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Bringing a pet to Thailand · By country

Bringing a pet to Thailand from Australia

Australia to Thailand is manageable. It is the journey back to Australia that owners must understand before they ever leave.

Last updated 21 May 2026

Rules change — verify before you act

This guide was last reviewed in May 2026. Thailand’s Department of Livestock Development (DLD), airlines and origin-country authorities change their rules without notice. Treat this as an orientation, then confirm every current requirement with the DLD, your airline and your origin-country authority before you book or travel.

Australia to Thailand

Heading to Thailand, the steps are the standard ones — microchip, rabies, other vaccinations, the health certificate endorsed by Australian authorities, and the DLD import permit. This direction is the straightforward part.

The return to Australia is the hard part

Australia has some of the strictest pet biosecurity rules in the world, and Thailand is not on its list of approved countries for direct pet import. In practice, bringing a pet from Thailand to Australia means a long, structured process: a rabies titer test, an import permit, a period spent in an approved country to qualify, and a mandatory stay in the government quarantine facility on arrival in Australia. It commonly takes six months or more of planning.

If you are an Australian who may one day return with your pet, do not improvise this. Speak to the Australian Department of Agriculture and a specialist pet relocation agent early, and read our guide to taking a pet out of Thailand.

Frequently asked

Can I fly my pet straight from Thailand to Australia?

Generally not directly — Thailand is not an approved country for direct pet import to Australia. The route usually involves time in an approved country first, plus quarantine on arrival. It is a long process; get specialist advice early.

How long does the return to Australia take to arrange?

Owners commonly report six months or more of preparation. Start with the Australian Department of Agriculture and a relocation agent well before you plan to travel.

Editorial and informational only. PattayaPets is not a veterinary practice and does not give veterinary advice. Pet import and export rules change without notice — always confirm the current requirements with the official source before you act. Always consult a qualified veterinarian about your pet’s health.