Country entry guide · Europe (EU)
Traveling to Ireland with your dog
Ireland welcomes dogs, but what you need to prepare depends mainly on the country your dog is travelling from — not only on Ireland itself. As an EU member, Ireland applies the EU pet-movement rules: an ISO microchip and a valid rabies vaccination are always required. A dog coming from another EU country simply needs an EU pet passport; a dog from a listed non-EU country (such as the United States, Canada or Great Britain) needs an EU animal health certificate but no blood test; a dog from a non-listed country faces the longest path, including a rabies antibody test and a three-month wait. Ireland adds one extra step almost every dog must complete: a tapeworm treatment given by a vet shortly before arrival. This guide explains each case so you know exactly what to prepare before you book your flight.
📋 At a glance
| Dogs allowed | Yes |
| Microchip | Required |
| Rabies vaccination | Required |
| Rabies antibody test | Conditional — non-listed origins only |
| Veterinary certificate | Conditional — non-EU origins |
| Tapeworm treatment | Required (dogs) — vet-administered before arrival |
| Quarantine | Normally not required |
⏱️ 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 Ireland
🧭 How your dog's entry requirements are decided
The exact documents depend on three things — Ireland (your destination) is only the first.
- 1 Country of destination — Ireland★★★★★
Ireland applies the EU pet-movement framework: an ISO microchip and a valid rabies vaccination are always required. Ireland is also one of the few countries that require a tapeworm treatment before arrival.
- 2 Country of departure★★★★★
Whether your dog leaves from an EU country, a listed non-EU country or a non-listed country decides whether an antibody test, a health certificate and advance notice are required.
- 3 Countries your dog recently stayed in★★★★☆
Ireland judges entry on where the dog is actually travelling from, not where it was born or usually lives. A recent stay in a rabies-risk country can trigger an antibody test even if you fly in from an exempt country.
So read the requirements below as Ireland'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 the rabies vaccination; readable to ISO standard 11785 (bring a scanner if not). | If the microchip cannot be read on arrival, the dog may be quarantined or refused entry. | EU Reg. 576/2013; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Rabies vaccination | Required | Dog at least 12 weeks old at the shot, given after the microchip; valid from at least 21 days after the primary vaccination. | 1- or 3-year vaccines accepted; no waiting period for in-date boosters if there was no break in cover. | EU Reg. 576/2013, Annex III; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Rabies antibody test | Conditional | Non-listed origins only: blood ≥30 days after vaccination, ≥3 months before entry, result ≥0.5 IU/ml, EU-designated lab. | Not required from the EU or from listed countries (US, Canada, Great Britain, Switzerland, Japan, Australia…). | EU Reg. 2020/692; gov.ie / DAFM |
| EU pet passport | EU origins | Issued by an EU vet; records the microchip, rabies vaccination and the tapeworm treatment. | Ireland also accepts passports from Northern Ireland, Norway, Switzerland, Andorra, Monaco, San Marino, and a few other listed European territories. | EU Reg. 577/2013; gov.ie / DAFM |
| EU animal health certificate | Non-EU origins | Completed by a vet and endorsed by an official (State) vet within 10 days of arrival in the EU; valid then up to 6 months for onward EU travel. | Not needed for EU origins (passport instead). | EU Reg. 577/2013, Annex IV; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Tapeworm (Echinococcus) treatment | Required (dogs) | A vet must treat the dog with a praziquantel product no less than 24 hours and no more than 120 hours before arrival, recorded in the passport or health certificate. | Not required only when the dog travels directly from Finland, Malta, Norway or Northern Ireland. Does not apply to cats or ferrets. | EU Reg. 1152/2011; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Advance notification / compliance check | Non-EU origins | From outside the EU you must give advance notice and book a compliance check on arrival through the DAFM Advance Notice portal. | No booking needed for EU/passport arrivals, but spot checks may still occur; a fee applies to most non-EU checks (free from Great Britain and for assistance dogs). | SI 141/2020; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Border check & points of entry | Non-EU arrivals | Pets from outside the EU may only enter via Cork Airport, Dublin Airport, Shannon Airport, Dublin Port, the Port of Cork (Ringaskiddy) or Rosslare Europort. | No systematic check for intra-EU arrivals; keep original documents on you. | gov.ie / DAFM — Pet Travel |
| Puppies / minimum age | Effectively ≥15 weeks | 12-week rabies shot + 21-day wait (listed); about 7 months from a non-listed country. | Puppies under 12 weeks cannot be vaccinated, so cannot enter from outside the EU. | EU Reg. 576/2013; gov.ie / DAFM |
| Quarantine | Not required | — | Only if rules are breached — a non-compliant dog may be refused entry or placed in quarantine under official control at the owner's expense. | SI 141/2020, Reg. 12(7) |
🌍 Rules according to your dog's origin
Simplified — EU pet passport (+ tapeworm)
A dog coming from another EU country needs an EU pet passport showing a valid ISO microchip and an in-date rabies vaccination. No antibody test and no health certificate — but a vet must still give the tapeworm treatment 24–120 hours before arrival and record it in the passport. Normally no booked border check, though spot checks can happen.
Health certificate + tapeworm, no blood test
From a listed non-EU country (United States, Canada, Great Britain, Switzerland, Japan, Australia and others), your dog needs a microchip, a valid rabies vaccination, an EU animal health certificate endorsed by an official vet, and the tapeworm treatment before arrival. No antibody test is required. You must give advance notice and book a compliance check at one of Ireland's designated points of entry.
Antibody test + 3-month wait + tapeworm
From a non-listed (at-risk) country, add a rabies antibody test: blood drawn at least 30 days after vaccination, result ≥0.5 IU/ml at an EU-designated laboratory, then a compulsory 3-month wait before entry. An endorsed EU animal health certificate, the tapeworm treatment and advance notice with a booked compliance check are also required.
🛬 Arrival
What happens when your dog reaches Ireland depends on where you flew from.
- From another EU country: no booked border check — keep the EU pet passport with you, with the tapeworm treatment recorded, as spot checks may occur.
- From outside the EU: enter only via Cork Airport, Dublin Airport, Shannon Airport, Dublin Port, the Port of Cork (Ringaskiddy) or Rosslare Europort, and undergo the compliance check booked in advance before leaving the arrivals area.
- A fee applies to most non-EU compliance checks; checks are free from Great Britain and for accredited assistance/guide dogs.
- Carry original documents, not copies. If importing a pet from outside the EU you may owe customs duty and VAT unless you claim Transfer of Residence relief (Revenue).
- If documents are missing or invalid — including a missing tapeworm treatment — the dog may be refused entry or placed in quarantine under official control, at the owner's expense.
🧳 Real traveller experience
No reliable documented traveller feedback available.
🚫 Restricted dogs
Ireland does not ban any breed and imposes no breed-based import restriction. Instead, the Control of Dogs Regulations 1998 place extra control rules on eleven breeds/types when they are in a public place. This is a public-safety control, not an entry ban.
Restricted breeds/types: American Pit Bull Terrier, Bull Mastiff, Doberman Pinscher, English Bull Terrier, German Shepherd (Alsatian), Japanese Akita, Japanese Tosa, Rhodesian Ridgeback, Rottweiler, Staffordshire Bull Terrier, and any Ban Dog (Bandog) — plus every strain or cross of these. In a public place such a dog must be securely muzzled, kept on a strong leash or chain no longer than 2 metres, and led by a person over 16 capable of controlling it. It must also wear a collar with the owner's name and address.
These are control obligations, not an import ban: a restricted-breed dog may still enter and live in Ireland if it meets the normal EU pet-travel requirements. Exemptions from the muzzle/leash rules apply only to certain official working dogs (Garda, Defence Forces, port/airport police, Customs) and to bona fide rescue and guide dogs on duty.
Confirm your dog's breed/type against the 1998 list and be ready to comply with the muzzle, leash and handler rules in public. There is no separate import permit tied to breed.
✈️ National airlines
Carriers registered in this country that accept dogs — see each airline's MyDogCanFly fiche.
🛂 Airports in Ireland
Check where your dog can relieve itself at each airport — and whether it's before or after security.
🧾 Preparation checklist
- ☐Microchip (ISO 11785) implanted before the rabies vaccination
- ☐Valid rabies vaccination (dog ≥12 weeks at the shot, +21 days)
- ☐Rabies antibody test — non-listed countries only
- ☐EU pet passport (EU origin) or endorsed EU health certificate (non-EU origin)
- ☐Tapeworm (praziquantel) treatment by a vet 24–120 hours before arrival, recorded
- ☐Advance notice + booked compliance check if arriving from outside the EU
- ☐Original documents (not copies); airline reservation and suitable IATA crate if in the hold
- ☐If a restricted breed, plan for muzzle, ≤2 m leash and a handler over 16 in public
📚 Official sources
- DAFM (gov.ie) — Bringing your pet into Ireland from an EU / listed country
- DAFM (gov.ie) — Bringing your pet into Ireland from outside the EU (listed countries)
- Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine — Pet Travel
- Irish Statute Book — Control of Dogs Regulations 1998 (S.I. No. 442/1998)
- European Commission — Travelling with a pet within the EU
- Revenue (Irish Customs) — Customs clearance and import/export controls