Pet Transport from Czech Republic to Norway
Regulations sourced from DEFRA, USDA APHIS, DAFF and other official authorities. How we source our data →
Moving a pet from Czech Republic to Norway involves more paperwork than most owners expect.
This route is moderately involved, with a clear checklist to follow. Start preparations at least 20 weeks before your travel date – some steps have fixed waiting periods that cannot be shortened. A rabies titre test is required, which adds a mandatory waiting period after your pet’s vaccination. You cannot speed this up. Norway restricts certain breeds. Check the breed restriction section below before making any travel arrangements.
Getting the timing right is critical. Work backwards from your travel date and add a buffer.
The Czech Republic to Norway process
Responsible: Your veterinarian
Responsible: Your veterinarian
Responsible: Your veterinarian + approved laboratory
Responsible: You (or your pet transport agent)
Responsible: Official veterinarian
Responsible: You + airline check-in/cargo desk
Norway: entry requirements
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Microchip | Required (ISO 11784/11785). Before or on same day as first rabies vaccination |
| Rabies vaccination | Required. Minimum age: 12 weeks. 21-day wait after vaccination before travel. Same rules as EU. 21-day wait after first primary vaccination. |
| Rabies titre test | Required for: Pets from non-listed countries. Not required for: Pets from EU member states and listed countries (UK, etc.). Minimum: 0.5 IU/ml. 90-day wait from test date before entry |
| Quarantine | No routine quarantine for pets arriving with correct documents. |
| Import permit | No import permit needed for compliant pets from listed countries. |
| Health certificate | Required. EU Pet Passport or AHC. Issued by: Official veterinarian. Valid for 10 days from issue. EU pet passport or AHC accepted. |
Export requirements
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Export permit | {'required': False} |
| Health certificate | {'required': True, 'name': 'EU Pet Passport or AHC', 'issued_by': 'SVA-authorised official vet'} |
What this route typically costs
| 1 | Airline cargo or cabin fees (varies by carrier, route, pet weight, and crate size) |
| 2 | IATA-compliant travel crate (purchase or hire) |
| 3 | Veterinary fees: vaccinations, microchipping, health certificate |
| 4 | Rabies titre test laboratory fee |
| 5 | Pet transport agent fee (recommended for complex routes) |
Read before you book
Norway breed rules
Airlines on this route
What to know about the Czech Republic to Norway route
Compared to some international pet transport routes, Czech Republic to Norway is manageable. That said, every country’s rules are different and the timing requirements are strict.
EEA/Schengen member but not EU. Norway follows EU pet travel rules for dogs, cats, and ferrets. Part 1 listed country for UK entry.
Practical advice for shipping your pet from Czech Republic
Microchip first, then vaccinate. The microchip must be implanted before any rabies vaccination for the vaccination to count. It’s the most common and costly mistake people make.
Book the titre test laboratory well in advance. Approved labs have limited appointment slots and the blood sample processing takes time. Don’t leave this to the last few weeks.
Get the health certificate from an official (government-approved) veterinarian, not just your regular vet. Some countries have strict requirements about who can sign the certificate. Check the destination authority’s approved list.
If this is your first international pet move, consider using a registered pet transport agent. They handle the documentation, airline booking, crate sizing, and can troubleshoot issues. IPATA-registered agents are the recognised standard.
Common questions
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