Your Go-To Guide for Completing International Health Certificates
Summer is here – and with it comes an uptick in international adventures. Countless pet parents are eager to bring their four-legged companions along for the journey. For veterinary teams, this means one thing: a surge in international health certificate (IHC) requests.
If your front desk is suddenly fielding questions like “Can I bring my dog with me to Italy?” or “How soon can I get papers for my cat to fly to Japan?” – you’re not alone. Summer is peak season for travel, and navigating the world of IHCs can be overwhelming without the right tools.
We took the time to create a step-by-step guide for tackling IHCs like a pro – so you can help pets travel safely and keep your clinic’s sanity intact.
Step 1: Decide if Your Clinic is Equipped to Offer IHCs
Let’s be honest: IHCs are time-consuming, high-stakes, and ever-changing. If your clinic doesn’t have the bandwidth to stay current, manage timelines, or absorb the liability, it’s okay not to offer them.
You can refer clients to a local USDA-accredited mobile vet or travel service instead. Better to say no than risk a pet being denied entry or quarantined abroad.
If you do offer them, make sure the certifying veterinarian is USDA-accredited. Without this accreditation, you legally cannot issue international certificates.
Step 2: Start Early – REALLY Early
The moment a client mentions international travel, gather:
- Destination country and expected travel dates
- Transit/layover countries (they may have separate rules)
- Travel type (personal vs. commercial, cargo vs. cabin)
Use the APHIS Pet Travel site to confirm country-specific rules. It’s a must-have resource.
Step 3: Educate Clients on Their Role & Costs
Your clinic can guide the process – but clients must own it. They’re ultimately responsible for ensuring:
- Destination country rules are followed
- Travel dates are accurate and communicated
- Airline and customs documents match the IHC
Tip: Provide a “Client Responsibilities” handout that includes key dates, deadlines, overall costs, and a checklist. Make it clear: mistakes can result in denied entry, quarantines, or canceled flights.
Step 4: Understand the Requirements
Each country has its own set of rules. Some common elements include:
- Rabies vaccine (often must be given >21 days before travel, but check every destination for specific requirements)
- Rabies titer (required for countries like the EU, Australia, and Japan)
- Internal and external parasite treatment
- Microchip compliance [Ex: must be ISO-compliant (15-digit, non-encrypted), must be placed before any rabies vaccine used for travel]
Timing is critical: one wrong date and the process resets – or worse, the pet is rejected at the border.
Step 5: Complete the Certificate Perfectly
Use the official APHIS forms only. Your certificate must be:
- Fully typed or clearly printed in black ink
- Free of white-out or corrections
- Exactly matched to vaccine and microchip records
- Signed and dated correctly (dates should be formatted according to the requirements of the destination country (DD/MM/YYYY or MM/DD/YYYY)
Always double-check, and then have a second team member check it again. Mistakes = delays = stressed-out clients missing flights.
Step 6: USDA Endorsement
Most countries require USDA endorsement of the certificate.
- VEHCS (Veterinary Export Health Certificate System) is the preferred digital submission method when eligible
- Some countries still require wet ink signatures and mailed documents
- Schedule overnight shipping both ways if submitting hard copies
Summer backlog warning: Allow extra time – USDA offices and couriers may be backed up.
Step 7: Set Expectations & Charge Accordingly
Make no mistake, IHCs are advanced-level veterinary work.
You’re dealing with:
- International legal documents
- Country-specific regulations
- High client emotion and travel pressure
Set clear expectations up front. Charge a fair price that reflects the time, risk, and responsibility involved.
Pro Tips for Busy Summer Clinic:
- Create an “International Travel Packet” with a checklist, questionnaire, and FAQs
- Assign a designated “IHC coordinator” on your team to manage cases, make sure IHC appointments are only scheduled on days the accredited vet and the IHC coordinator are there
- Recheck requirements every time – even if you’ve done the destination before
- Stay up to date with APHIS announcements – regulations change often
In Summary:
International health certificates are detailed, deadline-driven, and high-stakes. With travel peaking during the summer months, now is the time to review your clinic’s process – or your decision to offer IHCs at all.
If you do choose to provide them, make sure you’re equipped, thorough, and clear about what your clients must do. When it all comes together, you’re not just signing papers – you’re reuniting families, supporting military moves, and helping pets explore the world safely.
Here’s to safe skies and wagging tails this summer!
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You’re the Traffic Controller)
Triage: Where Medicine Meets Mayhem (and You're the Traffic Controller)Working in vet med means you wear a lot of hats - diagnostician, counselor, detective, animal whisperer. But one of the most underrated (and most stressful) roles? Triage Officer of Chaos. Whether...
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDV
Bloat in the Building: What Every Veterinary Team Member Should Know About GDVWhen a GDV case hits the clinic, the whole atmosphere changes. The clock ticks louder and the pace quickens. Everyone - from reception to recovery - has a role to play. Gastric...
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med Dependence
Fourth of July: Celebrating our Vet Med DependenceThis Independence Day, let's be honest: We're not exactly off the grid grilling hot dogs in flag shorts. Some of us are working. Some of us are on call. Some of us are pretending to enjoy fireworks while...
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear it
Vet Med Affirmations: Because You Deserve to Hear itWorking in vet med is not for the faint of heart; it's for the fierce, the compassionate, the caffeine-fueled warriors who do it all while dodging claws, cleaning "surprises," and explaining again why heartworm...
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail Flop
Wag Interrupted: The Tale of the Summer Tail FlopIf your summer schedule is filling up with dogs who suddenly "won't wag their tail," you're not imagining it - swimmer's tail season is officially upon us. Every year, as the weather warms up and the lakes and...
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to Humans
Things We Say to Pets That Would Get us Fired if Said to HumansLet's be honest: working in vet med means having entire conversations with patients who can't talk back (well...except for that one Dachshund, and we don't talk about him anymore). Over time, we develop a...