---
title: "Traveling Internationally With Pets in 2026: Complete Guide to Documents, Pet-Friendly Airlines and Quarantine-Free Countries"
excerpt: "Taking a pet abroad in 2026 requires four fixed documents: an ISO 11784/11785 microchip, a valid rabies vaccine, an international health certificate and, for strict destinations, a rabies antibody titer test. Quarantine-free destinations for animals with up-to-date serology include the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States. Dogs and cats up to roughly 8 kg fly in the cabin; above that, they travel in the pressurized cargo hold. This guide details each step, deadline and cost."
description: "Taking a pet abroad in 2026 requires four fixed documents: an ISO 11784/11785 microchip, a valid rabies vaccine, an international health certificate and, for strict destinations, a rabies antibody titer test. Quarantine-free destinations for animals with up-to-date serology include the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States. Dogs and cats up to roughly 8 kg fly in the cabin; above that, they travel in the pressurized cargo hold. This guide details each step, deadline and cost."
slug: "viagem-pets-internacional-2026-guia-completo"
locale: "en"
canonical: "https://voyspark.com/en/journal/viagem-pets-internacional-2026-guia-completo"
author: "Curadoria Voyspark"
published_at: "Tue Jun 02 2026 04:33:02 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
updated_at: "Wed Jun 03 2026 15:29:59 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
vertical: "pet"
reading_time_minutes: 15
word_count: 4100
hero_image: "https://s3.voyspark.com/voyspark-images/articles/viagem-pets-internacional-2026-guia-completo/hero.jpg"
tags:
  - "pet-travel"
  - "dog"
  - "cabin"
  - "pet-passport"
  - "microchip"
---

# Traveling Internationally With Pets in 2026: Complete Guide to Documents, Pet-Friendly Airlines and Quarantine-Free Countries

### The correct document order: chip before vaccine

**TL;DR**: The sequence is non-negotiable: microchip first, rabies vaccine after. A rabies shot given before the chip is not internationally recognized and forces revaccination. Only once the chip is registered does the vaccine count for travel abroad.

The microchip is the animal's identity. It must follow the ISO 11784/11785 standard, with 15 digits, read by universal scanners used at borders. If the chip uses another standard (some older US models use 9 or 10 digits), you must bring your own compatible reader or implant an additional ISO chip.

The rule most often broken by first-time travelers: the rabies vaccine is only valid if given after the chip is implanted and registered. The veterinarian must record the chip number on the vaccination certificate. If the rabies shot came before the chip, it is treated as nonexistent for the trip, and the animal must be revaccinated, restarting every waiting period.

Puppies and kittens have a biological lock: the rabies vaccine can only be given from 12 weeks of age, and the 21-day waiting period starts only after that. In practice, no dog or cat under 15 weeks travels to destinations requiring a valid rabies vaccine. For destinations with a titer test, the realistic minimum rises to 7 or 8 months of age.

Keep everything in two copies: the digital microchip record in the manufacturer's database and the physical vaccination booklet with the chip number transcribed by hand. At the border, the officer reads the chip, checks the number against the document, and only then validates the rabies vaccine. A single mismatched digit blocks entry.

| Step | When | Note |
|---|---|---|
| ISO microchip | First of all | 15 digits, universal read |
| Rabies vaccine | After the chip | Minimum 21-day wait before travel |
| Titer test (serology) | 30+ days after vaccine | Result ≥ 0.5 IU/ml |
| Health certificate | 1 to 10 days before flight | Short validity, varies by country |

### Rabies vaccine and the antibody titer test

**TL;DR**: The rabies shot needs at least a 21-day wait before travel. For strict destinations, a titer test is required: blood drawn at least 30 days after the vaccine, with a result of 0.5 IU/ml or higher, processed by an accredited lab. It is the step that delays travel plans the most.

The rabies vaccine is the central sanitary document of any international trip with a pet. After it is given (always after the microchip), there is a minimum 21-day waiting period before the animal can enter most countries. Booster shots within validity do not restart this wait.

The antibody titer test, also called the FAVN test or rabies serology, proves the animal's body reacted to the vaccine and produced enough antibodies. Blood must be drawn at least 30 days after the vaccine, and the result must be 0.5 international units per milliliter or higher. The test is processed by internationally accredited labs, and results usually take 2 to 4 weeks.

The titer test completely changes the calendar. For the European Union, animals from countries deemed of controlled risk must wait 3 months after the approved blood draw. For Japan, the wait is 180 days. That means flying to Tokyo with a recently vaccinated dog can require more than 7 months of preparation. Last-minute planners do not travel.

The titer result has a long validity as long as the rabies vaccine is kept current without a lapse. If you revaccinate on time, without letting the vaccine expire, the titer stays valid for future trips and you skip the test. But a single day late on a booster resets everything: new vaccine, new wait, new blood draw and new delay. It is the costliest and most common mistake among frequent travelers.

Mind the laboratory. Only results from labs recognized by the destination authorities count. A test done in a non-accredited lab, even if technically correct, is rejected at the border. Confirm the destination's list of accepted labs before drawing blood, because redoing it means at least another 30-day wait.

### International health certificate and sanitary transit

**TL;DR**: The international health certificate is issued by a veterinarian and, in many countries, needs endorsement from the official sanitary authority. Validity is short — often 10 days for the European Union. Issuing it at the wrong time voids the trip.

The international health certificate declares the animal healthy and fit to travel. It lists the microchip, vaccines, titer test when required, and parasite treatment when the destination asks. This document has a short validity window, counted from issuance.

In many countries the private veterinarian's issuance is not enough: federal sanitary authority endorsement is required. On departure, there is usually a transit certificate issued by the origin country's animal-health body, and on arrival the document is checked by the destination authority. Each country has its own official form — the European Union uses a specific Animal Health Certificate, and the United States requires USDA APHIS forms for certain cases.

The classic error is issuing the certificate too early. If validity is 10 days and you issue it 15 days ahead, the document expires before boarding. The ideal window is to issue it 1 to 5 days before the flight, with time for the official endorsement when required.

### Cabin or cargo hold: weight decides

**TL;DR**: Animals up to roughly 8 kg including the carrier travel in the cabin, under the seat in front, in a soft ventilated bag. Above that limit, they go in the pressurized, climate-controlled cargo hold in a rigid IATA crate. The exact limit varies by airline.

The split is simple in theory. A small pet rides with you in the cabin; a large pet goes in the hold. The cabin limit sits around 8 kg counting animal plus bag, but each airline sets its own, some working with 7 kg, others with 10 kg. The cabin carrier must be soft, ventilated, and fit under the seat in front — common dimensions are 45 x 30 x 25 cm.

The animal hold is not the regular luggage hold. It is a pressurized, climate-controlled and lit compartment with temperature regulation. The crate must follow the IATA Live Animals Regulations: rigid, with a safety latch, ventilation on four sides, and room for the animal to stand and turn. Attached food and water bowls are mandatory.

| Criterion | Cabin | Hold |
|---|---|---|
| Weight (animal + bag) | up to ~8 kg | above ~8 kg |
| Crate type | soft, ventilated | rigid IATA |
| Position | under the seat | climate-controlled compartment |
| Average cost | flat fee per leg | varies by weight and route |

There is also transport as cargo, separate from the owner's flight, used for international moves and very large animals. Specialized pet shippers handle door-to-door clearance, but the cost is high.

In the cabin, the golden rule is the seat in front. The carrier goes under the seat ahead of you during takeoff and landing, and the animal cannot leave it at any point of the flight. So under-seat space, not just weight, defines viability: window and aisle seats have slightly different dimensions, and smaller aircraft have tighter gaps. Most airlines allow one animal per passenger and cap the total pets per cabin, which makes early booking essential — the quota sells out.

For the hold, choose the crate at least a week ahead and let the animal sleep in it at home. The crate needs a live-animal label, orientation arrows pointing up, owner ID with an international phone number, and a water bowl accessible from outside. Line it with absorbent material, never straw or sawdust, which biosecurity bars in many countries.

### Quarantine-free countries and the strict-rule destinations

**TL;DR**: The European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States impose no quarantine on dogs and cats with a microchip, rabies vaccine and proper paperwork. Japan, Australia and New Zealand keep strict rules that may include isolation and months of preparation.

Quarantine is the nightmare of pet travel, but most popular destinations no longer require it — as long as the paperwork is flawless. The European Union, with the pet passport or the Animal Health Certificate, allows entry without isolation. The United Kingdom, even after Brexit, keeps quarantine-free entry for animals with a chip, rabies vaccine and tapeworm (Echinococcus) treatment when required. The United States allows dogs with rabies proof according to origin.

At the other extreme are island nations with extreme biosecurity. Australia requires a titer test, import by prior permit and, even meeting everything, a minimum quarantine period at an official facility. New Zealand follows similar logic. Japan allows entry without isolation only for those who complete the full titer protocol plus the 180-day wait; anyone failing a step faces up to 180 days of quarantine on arrival.

| Country / Bloc | Quarantine | Titer required? |
|---|---|---|
| European Union | No | Depends on origin |
| United Kingdom | No | Depends on origin |
| United States | No | Generally no |
| Japan | No, if full protocol | Yes, + 180 days |
| Australia | Yes, minimum at facility | Yes |
| New Zealand | Yes | Yes |

### Pet-friendly airlines and breed restrictions

**TL;DR**: Lufthansa, KLM, Air France, American, United and Delta run formal animal-transport programs in 2026. Brachycephalic breeds face hold restrictions or bans due to respiratory risk. Every policy changes by route and season — confirm in writing.

Not every airline carries animals, and those that do split between accepting in cabin, accepting in the hold, and only shipping as cargo. In 2026, Lufthansa, KLM, Air France, American Airlines, United and Delta maintain structured programs. Rules vary by route: the same airline may accept a pet in the cabin on one flight and refuse it on another due to aircraft or duration.

The critical point is brachycephalic breeds — flat faces. Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Pugs, Boxers and, among cats, Persians and Exotics. These breeds have compressed airways and suffer hypoxia under stress and heat. Most airlines ban them from the hold; many accept them only in the cabin within the weight limit, and some refuse outright. Check the airline's restricted-breed list before buying the ticket.

There are also seasonal heat embargoes. Many airlines suspend hold transport when the forecast temperature at any airport on the route exceeds a limit, usually around 29 to 30 degrees. Summer flights to hot destinations may be blocked for pets in the hold without notice.

Written confirmation is the only one that counts. Booking the ticket does not book the pet. Animal transport needs separate confirmation, usually by phone or email with the airline's animal desk, and that authorization must come before flight day. Owners who arrive at the counter assuming the ticket is enough get left behind. Ask for a reference number and bring the printed confirmation.

Connections deserve double attention. Each airline on the route must accept the animal, and changing aircraft may require re-claiming and re-checking the crate, exposing the pet to heat and stress. A direct flight is almost always the safer choice, even at a higher cost.

### Long-haul flight: fasting, water, sedation and the welfare protocol

**TL;DR**: For long-haul flights, offer water until boarding, do a partial 4-to-6-hour fast, attach a water bowl to the crate and do not sedate. Sedatives lower blood pressure and impair balance at altitude, raising the risk. Prior acclimation to the carrier is decisive.

The long-haul flight is where preparation pays off. Rule number one, repeated by veterinarians and airlines, is do not sedate. Sedatives lower blood pressure and impair thermoregulation and balance, and at altitude the effect is amplified. A sedated animal in the hold is an animal at risk. If the animal is very anxious, discuss behavioral alternatives with the vet, never sedatives on your own.

A partial fast reduces the risk of vomiting and discomfort. The general recommendation is to feed lightly 4 to 6 hours before boarding and keep water available until the last moment. A water bowl attached to the crate, refillable by crew without opening the door, is an IATA requirement on long flights. Lining the floor with absorbent material keeps the animal from traveling wet in case of an accident.

Carrier acclimation starts weeks ahead. The animal should associate the crate with something good: meals inside it, a familiar toy, a blanket that smells of home. A crate introduced the night before becomes a stress trap. Label the crate with the name, contact, a photo of the animal and a clearly visible live-animal sticker.

### Pet-friendly lodging and life at the destination

**TL;DR**: Pet-friendly hotels exist in every price tier, but the "pets welcome" label hides details: per-night fee, weight limit, maximum number of pets and a ban on leaving them alone in the room. Confirm the policy in writing before booking and plan the local logistics.

Arriving at the destination is only half the trip. Pet-friendly lodging has become standard at international chains, but the "pets welcome" label varies widely. Some hotels charge a flat fee per stay, others per night, and some ask for a refundable cleaning deposit. There are weight limits (often up to 10 or 20 kg), a maximum number of animals per room, and the near-universal rule of not leaving the pet alone in the room without notifying the front desk.

Beyond the hotel, think about daily logistics. Public transport with pets varies by city: many European metros accept small dogs in a bag and large dogs muzzled, while others restrict by time of day. Restaurants with outdoor seating usually welcome dogs across most of Europe. Research parks, dog areas and nearby veterinary clinics in advance, and carry the animal's paperwork on your phone and printed throughout the stay.

| Lodging item | What to confirm |
|---|---|
| Fee | Per night, per stay or deposit |
| Weight limit | Commonly 10 to 20 kg |
| Pet alone in room | Usually prohibited without notice |
| Common areas | Lobby, restaurant, elevator |
