Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Kyrgyzstan
Your pet makes this journey with you, and with the right preparation in place well ahead of your departure date, arrival in Bishkek can be straightforward and calm for everyone involved.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Kyrgyzstan is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union, which means that when the Canadian Food Inspection Agency certifies your pet for export, it is certifying them against a shared regional standard that also governs entry into Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia. This matters to you as a Canadian pet owner because the CFIA has negotiated a specific export health certificate and a defined set of requirements that align with EEU veterinary regulations, and those requirements are what drive the entire preparation timeline. The framework is more structured than many people expect, and understanding that you are working within a multilateral trade agreement rather than a bilateral pet-entry arrangement helps explain why the rules feel unusually detailed and why the CFIA takes the documentation so seriously.
The foundation of the entire process is the microchip, and it must be implanted before any other step in the compliance sequence begins. The CFIA requires that the microchip conform to ISO standard 11784 or 11785, the internationally recognized 15-digit format. Once the microchip is confirmed and recorded, the rabies vaccination can be administered, and this sequencing is not optional. A rabies vaccine given before a confirmed ISO-compliant microchip exists in the record is considered non-compliant, and that is one of the most common ways that well-meaning owners inadvertently reset their entire timeline. Your veterinarian must record the microchip number in the vaccination certificate at the time of vaccination, and that linkage is what the CFIA inspector will verify when endorsing your health certificate.
The health certificate itself is the document that ties everything together, and it is issued by an accredited veterinarian and then endorsed by a CFIA veterinarian before departure. The certificate must be completed on the official EEU export form and must accurately reflect the animal's microchip number, vaccination history, and clinical examination findings. The clinical examination that underpins the certificate must be conducted within a specific window before travel, and owners who book the vet appointment too early, or who allow travel dates to shift after the certificate is already prepared, can find themselves needing to start the health certificate process again. The CFIA endorsement step requires an appointment with a regional CFIA office, and those appointments are not always available on short notice, which is why we advise building a comfortable buffer between your vet visit and your intended travel date.
One of the aspects of this corridor that catches people off guard is the broader scope of the EEU page itself. The CFIA groups Kyrgyzstan with Russia, Belarus, Armenia, and Kazakhstan under a single regulatory umbrella, and the requirements cover not only dogs and cats but also rabbits and fur-bearing animals. For the typical Canadian family relocating to Bishkek with a dog or a cat, the practical implication is that the documentation and inspection standards are calibrated for a region with significant commercial animal movement, and the authorities on the receiving end are accustomed to reviewing detailed, formally endorsed paperwork. Arriving with anything less than a fully endorsed, complete CFIA health certificate is a serious risk, and the consequences of a documentation deficiency at a Central Asian border point can range from delays to refusal of entry for your animal.
Our strong advice to anyone planning this journey is to treat the preparation timeline as non-negotiable and to begin working backward from your intended travel date the moment your relocation becomes confirmed. Between scheduling the microchip verification, ensuring the rabies vaccination is on record and linked correctly, arranging the clinical examination within the required window, obtaining the accredited vet's signature, securing a CFIA endorsement appointment, and confirming airline arrangements for a live animal on what is likely a multi-leg international routing, there is no slack in the schedule for last-minute complications. Paws en route exists precisely to manage this sequence on your behalf, coordinating with your local veterinarian, the CFIA, and your carrier so that your pet's paperwork arrives at the Kyrgyz border in exactly the condition the authorities expect to see.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Kyrgyzstan 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 dog or cat must be implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before any other compliance step begins. The microchip number must be recorded in all subsequent vaccination and health documentation. This step anchors the entire preparation sequence.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
A valid rabies vaccination must be administered after the ISO-compliant microchip is confirmed and on record. The microchip number must be recorded on the vaccination certificate at the time of administration to establish a compliant, traceable link between the animal and the vaccine record. Vaccination timing relative to travel must fall within the validity window specified on the CFIA health certificate.
CFIA-Endorsed Export Health CertificateLong lead time
An accredited Canadian veterinarian must complete the official EEU export health certificate following a clinical examination of the animal within the prescribed pre-departure window. The completed certificate must then be endorsed by a CFIA veterinarian before travel. A certificate that is not CFIA-endorsed is not valid for entry into Kyrgyzstan.
Pre-Travel Clinical ExaminationLong lead time
The accredited veterinarian must conduct a clinical examination of the animal and declare it free of signs of infectious and parasitic disease at the time of certificate completion. This examination must occur within the validity window required by the EEU health certificate, meaning the timing of the vet appointment must be carefully aligned with the travel date. Rescheduling a flight after the certificate is prepared may invalidate the examination 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 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
ISO Microchip Implant
Confirm the chip reads as a 15-digit ISO 11784 or 11785 number and have your veterinarian record it in the patient file before scheduling the rabies vaccination.
- 2
After microchip is confirmed on record
Rabies Vaccination
The vaccination certificate must reference the microchip number at the time of administration; a vaccine administered before the microchip is documented creates a non-compliant record.
- 3
Ongoing, well before certificate preparation
Gather Supporting Veterinary Records
Compile the full vaccination history, microchip documentation, and any previous health certificates so your accredited veterinarian has everything needed to complete the EEU export form accurately.
- 4
At least 2 to 3 weeks before travel
CFIA Endorsement Appointment Booked
CFIA regional office appointments for certificate endorsement are not always available on short notice, and the endorsement cannot be skipped or substituted with an accredited vet signature alone.
- 5
Within the validity window before travel, as close to departure as the CFIA certificate requires
Pre-Travel Clinical Examination and Health Certificate Preparation
Your accredited veterinarian completes the official EEU export health certificate based on the clinical examination, and the date of that examination must fall within the window the receiving country accepts.
- 6
After the accredited vet signs the certificate and before travel
CFIA Endorsement
The CFIA veterinarian reviews and endorses the completed certificate, making it the legally recognized export document for entry into the Eurasian Economic Union.
- 7
As early as possible, ideally before the health certificate process begins
Airline Live Animal Booking Confirmed
Routes from Canada to Kyrgyzstan typically involve at least one connection, and each carrier has its own live animal policies, so confirming the animal's booking early prevents a situation where documentation is complete but no carrier space is available.
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
The CFIA's export framework for the Eurasian Economic Union focuses on ensuring the animal is certified as healthy and compliant before departure rather than mandating a post-arrival quarantine. Provided the CFIA-endorsed health certificate is complete and the animal's vaccination and microchip records are in order, quarantine on arrival is not a standard requirement for pet dogs and cats entering Kyrgyzstan. We always recommend confirming current entry conditions with the receiving country's veterinary authority or your relocation contact in Bishkek before travel, as conditions can change.
For most healthy adult dogs and cats that are already microchipped and have a current rabies vaccination on file, the active preparation window is driven by the health certificate's validity period and the lead time needed to secure a CFIA endorsement appointment. In practice, we recommend beginning the formal coordination process at least four to six weeks before your intended travel date to allow for any scheduling variability at the CFIA office. If your pet is not yet microchipped or the rabies vaccine needs to be administered from scratch, add the time needed for that vaccination to become valid before you begin counting toward the certificate window.
The clinical examination underpinning the EEU export health certificate must fall within a specific number of days before the animal actually travels, so a significant shift in your departure date can move the examination date outside the acceptable window and require the process to be repeated. This is one of the most consequential timing risks on this route, and it is why we encourage clients to confirm travel dates as firmly as possible before investing in the certificate preparation. If a date change becomes unavoidable, contact us immediately so we can assess whether the existing certificate remains valid or whether a new veterinary appointment and CFIA endorsement are required.
The CFIA's EEU export framework for dogs and cats does not list a rabies antibody titre test as a standard requirement for this corridor in the way that certain other destinations, such as Japan or Australia, mandate it. The emphasis for Kyrgyzstan entry is on a valid, post-microchip rabies vaccination that is current and properly documented on the CFIA-endorsed health certificate. If you have any reason to believe your individual situation might warrant additional documentation, for example if your pet has a complex vaccination history or a gap in coverage, we can review the records with your veterinarian before the certificate process begins.
The CFIA's export guidance for the Eurasian Economic Union does not specify breed-based restrictions within the health certificate framework for companion dogs travelling as pets. However, individual airlines operating on routes connecting Canada to Kyrgyzstan may have their own policies regarding specific breeds, particularly brachycephalic or short-nosed breeds, and some transit countries may have their own import restrictions. We review the full routing, including any transit points, as part of our planning process to identify any carrier or transit-country breed considerations before your booking is confirmed.
All five countries are members of the Eurasian Economic Union and operate under a shared customs territory with harmonized veterinary import standards, which means that a single set of export health certificate requirements and a single CFIA-approved certificate form covers the entire bloc. For you as a pet owner, this is actually an advantage: the requirements are well-established, the CFIA has a clear and tested process for endorsing these certificates, and veterinarians with experience preparing animals for any EEU destination can apply that knowledge directly to a Kyrgyzstan-bound journey. It also means that if your travel routing requires a transit stop in another EEU country, the underlying documentation framework is consistent across the bloc.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Kyrgyzstan 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.
