If you're going abroad with your pet cat, dog or ferret, the Pet Travel Scheme (PETS) could help avoid long quarantine periods when you return. Working guide dogs and hearing dogs may also travel on the scheme.
The scheme is designed to stop the spread of rabies and other diseases while still allowing pets to travel.
The UK has been free of rabies for many years, but mammals are still at risk in some other countries. All rabies-susceptible animals entering the UK have to spend six months in quarantine, unless they arrive under and meet all the conditions of PETS.
Most European Union (EU) countries and many outside the EU have joined PETS. You can check details and the full procedure for preparing your pet on the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) website.
To be eligible, your cat, dog or ferret must:
Cats and dogs must also:
You must also ensure that your pet:
You must book your return journey into the UK with one of the many PETS-approved carriers, on a PETS-approved route. There is only a limited amount of space and it is allocated on a first-come-first-served basis.
You must book in advance or your pet will not be allowed to travel.
These tips can help make your pet's journey as comfortable as possible:
When returning to the UK, transport staff will check your pet passport to ensure the requirements of the scheme have been met. If there is missing paperwork or your pet has not been prepared correctly it may be:
The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association in partnership with
has produced a set of guidelines for registered assistance dog owners wishing to use PETS.
Pets entering the UK on airlines under the Pet Travel Scheme must normally be carried in the hold. However, guide dogs or other assistance dogs are allowed to travel in the cabin with their owner on certain approved routes.
The disabled people section also gives more information on assistance dogs.