Paws en routePaws en route
All routes

Country Corridor

Flying Your Dog or Cat from Canada to Singapore

Singapore is one of the most rewarding destinations in Asia to share with a pet, and with the right preparation begun well in advance, your dog or cat can arrive healthy, cleared, and ready to settle into your new home alongside you.

Our perspective

Paws en route Notes

Singapore sits in a category of its own when it comes to pet import regulations. The city-state is meticulous about biosecurity, and its national animal authority, the Animal and Veterinary Service, maintains some of the strictest and most precisely sequenced entry requirements in the world. Canada is recognised as a low-rabies-risk country, which works in your favour, but that status does not exempt your pet from Singapore's core requirements. Every dog and cat entering Singapore must be microchipped to ISO 11784 or 11785 standard, vaccinated against rabies after the microchip is implanted, and then demonstrate a satisfactory rabies neutralising antibody titre through an approved blood test before travel. That blood test result must be on file and must meet Singapore's threshold before a travel date can be confirmed. The CFIA's role is to verify and certify that all of these conditions have been met on Canada's end, and their export health certificate is the document that bridges Canadian veterinary records with Singapore's import permit system.

The timing sequence on this corridor is where the vast majority of preparation errors occur, and it is worth understanding exactly why. The rabies titre test, sometimes called the FAVN test or the fluorescent antibody virus neutralisation test, cannot be performed until after the rabies vaccination has been administered, and the vaccination itself cannot be given until after the microchip has been confirmed in place. Each of these steps has its own laboratory processing time, and Singapore requires that the titre test result show a reading of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre. If the result falls below that threshold, the pet must be revaccinated and retested, which adds weeks to the timeline. Even when everything proceeds perfectly, the gap between microchipping, vaccinating, waiting for the vaccine to produce a measurable antibody response, drawing blood, submitting the sample to an approved laboratory, and receiving a result typically spans several weeks at minimum. Owners who discover this sequence for the first time after booking a moving date frequently find themselves in the position of either delaying their travel or, in the most difficult cases, making other arrangements for their pet temporarily.

Singapore also imposes a mandatory quarantine period on all incoming dogs and cats, regardless of their country of origin or health status. This is a fixed feature of the system, not a consequence of incomplete paperwork, and it applies to pets arriving from Canada just as it applies to pets arriving from anywhere else. The quarantine is served at a government-approved facility in Singapore, and the duration and conditions are set by the Animal and Veterinary Service. Owners should budget for this quarantine period in both financial and emotional terms, understanding that their pet will be professionally cared for but will not be coming home with them on arrival day. The practical implication is that your moving timeline and your pet's reunification timeline are two different things, and a well-constructed travel plan accounts for both. Engaging with Singapore's import permit process early is essential, because the permit must be obtained before your pet travels, and the permit application requires documentation that can only be produced after the titre test is complete.

The Canadian export health certificate issued by a CFIA-accredited veterinarian is the keystone document for this journey. It must be completed accurately, signed by an accredited veterinarian, and then endorsed by the CFIA, and it has a limited validity window, which means it must be issued close enough to your departure date to remain valid upon arrival in Singapore. This creates a narrow operational window at the end of a long preparation period. Your veterinarian will need access to all underlying health records, the microchip number, the vaccination dates and product details, and the titre test result in order to complete the certificate correctly. Any discrepancy between what appears on the certificate and what appears in the supporting documentation is grounds for refusal at the Singapore border. The certificate is not simply a formality; it is Singapore's primary assurance that the animal in transit is the same animal whose records have been reviewed and approved.

From a practical standpoint, the Canada-to-Singapore corridor rewards owners who treat preparation as a months-long project rather than a pre-travel checklist. The most resilient approach is to begin the microchipping and vaccination sequence as early as possible, submit the titre test blood draw to an approved laboratory promptly, and have a frank conversation with your veterinarian about realistic timelines before committing to a travel date. Singapore is not a destination where preparation can be compressed. The regulations exist to protect a city that has successfully maintained rigorous disease control, and the authorities apply them consistently. Owners who work with an IPATA-certified pet transport specialist from the outset benefit from having someone who already knows the sequencing, the approved laboratories, the certificate endorsement process at the CFIA, and the Singapore permit application system. The goal at every stage is the same: your pet arrives in Singapore healthy, fully documented, and cleared to begin their quarantine period without incident, so that the reunion, when it comes, is everything it should be.

Entry Requirements

What your pet's journey to Singapore 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 implanted with an ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant microchip before any vaccinations are administered. This microchip number becomes the permanent identifier linking every subsequent document, including the rabies vaccination record, the titre test result, and the export health certificate.

  • Rabies Vaccination

    A rabies vaccination must be administered by a licensed veterinarian after the microchip is confirmed in place. The vaccination date, product name, batch number, and expiry date must all be recorded accurately, as this information is required for both the titre test submission and the export health certificate.

  • Rabies Antibody Titre TestLong lead time

    Singapore requires a rabies neutralising antibody titre test result of at least 0.5 IU per millilitre, conducted at an approved laboratory after the rabies vaccination. The blood draw can only take place after the vaccine has had sufficient time to produce a measurable antibody response, and laboratory processing adds additional weeks to the timeline.

  • CFIA Export Health CertificateLong lead time

    A CFIA-accredited veterinarian must complete and sign the Canadian export health certificate, which must then be endorsed by the CFIA before departure. The certificate has a limited validity window and must accurately reflect the microchip number, vaccination history, and titre test result on file.

  • Singapore Import PermitLong lead time

    An import permit issued by Singapore's Animal and Veterinary Service must be obtained before your pet travels, and the permit application requires the completed titre test result and other supporting documentation. All dogs and cats entering Singapore are also subject to a mandatory quarantine period at a government-approved facility 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. 1

    As early as possible, at least 6 months before travel

    Microchip implant

    The microchip must be ISO 11784 or 11785 compliant and must be in place before the rabies vaccination is administered, as the chip number anchors every document that follows.

  2. 2

    After microchip is confirmed, at least 30 days before blood draw

    Rabies vaccination

    The vaccine must be given after the microchip is implanted and the pet must have adequate time to develop a measurable antibody response before blood is drawn for the titre test.

  3. 3

    After adequate post-vaccination interval, at least 4 months before travel

    Rabies titre blood draw and laboratory submission

    Blood must be submitted to an approved laboratory, and processing time means results may take several weeks; a result below 0.5 IU per millilitre requires revaccination and retesting, resetting the clock.

  4. 4

    Once titre test result is confirmed satisfactory

    Singapore import permit application

    The import permit from Singapore's Animal and Veterinary Service must be secured before travel and requires the titre test result and other supporting health documentation.

  5. 5

    Within the validity window before departure, typically 10 days prior

    CFIA export health certificate preparation

    A CFIA-accredited veterinarian completes the certificate using all underlying records, and the document must then be endorsed by the CFIA before it can accompany the pet.

  6. 6

    After certificate is signed, before departure

    CFIA endorsement

    Allow sufficient time for CFIA to review and endorse the certificate, as processing times can vary and the endorsed document must be in hand before travel.

  7. 7

    On departure date

    Travel and mandatory quarantine

    Upon arrival in Singapore, all dogs and cats enter a mandatory quarantine period at a government-approved facility; the duration is set by Singapore's Animal and Veterinary Service and applies to all arriving pets regardless of origin.

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 Singapore 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 在全球範圍內提供專業寵物運輸與移居服務。我們的 IATA 認證專員統籌前往 150 多個目的地的國際寵物托運,涵蓋犬隻運輸、貓咪運輸、獸醫合規、海關清關,以及全球到府禮賓接送服務。

IPATA: The Pet Shipping Experts