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Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Malaysia

Your pet arrives healthy, documented, and ready to settle into your new life in Malaysia — because every requirement was handled before you ever reached the airport.

Our perspective

Paws en route Notes

Moving a dog or cat from Canada to Malaysia is a carefully regulated process governed by a bilateral health certification framework that sits between Canadian federal authority — specifically the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the CFIA — and Malaysia's own border inspection body, the Malaysian Quarantine and Inspection Services Department, known as MAQIS. The official document at the centre of this journey is CFIA form HA2849, a two-page export certificate that functions simultaneously as a veterinary health declaration, a vaccination record, and a government-to-government attestation that your animal is free from infectious or contagious disease. What this means in practice is that two veterinarians must sign off on your pet: a licensed private veterinarian who examines the animal and completes the clinical sections, and an official CFIA veterinarian who endorses the certificate with a government stamp. Neither signature alone is sufficient, and Malaysian authorities at the point of entry will verify both.

The health examination itself carries a strict and unforgiving timing window that catches many owners off guard. The CFIA certificate requires the licensed veterinarian to declare that the animal was examined and found healthy and free from clinical signs of infectious or contagious disease within seven days immediately prior to export. This is not a soft guideline — it is the window within which the certificate is considered valid for the purpose of entry into Malaysia. If your flight is delayed, rescheduled, or if the examination happens too early, the certificate can become void before your pet ever boards the aircraft. This means that while much of the preparation for this corridor happens weeks in advance, the health examination itself must be timed with surgical precision to fall within that final seven-day window before departure.

Rabies vaccination is the other pillar of the health certificate, and its requirements introduce a layer of timing that must be planned well in advance. The CFIA form requires the attending veterinarian to declare that the animal has been vaccinated against rabies using an approved anti-rabies vaccine, and the vaccination must have occurred prior to export with the certificate confirming the vaccine name, manufacturer, batch number, and expiry date. Critically, the vaccination must fall within the twelve months preceding the date of export. This means a rabies vaccine administered more than a year before your departure date will not satisfy Malaysia's requirements, and a booster will need to be administered and allowed to take effect before the certificate can be honestly completed. For puppies or kittens being vaccinated for the first time, the vaccine must be given prior to the health examination, so the sequence of microchipping, vaccination, and examination must be planned as an ordered timeline rather than a series of unrelated appointments.

Breed restrictions are one of the most significant Malaysia-specific elements of this corridor, and they deserve serious attention before any other preparation begins. Malaysia maintains two distinct categories of controlled breeds. The restricted category — which includes Bull Mastiff, Bull Terrier, Doberman, German Shepherd and its Belgian and East European variants, Perro de Presa Canario, and Rottweiler — can be imported, but only after written approval has been obtained from the Director General of MAQIS prior to the application of an import permit. The banned category is absolute: Akita, American Bulldog, Dogo Argentino, Fila Brasileiro, Japanese Tosa, Neapolitan Mastiff, and all dogs known as Pit Bull Terriers, including American Pit Bull, American Staffordshire Terrier, and Staffordshire Bull Terrier, may not be imported into Malaysia under any circumstances. If your dog falls within the restricted category, the written approval from MAQIS is not a formality that can run in parallel with other preparations — it must be secured before the import permit application is even submitted, and contacting the local MAQIS District Office early is essential.

There is one further requirement embedded in the CFIA source that speaks to Malaysia's disease-surveillance posture and is easy to overlook in the more prominent vaccine and examination requirements. The certificate requires the veterinarian to declare that no case of rabies has been reported in the country where the animals originated, or the part of the country from which they were exported, in the six months preceding the date of export. It also requires a declaration that the animals were not imported into that country during the six months preceding the date of export. This latter point has direct relevance for pets that have recently been travelling internationally before this move to Malaysia: an animal that was brought into Canada from another country within the preceding six months may not satisfy the requirements of the health declaration. Owners who have recently relocated to Canada with their pet, or whose animal has had recent international travel history, should raise this with both their veterinarian and with Paws en route well before the certificate process begins, as the resolution may require waiting out the full six-month period before export can proceed.

Entry Requirements

What your pet's journey to Malaysia requires

Every detail is prepared before you even think to ask. The requirements below are verified against CFIA guidelines for this corridor.

  • Microchip

    Your pet must be identified by a microchip conforming to ISO standards 11784 and 11785. Brands and other distinguishing marks are noted on the certificate, but ISO-compliant microchip identification is the accepted standard for this corridor. The microchip number must be recorded on the CFIA health certificate.

  • Rabies VaccinationLong lead time

    An approved anti-rabies vaccine must be administered prior to export, and the vaccination must fall within the twelve months preceding the date of departure. The vaccine name, manufacturer, batch number, and expiry date must all be documented on the CFIA certificate. A vaccine administered more than twelve months before departure will not satisfy Malaysian entry requirements.

  • CFIA Health Certificate (HA2849)Long lead time

    The official CFIA export certificate HA2849 must be completed by a licensed veterinarian following a clinical examination conducted within seven days immediately prior to export, and then endorsed with a government stamp by an official CFIA veterinarian. Both signatures are mandatory. The certificate must confirm the animal is free from clinical signs of infectious or contagious disease.

  • Breed RestrictionsLong lead time

    Malaysia maintains a list of restricted breeds that require prior written approval from the Director General of MAQIS before an import permit can be applied for, and a separate list of breeds that are categorically banned from entry. Owners of restricted breeds must obtain MAQIS written approval before beginning any other import documentation. Banned breeds cannot be imported under any circumstances.

  • Malaysian Import PermitLong lead time

    An import permit from MAQIS must be obtained before the animal travels to Malaysia. For restricted breeds, written approval from the Director General of MAQIS must be secured before the import permit application is submitted. Animals must travel directly to a prescribed landing place or approved airport in Malaysia.

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. 1

    As early as possible, before all other steps if applicable

    Breed eligibility and MAQIS approval

    If your dog belongs to a restricted breed, written approval from the Director General of MAQIS must be obtained before the import permit application can be submitted; begin this process first.

  2. 2

    Before rabies vaccination

    ISO microchip implantation

    Your pet must be identified with an ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip, and this should be in place before the rabies vaccine is administered so the chip number can be linked to the vaccination record.

  3. 3

    No more than 12 months before departure date

    Rabies vaccination

    An approved anti-rabies vaccine must be administered within the twelve months preceding export; if your pet's existing vaccine will expire before travel, a booster must be given and documented before the health certificate is completed.

  4. 4

    After breed approval if applicable, well in advance of travel

    Malaysian import permit application

    The import permit from MAQIS must be secured before travel, and processing times can vary, so submitting the application as early as possible provides the necessary buffer.

  5. 5

    Within 7 days immediately prior to export

    Pre-export veterinary health examination

    A licensed veterinarian must examine your pet and complete Sections III and IV of form HA2849 confirming the animal is healthy and free from clinical signs of infectious or contagious disease; this examination cannot occur earlier than seven days before departure.

  6. 6

    After health examination, before departure

    CFIA endorsement

    The completed HA2849 certificate must be presented to a CFIA official veterinarian for government endorsement and stamping; allow sufficient time for a CFIA appointment, which should be booked in advance.

  7. 7

    On departure day

    Direct travel to Malaysia

    Malaysian regulations require animals to travel directly to a prescribed landing place or approved airport in Malaysia, so routing and any layovers should be confirmed to satisfy this direct-transport requirement.

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

Carriers

Airlines serving this corridor

These carriers operate between Canada and Malaysia 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.

Paws en route, dünya genelinde uzman evcil hayvan taşımacılığı ve seyahat hizmetleri sunmaktadır. IATA sertifikalı uzmanlarımız 150'den fazla destinasyona uluslararası evcil hayvan nakliyesi, köpek ve kedi taşımacılığı koordinasyonu sağlar; veteriner uygunluk süreçleri, gümrük işlemleri ve kapıdan kapıya concierge teslimatını küresel ölçekte yönetir.

IPATA: The Pet Shipping Experts