Country entry guide · Europe (non-EU)
Traveling to Great Britain with your dog
Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland) welcomes dogs, but it is no longer in the EU and runs its own scheme — "Bring your pet dog, cat or ferret to Great Britain" — not the EU pet passport system. An ISO microchip and a valid rabies vaccination are always required, and — unlike most EU countries — a vet-administered tapeworm treatment is compulsory for every dog before arrival. You must also travel on an approved route. What else you need depends on where you are coming from: a dog from the EU or a listed country needs a travel document but no blood test, while a dog from an unlisted country also needs a rabies blood test and a three-month wait. This guide explains each case so you know exactly what to prepare before you book.
📋 At a glance
| Dogs allowed | Yes (except banned types) |
| Microchip | Required |
| Rabies vaccination | Required |
| Rabies blood test | Conditional — unlisted origins only |
| Travel document (passport / AHC / GB certificate) | Required |
| Tapeworm treatment | Required for dogs (24–120 h before arrival) |
| Approved travel route | Required (except from Ireland/within UK) |
| Quarantine | Only if the rules are not followed |
⏱️ Estimated preparation time
Times are indicative. The rabies antibody test alone adds a fixed 3-month wait.
⚠️ Important
- MyDogCanFly provides general information — not veterinary or legal advice.
- Only a veterinarian can confirm the exact procedure for your individual dog.
- Requirements depend on: the country of origin, previous travel history, identification, vaccinations, the itinerary and the travel date.
Always consult your veterinarian before booking your trip.
Find a flight to United Kingdom
🧭 How your dog's entry requirements are decided
The exact documents depend on three things — Great Britain (your destination) is only the first.
- 1 Country of destination — Great Britain★★★★★
Great Britain applies its own scheme: an ISO microchip and a valid rabies vaccination are always required, a compulsory tapeworm treatment applies to every dog, and you must use an approved travel route.
- 2 Country of departure★★★★★
Whether your dog leaves from the EU, a listed country or an unlisted country decides which travel document you need and whether a rabies blood test plus a three-month wait are required.
- 3 Countries your dog recently stayed in★★★★☆
A recent stay in an unlisted, rabies-risk country can trigger the blood test even if you fly in from a listed country. It is your dog's real origin and history that count — not only the last airport.
So read the requirements below as Great Britain's framework, then confirm your dog's exact origin and history with your vet.
✅ Entry requirements
| Requirement | Required? | When | Exceptions | Official reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISO microchip | Required | Must be implanted before, or at the same time as, the rabies vaccination; must meet ISO 11784/11785. | A clearly legible tattoo is accepted only if done on or before 3 July 2011 and before vaccination. | GOV.UK — Bring your pet to Great Britain (Microchip) |
| Rabies vaccination | Required | Microchip first; wait at least 21 full days after the first vaccination (or the last of the primary course) before travelling. | If the microchip was implanted after the vaccination, the dog must be vaccinated again. | GOV.UK — Rabies vaccination and boosters |
| Rabies blood test | Conditional | Unlisted origins only: blood taken ≥30 days after vaccination, result ≥0.5 IU/ml at an EU-approved lab, then a 3-month wait from the sampling date before travel. | Not required from the EU or from listed countries; the 3-month wait is waived if the pet was vaccinated and blood tested in the EU before travelling to an unlisted country. | GOV.UK — Blood tests for rabies |
| EU pet passport | Accepted document | A pet passport issued in an EU country (or certain other countries) is accepted for entry from the EU; it records the microchip, rabies vaccination and tapeworm treatment. | GB-issued pet passports are only valid if issued before 1 January 2021. | GOV.UK — Which pet travel document you need |
| Animal health certificate (AHC) | Accepted document | A GB-issued AHC used within 6 months is accepted for entry from the EU and some listed countries. | Replaced by a Great Britain pet health certificate for most non-EU / listed origins. | GOV.UK — Animal health certificate (AHC) |
| Great Britain pet health certificate | Required for most non-EU origins | Needed to enter from listed and unlisted countries; issued/completed by an official vet before travel. | Not needed from Northern Ireland, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man. | GOV.UK — Great Britain pet health certificate |
| Tapeworm (Echinococcus) treatment | Required for dogs | Given by a vet no less than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours (5 days) before arrival; must contain praziquantel or an equivalent and be recorded (date, time, product) in the travel document. | Not required when coming directly from Finland, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Malta or Norway. | GOV.UK — Tapeworm treatment for dogs |
| Approved travel route | Required | You must enter on an approved air, sea or rail route and operator; by plane, pets travel as cargo unless on a charter flight or an assistance dog. | Not required for travel within the UK or from Ireland. | GOV.UK — Travel routes for pets |
| Owner declaration (non-commercial) | Required | Complete a pet travel declaration confirming you will not sell or transfer ownership of the pet. | Commercial movements or rehoming follow the stricter Balai rules instead. | GOV.UK — Pet travel declaration |
| Puppies / minimum age | Effectively ≥15 weeks | Rabies vaccine cannot be given before 12 weeks, then a 21-day wait applies (about 4 months from an unlisted country after the blood test and wait). | Unvaccinated young puppies cannot meet the rabies rule and so cannot enter under this scheme. | GOV.UK — Rabies vaccination and boosters |
| Quarantine | Not routine | — | A pet may be put into quarantine for up to 4 months, or refused entry (if travelling by sea), if the rules are not followed. | GOV.UK — Bring your pet to Great Britain (What you need to do) |
🌍 Rules according to your dog's origin
From the EU — travel document, no blood test
From an EU country, your dog needs a microchip, a valid rabies vaccination (21-day wait) and one accepted document: an EU pet passport, a GB animal health certificate used within 6 months, or a Great Britain pet health certificate. A tapeworm treatment 24–120 hours before arrival is compulsory, and you must use an approved route. No blood test is required.
From a listed country — GB certificate, no blood test
From a listed country (such as the United States, Canada, Australia, Japan or Switzerland), your dog needs a microchip, a valid rabies vaccination and a Great Britain pet health certificate completed by an official vet. The compulsory tapeworm treatment and an approved route still apply. No rabies blood test is required.
From an unlisted country — blood test + 3-month wait
From an unlisted country, add a rabies blood test: blood drawn at least 30 days after vaccination, result ≥0.5 IU/ml at an EU-approved laboratory, then a compulsory 3-month wait from the sampling date before travel. A Great Britain pet health certificate, the tapeworm treatment and an approved route are also required.
🛬 Arrival
When your dog reaches Great Britain, its microchip and documents are checked; pets may also be checked before boarding by sea or Eurotunnel.
- Checks confirm the microchip, rabies vaccination, travel document and the recorded tapeworm treatment (date and time).
- You must arrive on an approved route and operator, except when travelling within the UK or from Ireland.
- Entering from outside the EU, your pet must clear customs before you collect it — an agent, travel company or airline can usually do this for you.
- If documents are missing or the dog was not properly prepared, it may be put into quarantine for up to 4 months or refused entry (by sea) — at the owner's expense.
- If the microchip cannot be read on arrival, the pet can be refused entry or quarantined, and the whole preparation may have to be repeated.
- Banned types of dog are refused entry unless they already hold a valid Certificate of Exemption.
🧳 Real traveller experience
No reliable documented traveller feedback available.
🚫 Restricted dogs
Great Britain does not use a permissive category system. Under the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991, certain types of dog are simply banned, and importing a banned type into Great Britain is illegal. Whether a dog is a banned type depends on what it looks like, not its breed name or pedigree.
Banned types (prohibited): Pit Bull Terrier, Japanese Tosa, Dogo Argentino, Fila Brasileiro and the XL Bully (added in 2023–2024). You cannot bring these into Great Britain unless the dog already holds a valid Certificate of Exemption. Owning a banned type unlawfully can mean an unlimited fine, up to 6 months in prison and destruction of the dog.
There is no permissive second category: Great Britain uses a banned-type model, not the two-tier approach seen in some EU countries. The only route to keep a banned-type dog is an individual Certificate of Exemption, granted for the life of the dog (typically via a court's Contingent Destruction Order) with strict conditions — neutering, microchipping, muzzle and lead in public, and secure containment.
A dog that resembles a banned type may be treated as banned; it is the owner's responsibility to prove a dog is not a banned type. Exemption certificates are managed by the Index of Exempted Dogs (Defra); do not travel with a banned-type dog without confirming its legal status first.
✈️ National airlines
Carriers registered in this country that accept dogs — see each airline's MyDogCanFly fiche.
🛂 Airports in United Kingdom
Check where your dog can relieve itself at each airport — and whether it's before or after security.
🧾 Preparation checklist
- ☐Microchip (ISO 11784/11785) implanted before or with the rabies vaccination
- ☐Valid rabies vaccination (dog ≥12 weeks at the shot, +21 days before travel)
- ☐Rabies blood test + 3-month wait — unlisted countries only
- ☐Travel document: EU pet passport, GB animal health certificate, or Great Britain pet health certificate
- ☐Vet tapeworm treatment recorded 24–120 hours before arrival
- ☐Book an approved air, sea or rail route and operator
- ☐Completed pet travel declaration (non-commercial movement)
- ☐Confirm your dog is not a banned type (Pit Bull Terrier, Japanese Tosa, Dogo Argentino, Fila Brasileiro, XL Bully)
📚 Official sources
- GOV.UK — Bringing your pet dog, cat or ferret to Great Britain (what you need to do)
- GOV.UK — Travel routes for pets
- GOV.UK — Microchip
- GOV.UK — Blood tests for rabies
- GOV.UK — Tapeworm treatment for dogs
- GOV.UK — Which pet travel document you need (listed / unlisted countries)
- GOV.UK — Arriving in Great Britain
- GOV.UK — Controlling your dog in public: Banned dogs