Germany pet travel requirements
for dogs, cats, and ferrets
Germany follows standard EU pet travel rules: microchip, valid rabies vaccination, and the right travel document. There is no Germany tapeworm requirement for routine entry.
What your pet needs for Germany entry
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1
Microchip (ISO 11784/11785)
Must be implanted before or on the same day as the rabies vaccination.
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2
Rabies vaccination — 21-day wait for primary vaccines
Boosters given within validity have no wait. Lapsed boosters restart the 21-day clock.
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3
EU Pet Passport or Animal Health Certificate (AHC)
EU/EEA-origin pets need a valid EU Pet Passport; arrivals from other countries need a government-endorsed AHC issued within 10 days of travel.
Check your compliance
This calculator provides guidance based on EU Regulation 576/2013. Not veterinary or legal advice.
Travelling to Germany with your pet
Germany is one of Europe's most popular destinations for travelling with pets, whether you're heading to the Rhine Valley, the Bavarian Alps, or one of its many dog-friendly cities. The paperwork is straightforward: a valid EU Pet Passport (for EU/EEA pets) or an Animal Health Certificate (AHC), plus proof of a current rabies vaccination.
The 21-day waiting period applies only to primary vaccinations — if your pet's booster was given before the previous vaccination expired, you're clear to travel immediately after the jab. There is no tapeworm treatment required for Germany.
Germany's well-maintained dog-friendly infrastructure — train carriages, parks, and many restaurants with outdoor terraces — makes it easy to include your pet in any trip. Always carry your EU Pet Passport or AHC at the border. Germany applies EU Regulation 576/2013 directly as an EU member state.