Animal transports
Travelling with pets: Rules to keep in mind
Your pet can join you when you go on holiday to another EU country, but there are certain rules to bear in mind. Read on to find out more, Society.
Thanks to EU rules on travelling with pets, people are free to move with their furry friend within the EU. Make sure your pet has the following before you leave on holiday:
- Identification via a registered microchip or a readable tattoo, if applied before 3 July 2011
- A pet passport proving that they have been vaccinated against rabies and are fit to travel
- Dogs travelling to Finland, Ireland, Malta, or Norway must be treated against the Echinococcus multilocularis tapeworm
In general you can travel with a maximum of five animals. European pet passports are issued for dogs, cats and ferrets only. If you wish to travel with other pets, you should check the entry conditions of your destination country.
Read more about the EU's animal welfare laws
Travelling with your pet
- Rules for travelling with dogs, cats and ferrets
- Animal welfare and protection
- Animal welfare and protection: EU laws explained (videos)
- Animal transport: systematic failures revealed (interview)
- Animal transport: Parliament wants better protection
- Why MEPs want a global ban on animal testing for cosmetics
- Pet trafficking: measures against the illegal puppy business
- Travelling with pets: Rules to keep in mind
- Veterinary medicines: fighting antibiotic resistance
- How to preserve biodiversity: EU policy (video)
- Endangered species in Europe: Facts and figures (infographic)
- What’s behind the decline in bees and other pollinators? (infographic)
- Protecting pollinators: What the Parliament wants (video)
- Key facts about Europe's honey market (infographic)
- Protecting bees and fighting fake honey imports in Europe
- Bees and beekeepers: MEPs set out EU-wide long-term survival strategy
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