Here’s the latest on EU pet passport rules as of April 2026.
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What changed for travel into the EU: EU pet passports issued by EU member states are no longer valid for travel from Great Britain to the EU for non-commercial trips as of April 22, 2026. UK residents must use an Animal Health Certificate (AHC) and ensure all pet data (microchip, rabies vaccination, etc.) aligns with EU requirements. This means if you’re in the UK (or are travelling from GB), you’ll need AHCs for each trip rather than relying on an EU passport you might have used before.[3][7]
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Where the changes apply: The rule targets non-commercial movements (holidays, visits) and focuses on tighter documentation, health certification, and traceability at EU borders for dogs, cats, and ferrets. Some EU-initiated databases and pre-registration concepts are being rolled out in parallel to improve cross-border checks, with full implementation extending over several years from 2025 onward.[1][8][3]
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Practical steps if you’re travelling from the UK to the EU with a pet:
- Microchip the pet and confirm rabies vaccination timing (rabies certificate up-to-date).
- Obtain an official Animal Health Certificate (AHC) for each journey, ensuring it covers microchip and vaccination details.
- Be aware of any origin-specific requirements (some routes may need additional checks or paperwork). Agencies and government portals emphasize planning ahead because the transition is phased and some elements remain in flux until 2028.[7][1][3]
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What about moving within the EU or from other non-EU countries: The EU is moving toward a centralized, more digital system for pet health data and cross-border checks. For pets entering from non-EU countries, authorities may require health certificates, vaccination records, and, in some cases, waiting periods or additional testing depending on origin and health status.[8][1]
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UK and EU official guidance: The UK government and the European Commission have published guidance clarifying the new format (AHC for GB residents; EU passports not valid for GB-to-EU travel) and timelines for gradual rollout. Check the GOV.UK page and EU travel pages for the most current templates and requirements before booking travel.[7][8]
Illustration: If you previously relied on an EU pet passport for a GB-to-EU trip, plan to switch to an AHC model per trip, starting with microchip and rabies validation, and coordinate with a certified vet to issue the AHC close to travel date.[3][7]
Citations:
- No-more-pet-passports coverage and GB-to-EU applicability.[3]
- UK GOV guidance on new EU rules for GB residents.[7]
- EU travel guidance on pet documents and health certificates.[8]
Sources
Are you planning a trip to the European Union with your pet? Although navigating the EU Pet Passport application procedure may appear complicated, it is not!If you're headed to the European Union with your furry friend, proper paperwork matters. The EU Pet Passport guarantees your pet meets all EU travel requirements. Dive into our 2025 guide to learn how to apply for EU Pet Passport online and make your pet's travel a breeze before choosing pet transport service..Your Pet's Ticket to European A
www.execpets.co.ukAnyone travelling into the EU with pet dogs, cats and ferrets will need new documents, under rules which come in to force on Wednesday. ITV National News
www.itv.comTravelling with your dog across Europe? 🐾 This guide makes pet paperwork easy – from rules to vet visits and passport tips.
petabroad.euFollowing Brexit, the UK left the scheme in January 2021 with Britons needing to get a vet's certificate
www.gbnews.comTravelling with your pets in the EU? Find out which documents you need to take, including EU pet passports and animal health certificates.
commission.europa.euRules for travelling with dogs, cats and ferrets in the EU and to the EU from abroad; information on pet passports and EU animal health certificate; information on other pets; rules for entry to the EU from a non-EU country.
europa.euThe changes apply to non-commercial movements of dogs, cats and ferrets
www.gov.ukBrussels has tightened up the rules, ferreting out animal owners who live in Britain
www.independent.co.ukNew EU rules are reshaping how dogs, cats and ferrets travel across borders, tightening health checks and traceability while phasing in a more digital, data-driven system.
www.thetraveler.org