Actually, the requirements from the Canadian Government differ depending on the country of origin of the dog. We are also planning to travel with our dog but because of his size, he cannot travel in the cabin with us. We have to show a rabies vaccination certificate and that's it. The Veterinary passport is a requirement in our home country to be able to take him out of the country."Of the documents, you will need to have:
An international veterinary passport
A rabies vaccination certificate
A real rabies antibody serology test.
It's also worth taking a toy on board to keep the dog from getting bored and howling. I would suggest https://www.doggietoys.deals/product/large-cotton-rope-ball-toy/ Large Cotton Rope Ball Toy. You can play on board in a corner or a seat you have a ticket for. In Canada, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) oversees the importation of animals. If an animal arriving in Canada does not meet import requirements, the CFIA will inspect it and usually order the animal removed from Canada."
https://inspection.canada.ca/animal-health/terrestrial-animals/diseases/reportable/rabies/countries-at-high-risk-for-dog-rabies/eng/1656375417730/1656375418777Is anyone aware of the new restrictions set by the government of Canada to travel with dogs from certain "high-risk" countries? I am planning to travel to Honduras in a few months and bring with me a dog I'm adopting, but I'm not sure what are the restrictions with this new rule.
See the link I posted above. The change was for dogs classified as commercial.I traveled a month ago from Chile and the officer barely saw my documents and let me go. Not sure about the new restrictions. I came prepared with my dog's vaccination certificate, his veterinary notes and everything. I had no problem at all.
This is my situation: my parents have two small dogs that they can't take care of anymore. So I want to bring both dogs with me to Canada. They've been in the family for a long time, I have lots of pictures with them so it wouldn't be hard to prove they're personal and not commercial dogs.If you are bringing a dog to Canada to give to someone else, to foster, to adopt out, to breed, or for other commercial purposes, change your selection from "personal" to "commercial" to get the correct import requirements.
You mean August 2022, right?I traveled with a dog too back in August 2021 and had no issues at all.
There's a section that says:
This is my situation: my parents have two small dogs that they can't take care of anymore. So I want to bring both dogs with me to Canada. They've been in the family for a long time, I have lots of pictures with them so it wouldn't be hard to prove they're personal and not commercial dogs.
Now the thing is that airlines usually allow only one pet per traveler, which means I can't bring both of them with me on one single trip. Both my parents have visitor visas, so I was thinking that one of them could travel with me so we can bring both dogs. But I'm not sure if doing this would be considered as a commercial dog as either of my parents who is transporting the other dog would be "giving it to someone else", which is me. The dogs would be coming from Honduras, so they would be banned as commercial dogs.
I'm also not sure if my parents can come to Canada as visitors with dogs coming from a banned country.
I'm not sure if that's how it works.
No, August 2021. That's when I first arrived in Canada.You mean August 2022, right?