the certificate will expire before the animal arrives. Planning the examination date requires working backwards from the travel date with precision, accounting for CFIA endorsement time, airline booking windows, and any transit layovers. A certificate that expires in transit is treated as no certificate at all. This is why the health certificate, though it is completed last in the preparation sequence, actually governs the entire schedule and should be the fixed point around which everything else is arranged.
For pet owners approaching this route for the first time, the most important reframe is this: the EU is not primarily concerned with making entry difficult, it is concerned with disease prevention, particularly rabies, and with ensuring traceability of animals entering its territory. Every requirement on this route exists in service of those two goals. Understanding that logic makes the regulations feel less arbitrary and more navigable. It also clarifies where there is no flexibility. The microchip-before-vaccination sequence, the health certificate endorsement, and the valid rabies coverage at the time of travel are not areas where border authorities exercise discretion. They are binary checkpoints. A thorough preparation process, begun at least four to six months before the intended travel date, is the only reliable way to ensure that your animal arrives on the day you planned, in the condition you expect, without administrative delay at the point of entry.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Eu 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 11785 compliant microchip before the rabies vaccination is administered. The microchip number must appear consistently on all subsequent documents including the vaccination record and the official health certificate.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
Rabies vaccination must be administered by an accredited veterinarian after microchip implantation is confirmed. The vaccination must remain valid through the date of arrival, and any lapse in booster coverage requires restarting the waiting period as if the animal were unvaccinated.
Official Health CertificateLong lead time
A CFIA-accredited veterinarian must complete the official health certificate, which must then be endorsed by CFIA before travel. The certificate is valid only for a limited window from the date of clinical examination, and the examination must be timed precisely to remain valid through arrival.
Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs, Select Countries)
Dogs entering Finland, Ireland, Malta, Norway, and certain other destinations require a licensed veterinarian to administer and document an approved tapeworm treatment within a specific window before arrival. This treatment must be recorded in the official health documentation.
Commercial Movement Classification
Any movement where the animal travels separately from its owner, is transferred to a new owner, or is part of a sale or breeding arrangement is classified as a commercial movement and is subject to the full EU commercial import framework, including border inspection post checks upon arrival.
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 if chip and vaccination are not done simultaneously, and always before the rabies vaccination under any circumstances
ISO Microchip Implantation
The microchip must be implanted and confirmed by the veterinarian before the rabies vaccination is recorded, as the EU considers any vaccination administered before confirmed microchip implantation to be legally invalid.
- 2
After microchip confirmation, as early as the animal's eligible age permits
Rabies Vaccination
The vaccination date and microchip number are recorded together and form the evidentiary foundation for all subsequent documents, so accuracy at this step is critical.
- 3
Per manufacturer schedule, before any lapse in coverage occurs
Rabies Booster (if applicable)
If the primary vaccination expires before travel, a booster must be administered and the animal must not have any gap in coverage, as a lapsed vaccination resets the animal to unvaccinated status under EU rules.
- 4
Within the window specified by the destination country, typically 1 to 5 days before arrival
Tapeworm Treatment (dogs to applicable countries)
The treatment must be administered by a licensed veterinarian and documented with the product name, dose, and date, as border authorities in Finland, Ireland, Malta, and similar destinations verify this record.
- 5
Close enough to travel that the certificate remains valid on arrival, accounting for CFIA endorsement processing time
Veterinary Clinical Examination and Health Certificate Preparation
The examination window is short and non-negotiable, so the examination date must be calculated backwards from the travel date after confirming CFIA endorsement turnaround time with your accredited veterinarian.
- 6
Immediately after the accredited veterinarian completes the certificate, allowing sufficient time before travel
CFIA Endorsement of Health Certificate
CFIA endorsement is a separate administrative step that adds time to the process and cannot be bypassed, so submitting the certificate for endorsement as early as the examination window allows is essential.
- 7
On travel day, with all original documents presented
Arrival at EU Border Inspection Post
Commercial movements into the EU must enter through a designated border inspection post where an official veterinarian will verify the microchip, the health certificate, vaccination records, and any applicable treatment documentation before the animal is released.
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
Canada is recognized as a low-risk country for rabies under EU regulations, and pets that arrive with a compliant microchip, valid rabies vaccination, and properly endorsed health certificate are not subject to mandatory quarantine in most EU member states. However, if any document is missing, expired, or inconsistent, the animal may be held at the border inspection post while the issue is investigated, which can result in detention or return at the owner's expense.
Beginning the process at least four to six months before your intended travel date is a reasonable minimum, and some situations require even more lead time. The rabies vaccination waiting period, the health certificate examination window, and CFIA endorsement processing all have fixed durations that cannot be compressed, so any delay early in the sequence has cascading effects on the entire schedule.
Yes, this is a meaningful distinction under EU rules. When an animal travels separately from its owner, the EU typically classifies the movement as commercial rather than non-commercial, and the commercial framework applies a more rigorous documentation and inspection process. You should confirm the classification of your pet's specific movement before selecting a documentation pathway, as an animal prepared under the non-commercial rules but arriving under commercial conditions may be refused entry.
Under EU regulations, a rabies vaccination that was administered before the microchip was confirmed in the animal is treated as invalid. This means the vaccination record cannot be used as the basis for entry, the animal is considered unvaccinated for import purposes, and the entire sequence, including a new vaccination, must be restarted from the microchip implantation date forward. There is no exception or appeal process for this at the border.
Several EU and European countries layer additional national requirements on top of the baseline union-wide rules. Finland, Ireland, and Malta, among others, require documented tapeworm treatment for dogs within a specific window before arrival. It is essential to verify the rules of your specific destination country, as well as any transit country, because the most stringent requirement encountered anywhere along the route is the one your preparation must satisfy.
The health certificate is valid for a limited period calculated from the date of the clinical examination conducted by the CFIA-accredited veterinarian. Because CFIA endorsement adds time between the examination and the moment the document is in hand, the examination must be scheduled precisely so that the certificate does not expire before the animal arrives. Confirming the exact validity window with your veterinarian and CFIA contact before booking the examination date is an important step that is easy to overlook.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Eu 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.
