Pet Travel Scheme
The Pet Travel Scheme (PETS) allows:
- Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris)
- Cats (Felis silvestris catus)
- Ferrets (Mustela putorius furo)
to enter or re-enter the UK without serving statutory quarantine providing they comply with PETS. More information on PETS is on the Bring your dog, cat or ferret to Great Britain GOV.UK page.
Criteria for a 'non-commercial' movement
- The owner, or designated person, must travel within five days of the pets.
- No more than five pets in the consignment
- A non-commercial entry document is issued with a signed declaration.
Your pet must be booked as manifest cargo on an approved airline. You may need to apply for Transfer of Residency relief (ToR1). Information is at Entering and staying in the UK on the GOV.UK page.
Travel from a listed country (Part 1 and 2)
A list of these countries is on the listed and unlisted countries GOV.UK page. The required order of preparation is:
Microchip
Go to the microchip GOV.UK page. Their microchip:
- Should be ISO 11784/5 compliant (15 numerical digits)
- Must have been implanted and scanned prior to their rabies vaccination
We have microchip scanners that are able to read AVID (9 digits), FECAVA (10 digits, alphanumeric) and Trovan standard microchips too.
Rabies vaccination
Go to the rabies vaccinations and boosters GOV.UK page. Ensure the rabies vaccine is administered:
- After their microchip was implanted and read. The vaccinating vet must scan their microchip prior to vaccination.
- In accordance with the manufacturer's and countries data sheet
- When your pet was at least 12 weeks old
- At least 21 days prior to arrival (day of vaccine = day 0)
DOGS only: Tapeworm treatment
Go to the tapeworm treatment for dogs GOV.UK page. Ensure the treatment:
- Is administered by your vet
- Contains the active ingredient praziquantel
- Is administered no less than 24 hours arrival before arrival
- Is administered no more than 120 hours (five days) before arrival
- Is recorded in full on their entry document
Tapeworm treatment is not required for dogs arriving from Ireland, Finland, Malta and Norway
Get an entry document issued
The entry document required depends on the country your pet is travelling from:
Part 1 listed countries
- EU Pet Passport. These can only be issued by vets in a Part 1 listed country. Third country vets (Eg. USA, Canada) are not authorised to enter information in sections labelled "Authorised veterinarian" – doing so may make it invalid for entry. Tapeworm treatments may be documented by third country vets. Go to the listed and unlisted countries GOV.UK page.
- Animal Health Certificate. This is completed by a official vet in Great Britain for return travel to the EU. From the date of issue you have 10 days to enter the EU or Northern Ireland. You may return to Great Britain within 4 months of the date of issue.
Part 2 listed and unlisted countries
- GB Health Certificate. This is completed by your authorised/official vet, and then endorsed by the competent authority in the country of origin. You must include supporting documentation with this certificate. Your pet must enter Great Britain no later than 10 days from the date of endorsement by the competent authority. Go to the listed and unlisted countries GOV.UK page.
EU Pet Passports and Animal Health Certificates cannot be used as an entry document from part 2 and unlisted countries.
Cats from Australia
Cats from Australia must be accompanied with a certificate from the Australian veterinary authorities confirming that they have not been on a holding where Hendra virus has been confirmed during the 60 days before export.
Pets from Malaysia (Peninsula)
Health certification must be provided by the Malaysian veterinary authorities which confirms they:
- Had no contact with pigs during at least the 60 days before export.
- Had not been resident on holdings where during the past 60 days any case of Nipah disease has been confirmed.
- Had a NIPAH test with a negative result. This must be carried out in a laboratory approved for testing for antibody against the Nipah disease viruses by the competent veterinary authorities on a sample of blood taken within ten days of export.
Pets imported for commercial purposes and those which cannot be accompanied as above must travel under the Trade and import regime.
Travel from an unlisted country
Any country that is not Part 1 or 2 listed on the GOV.UK page is classified as unlisted. In addition to the requirements above, you pet will need:
Rabies serology test
To be valid this must:
- Be performed at an EU approved laboratory
- Be based on a blood sample drawn at least 30 days after the rabies vaccination (the date of vaccination is day 0)
- Return a titre of at least 0.5iu
- A waiting period of three months from the sample date must pass before entry. Your pet may re-enter the EU without the three month post-blood test wait providing they vaccinated against rabies and blood sampled whilst still in the EU. This must be documented in your pet's EU Passport by your vet.
- The blood test remains valid for entry providing your pet has remained vaccinated against rabies without any breaks/gaps since the blood sample. We must see evidence of all subsequent vaccinations in the form of a vaccination booklet or certificates. These must all list your pet's microchip number.
What happens if there are problems with my paperwork?
This is likely to result in delays in releasing your pet and you could incur extra charges. Non-compliances are grouped into three categories:
- Section 1: Minor administrative errors by the issuing vet. No clarification from the issuing vet required and no further action required.
- Section 2: Errors with the paperwork that will require us to contact the vet for clarification before release. This will incur an administrative fee of £99.
- Section 3: Serious error with the paper work that could result in your pet needing to serve quarantine, or be re-exported to the country of origin. This also includes issues such as tapeworm re-treatment or new entry paperwork being issued. These will incur further charges.
Common problems
Your vet needs to record the following information about the rabies vaccination:
- Manufacturer (eg. Merck, Zoetis, Merial, Boehringer Ingelheim)
- Product name (Eg. Nobivac, Defensor, Imrab)
- Batch number
- Validity dates
We often see entry paperwork where the vet has only stated the manufacturer, and not the product name. This will result in your pet being held at our facility until we can confirm this information from the vet who administered the vaccine, incurring a £99 administrative fee.
Your pet must be identifiable via microchip before it is vaccinated against rabies. The vaccinating vet must scan and record the microchip number of your pet before administering a rabies vaccine. Any rabies vaccinations administered before microchipping are not valid for entry.
We advise you review your pet's veterinary records to find the date the microchip was implanted so this can be recorded on the entry document. if you cannot find this date, a reading date can be entered. However this first reading date must be before the rabies vaccination(s).
Most three year rabies vaccinations are only valid for three years if they're given as a booster within the validity of a one year primary rabies vaccination. The entire rabies vaccination course must have been administered:
- When your pet was at least 12 weeks old
- After their microchip was implanted/read
- In accordance to the manufacturer and countries requirements
If your pet's three year booster was given more than one year before its scheduled entry you will need to include evidence of its vaccination history in the form of vaccination certificates, or a booklet. You must ensure the following information is present:
- Microchip number
- Manufacturer of vaccine (Eg. Merck, Merial, Zoetis, Boehringer Ingelheim)
- Product name of vaccine (eg. Nobivac R, Imrab, Defensor)
- Batch number
- Validity dates
Any breaks in vaccination will invalidate subsequent boosters and we cannot use any vaccinations that occur before its microchip was implanted or read. The first vaccine after a break or microchip implant is considered its primary vaccine, valid for one year only.
Frequent issues with tapeworm treatment include:
- A treatment given that does not contain the active ingredient 'Praziquantel', eg. Pfizer Cestex
- The tapeworm treatment is administered by the owner, and not the vet.
- The treatment was not administered at least 24 hours before arriving at Heathrow, or more than 120 hours (five days) before arriving. You must allow for time zone differences, these time frames are based on UK (GMT) time.
If your dog arrives without a valid tapeworm treatment it will be re-treated by a vet at HARC. This will incur re-treatment costs and another 24-hour boarding fee.