Pet Relocation · 🇨🇦 CanadaMoving to Thailand with a pet from Canada.
Exactly how to bring your dog or cat from Canada into Thailand — the authority that endorses your paperwork, rabies and titer guidance, airline notes, the official links, and the shared import process end to end.
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01From Canada: what's specific to you
Rabies & titer: Canada is not rabies-free, so keep rabies documentation tight and current, linked to the microchip. Check whether a titer is needed for your route.
Official endorsement: A CFIA-accredited veterinarian completes the certificate and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) endorses it.
Flights: Direct and one-stop routes run from major Canadian hubs. Cabin allowances for small pets vary by carrier; larger animals travel as cargo with seasonal heat rules.
- Use a CFIA-accredited vet so the certificate can be endorsed.
- Allow CFIA endorsement turnaround time after the vet visit.
- Confirm whether a FAVN titer is required for your airline/route before booking.
- Check carrier cabin-vs-cargo rules and breed restrictions.
02The import process, step by step
This Thailand-side sequence is the same from Canada as anywhere — the order matters most.
- Microchip first. Thailand recognises the ISO 11784/11785 15-digit microchip. It must be implanted BEFORE the rabies vaccination so the two records are linked — if you vaccinate first and chip later, some authorities make you re-vaccinate.
- Rabies vaccination. Your dog or cat needs a current rabies shot given after the microchip and (as a general rule) at least 21 days before travel and not expired on the travel date. Dogs also need core vaccines (distemper, hepatitis, leptospirosis, parvovirus); cats need panleukopenia, calicivirus and rhinotracheitis.
- Rabies antibody (FAVN/RNATT) titer test — confirm if needed. Thailand does not require a titer for every country, but it is strongly recommended and can be requested. If your route or airline needs it, the blood draw must usually be done well in advance, so check early.
- Government health certificate. A licensed vet in your origin country completes a veterinary health certificate close to departure (commonly within ~10 days of travel) confirming the microchip, vaccinations and that the animal is fit to fly.
- Official endorsement. That certificate must be endorsed by your country's competent government authority (e.g. USDA APHIS, UK APHA, an EU state vet) — this is the step travellers most often leave too late.
- Thailand import permit (R7). Apply to the Department of Livestock Development (DLD) for the import licence. Many owners arrange it in advance through the DLD e-service or via the Animal Quarantine Station at the arrival airport; bring printed copies of everything.
- Book the flight correctly. Small pets may fly in-cabin on some airlines; larger animals travel as manifest/excess-baggage cargo. Snub-nosed (brachycephalic) breeds face cargo restrictions in hot months. Fly into Suvarnabhumi (BKK), which has the main Animal Quarantine Station.
- Arrival inspection. On landing, the DLD Animal Quarantine officers check the microchip, paperwork and the animal. If everything is in order Thailand does not impose a long mandatory quarantine — non-compliant animals can be detained, so the paperwork is everything.
- Settle in. Line up a pet-friendly home before you fly (many Bangkok condos restrict or ban pets), and know your nearest 24-hour animal hospital and vet for the first weeks.
03Mistakes to avoid
- Vaccinating against rabies BEFORE microchipping — the records won't link and you may have to start over.
- Leaving the government endorsement (USDA/APHA/state vet) until the last few days — endorsement has its own processing time.
- Booking a flight before checking the airline's breed, crate-size and seasonal heat embargoes for cargo.
- Assuming your condo allows pets — many Bangkok buildings don't, or cap size/number. Confirm the building's pet policy in writing before you sign.
- Letting the rabies vaccine or health certificate lapse against the travel date — both have validity windows.
04Official resources
Always verify current rules against the primary sources before you book travel:
05Frequently asked
Who endorses my Canadian pet's certificate?A CFIA-accredited veterinarian completes the health certificate and the CFIA endorses it. Build the CFIA turnaround into your timeline before the flight.
Does Thailand quarantine pets on arrival?Thailand does not impose a long mandatory quarantine for cats and dogs that meet all import requirements; DLD officers inspect the animal and documents on arrival. Animals arriving without correct paperwork, microchip or vaccination can be detained or quarantined, so compliance is what avoids quarantine. Confirm current rules with the DLD before you travel.
How many pets can I bring?Thailand commonly allows up to two pets per traveller arriving together with the owner; larger numbers may be treated as commercial and need extra approval. Verify the current limit with the DLD and your airline, as carrier limits per cabin/cargo also apply.
Can my pet fly in the cabin?Some airlines allow small dogs and cats (animal plus carrier under roughly 7–8 kg) in the cabin; bigger animals travel as manifest cargo in a climate-controlled hold. Policies vary a lot by airline and route — confirm directly with the carrier when you book.
Which airport should I fly into?Suvarnabhumi (BKK) has the principal Animal Quarantine Station and is the most established arrival point for pets. Confirm the clearance process for your specific flight and airport in advance.
Land softly — with your pet
Sort the import, then find a genuinely pet-friendly home and neighbourhood.
General information only — not veterinary, legal or customs advice. Pet import rules, fees and timelines change and are enforced at officials' discretion; confirm current requirements with Thailand's Department of Livestock Development (DLD) and the Canada authority above before booking travel. BAANLYY never takes paid placement.