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Frequently asked questions
AHC Questions
EHC Questions
OV66 Questions
General Information
An Animal Health Certificate (AHC) is an official veterinary document required for dogs, cats, and ferrets travelling from Great Britain to the EU or Northern Ireland. It confirms that your pet is microchipped, has a valid rabies vaccination, and meets all pet travel regulations. AHCs are issued by Official Veterinarians.
You need an AHC when travelling from Great Britain to the EU and some other European countries unless your pet holds a valid EU-issued pet passport with an in-date rabies vaccination. UK-issued pet passports are no longer valid for travel.
You can use one but there is a cheaper alternative.
Pets travelling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland may travel without an Animal Health Certificate under the Pet Travel Document (PTD) scheme. This applies only to pets normally resident in Great Britain and provided they:
• Travel directly to Northern Ireland, and
• Do not travel onwards to Ireland or any other country.
Pets normally resident in Northern Ireland do not require a PTD for travel within Northern Ireland.
If your pet will be travelling onward from Northern Ireland to Ireland or elsewhere, an Animal Health Certificate or EU pet passport will be required.
Not always. An AHC is not required if the EU pet passport was issued in an EU country and the rabies vaccination recorded in the passport is still valid. If the rabies vaccination has expired, an AHC will be required.
An AHC is valid for:
• 10 days from the date of issue for entry into the EU and other accepted European countries.
• Up to 4 months for onward travel within the EU
• Up to 4 months for return to Great Britain
This is provided the rabies vaccination remains valid.
Yes. An Animal Health Certificate is single-use, meaning a new AHC is required for each trip from Great Britain to the EU and other accepted European countries.
Dogs travelling to certain countries, including Ireland, Northern Ireland, Norway, Finland, and Malta, must receive tapeworm treatment 24–120 hours before entry into those countries.
When returning to Great Britain from any country other than Ireland, Northern Ireland, Norway, Finland, or Malta, dogs must also receive tapeworm treatment 24–120 hours before re-entry to the UK, with the treatment administered and recorded by a veterinarian on the AHC.
Yes. An AHC can be issued on the day of travel, provided all requirements are met, including a valid rabies vaccination and microchip.
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