Country Corridor
Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Taiwan
Taiwan rewards careful preparation with a smooth, quarantine-free arrival for your pet, and we guide you through every regulated step from Toronto to Taipei.
Our perspective
Paws en route Notes
Taiwan is, by any honest measure, one of the more demanding destinations in Asia for pet import, and understanding why helps Canadian owners approach the process with the right mindset from the very beginning. The Taiwanese authorities have constructed their import requirements around a single overriding concern: the prevention of rabies from entering the island. Taiwan declared itself rabies-free in its dog and cat population decades ago, and its government takes that status extremely seriously. Every requirement on the list, from the microchip to the serological titre test to the precise sequencing of vaccinations, flows directly from that protective instinct. When you understand the 'why,' the regulations stop feeling arbitrary and start feeling like a coherent system you can navigate with confidence.
The single requirement that most consistently catches Canadian pet owners off guard is the rabies antibody titre test, and it is worth dwelling on this point because the timing implications are significant. The test, which measures whether your pet has developed a sufficient antibody response to a rabies vaccination, cannot simply be done and then forgotten. It must be performed at a laboratory recognised by the Taiwanese authorities, and the result must meet a minimum threshold. Critically, there is a mandatory waiting period after a satisfactory titre result before your pet is eligible to travel, and that waiting period is measured in months, not days or weeks. If your pet has never been vaccinated against rabies, or if the vaccination record is incomplete, the clock does not even start until the titre test returns a passing result. This means that a family deciding to relocate to Taiwan and calling us three weeks before their flight is, unfortunately, already too late to bring their pet on that same departure.
The sequencing of steps matters as much as the steps themselves, and this is where a checklist alone will mislead you. The microchip must be implanted before the rabies vaccination is administered, because the microchip is the identification anchor for every document that follows. A vaccination given before the microchip is recorded is, in the eyes of Taiwanese customs, a vaccination given to an unidentified animal, and it may not be counted toward the required titre test timeline. Once the microchip is confirmed and the rabies vaccination is current, you can proceed to the titre test, but you must then wait for the mandatory post-titre observation period to elapse before the travel date. Any disruption to this sequence, even something as well-intentioned as updating a booster vaccination at the wrong moment, can reset or complicate the timeline. Our role at Paws en route is to map this sequence precisely for your individual pet's history and hold the timeline so nothing falls out of order.
The export health certificate issued by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is the document that ties everything together, and its preparation deserves careful attention. The certificate must be completed by an accredited veterinarian and then officially endorsed by the CFIA before it is valid for export. The CFIA endorsement step requires its own lead time, and the certificate itself has a limited validity window, meaning it must be issued close enough to travel that it remains current upon arrival in Taiwan but not so late that the endorsement cannot be completed in time. If your routing involves a layover or a change of aircraft, you should also be aware that some transit countries have their own documentation requirements, and a certificate prepared for Taiwan's customs may not satisfy an intermediate inspection point. Planning the itinerary and the documentation together, rather than separately, is one of the most practical ways we protect our clients from avoidable complications at the airport.
It is also worth noting that Taiwan's requirements are subject to revision, and the most current, authoritative source is always the Taiwanese Bureau of Animal and Plant Health Inspection and Quarantine, known as BAPHIQ. The CFIA page for Taiwan provides the framework from Canada's export side, but Taiwan is the receiving country and ultimately sets the terms of entry. Regulations around specific breed restrictions, the number of animals permitted per traveller, and any seasonal or outbreak-related adjustments are made by BAPHIQ and may not be immediately reflected in the Canadian guidance. This is precisely why working with an IPATA-certified concierge matters for this corridor: we maintain current relationships with destination-country contacts and monitor regulatory updates so that the plan we build for your pet reflects the rules as they stand on the day you travel, not as they were written when a webpage was last updated.
Entry Requirements
What your pet's journey to Taiwan 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 pet must be identified with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant 15-digit microchip before any other step in the process begins. The microchip implantation must be recorded and verifiable, as it serves as the identification link for the rabies vaccination, titre test, and health certificate. If your pet already has a non-ISO chip, a secondary ISO-compliant chip will need to be implanted.
Rabies VaccinationLong lead time
A current rabies vaccination administered after microchip implantation is required, and the vaccination record must clearly reference the microchip number. The vaccine must be an approved inactivated or recombinant product, and the vaccination history must demonstrate compliance with the required intervals. Any vaccination given before the microchip was implanted may not be accepted by Taiwanese authorities.
Rabies Antibody Titre TestLong lead time
A fluorescent antibody virus neutralisation (FAVN) or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) titre test must be performed at a BAPHIQ-recognised laboratory, and the result must meet Taiwan's minimum antibody threshold of 0.5 IU per millilitre. A mandatory waiting period applies after a satisfactory result before the pet may travel, making this the requirement with the longest lead-time implications. If the result is unsatisfactory, the pet must be re-vaccinated and re-tested, restarting the waiting period.
CFIA-Endorsed Export Health CertificateLong lead time
An accredited veterinarian must complete the official export health certificate, which must then be submitted to the CFIA for official government endorsement before travel. The certificate has a limited validity period and must be issued close enough to the departure date to remain current upon arrival in Taiwan. Both the veterinary examination and the CFIA endorsement process require advance scheduling.
Taiwan Import PermitLong lead time
An import permit issued by Taiwan's Bureau of Animal and Plant Health Inspection and Quarantine (BAPHIQ) is required before your pet departs Canada, and the application should be submitted well in advance of travel. The permit specifies the conditions under which the animal may enter and is a prerequisite for the health certificate to be completed correctly. Travelling without a valid, current import permit can result in your pet being refused entry or placed into quarantine at the owner's expense.
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
As early as possible, before all other steps
ISO Microchip Implantation
The microchip must be implanted and recorded before the rabies vaccination is administered, as it anchors the identity of the animal to every subsequent document in the process.
- 2
After microchip implantation is confirmed
Rabies Vaccination
The vaccination record must explicitly reference the microchip number, and only vaccinations administered after confirmed microchip implantation will be recognised for the purposes of the titre test timeline.
- 3
At least 30 days after rabies vaccination, at a BAPHIQ-recognised laboratory
Rabies Antibody Titre Test
The blood sample must be sent to a laboratory approved by Taiwan, and the result must reach or exceed 0.5 IU per millilitre before the mandatory post-titre waiting period begins.
- 4
After a satisfactory titre result is received, for the period specified by BAPHIQ
Post-Titre Waiting Period
Taiwan requires a mandatory waiting period following a passing titre result before the pet is eligible to travel, and this period is the primary reason the overall preparation timeline extends to approximately six months.
- 5
As soon as the titre test result is satisfactory, well before travel
Taiwan Import Permit Application
The import permit from BAPHIQ must be obtained before the health certificate can be finalised, so submitting the application promptly after the titre result is confirmed protects the overall schedule.
- 6
Within the validity window specified by BAPHIQ, close to the departure date
Veterinary Examination and Health Certificate
The accredited veterinarian must examine the pet and complete the health certificate within the timeframe Taiwan will accept upon arrival, after which the certificate must be submitted to the CFIA for official endorsement.
- 7
After veterinary completion, before departure, allowing for CFIA processing time
CFIA Endorsement of Health Certificate
The CFIA endorsement step requires its own processing window, so the veterinary appointment must be scheduled early enough that the endorsed certificate is returned before the travel date.
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
Taiwan does allow dogs and cats that have met all import requirements, including a satisfactory rabies titre test and the mandatory post-titre waiting period, to avoid extended quarantine upon arrival. However, if any documentation is missing, out of date, or if the titre test was not conducted at a recognised laboratory, your pet may be subject to quarantine at a government facility at your expense. The best way to avoid this outcome is to have all documents reviewed by a qualified professional before you depart Canada.
For most pets that do not yet have a valid titre test result on file, the realistic minimum preparation window is approximately six months before your intended travel date, and starting earlier provides a meaningful buffer. The titre test itself takes time to process, and a mandatory waiting period applies after a satisfactory result before the pet may travel. If your pet has an existing, valid titre result from a recognised laboratory, your available timeline may be shorter, and we can assess that during an initial consultation.
The rabies antibody titre test is a blood test that measures the level of antibodies your pet has developed in response to a rabies vaccination, confirming that the vaccination has produced an adequate immune response. Taiwan requires this test because it is a rabies-free island and uses serological verification as an additional layer of protection beyond simply confirming that a vaccination was administered. The test must be performed at a laboratory approved by Taiwan's BAPHIQ authority, and the result must meet a minimum threshold of 0.5 IU per millilitre.
Whether an existing titre test result remains valid for Taiwan entry depends on when the test was conducted, which laboratory performed it, and whether the underlying vaccination remains current. Taiwan's BAPHIQ sets the rules for result validity, and an expired or lapsed result will require the process to restart. We recommend sharing your pet's full vaccination and titre history with us so we can assess where you stand relative to current Taiwanese requirements before any appointments are booked.
Taiwan does maintain restrictions or special conditions for certain dog breeds, particularly those classified as aggressive or dangerous under Taiwanese law. The specific list is determined by BAPHIQ and local municipal regulations, which can vary, and it is important to verify your dog's breed status directly with the current BAPHIQ guidelines before beginning preparations. If your dog is a breed that falls under any restriction, additional permits or conditions may apply, and we can help you navigate that process.
The health certificate has a limited validity window that is set by the receiving country, Taiwan, rather than by the CFIA, and it must remain valid from the date of issuance through your pet's arrival date in Taipei. Scheduling the veterinary examination too early risks the certificate expiring before travel, while scheduling it too late risks the CFIA endorsement not being returned in time for departure. We coordinate both the veterinary appointment and the CFIA submission as part of our standard process to ensure the timing is correct.
Carriers
Airlines serving this corridor
These carriers operate between Canada and Taiwan 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.
