HomeGuides › Pet quarantine countries: where pets are held on arrival

Pet quarantine countries: where pets are held on arrival

Prepared by the Animals Productions editorial team. See about us and our editorial standards.

Most destinations no longer quarantine healthy, fully documented pets — but a handful still do, and a few enforce long waiting periods that act like quarantine before you even travel. The key is that proper preparation (microchip, vaccination, titer test, permits) usually shortens or removes on-arrival quarantine entirely.

Where quarantine still applies

Strict, rabies-free destinations are the ones to watch. Australia requires a minimum stay at a government quarantine facility on arrival. Japan can hold non-compliant pets for up to 180 days, but compliant pets clear in hours. Singapore, New Zealand and Hawaii also run quarantine programs that shrink dramatically when paperwork is perfect.

Two kinds of 'waiting'

How to minimise it

Start months ahead, get the titer test done early, file import permits on time, and make sure every certificate is endorsed correctly. A single missing signature can turn a few hours into weeks.

Each country page lists the exact quarantine days (or 'none') for that destination.

Helpful for the trip

Affiliate partners — only what's genuinely useful.

We may earn a commission from partner links, at no extra cost to you. Learn more.

FAQ

Can I avoid quarantine completely?

In many countries yes — if every requirement is met in advance. In strict rabies-free countries a minimum stay may still apply regardless.

Does quarantine mean my pet is locked away for months?

Rarely now. For compliant pets it's often hours to a few days. Long holds usually mean a requirement was missed.

Is the titer-test wait the same as quarantine?

No — that wait happens at home before travel, but it has the same effect of delaying when you can fly.

Popular routes

Updated 2026-06-20