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Taking a pet out of Thailand

Taking a pet from Thailand to the UK

The UK treats Thailand as an ‘unlisted’ country, which makes the rabies titer test and its waiting period the centre of your timeline.

Last updated 21 May 2026

Rules change — verify before you act

This guide was last reviewed in May 2026. Export rules — Thai DLD procedures, destination-country requirements, airline policies and CDC/APHA rules — change without notice. Use this as orientation, then confirm every current requirement with the DLD and the destination country’s authority before booking.

The rabies titer test and the three-month wait

To enter the UK from Thailand your pet needs a current rabies vaccination and a rabies titer (blood) test taken at least 30 days after vaccination. Then comes the part that catches people out: you must wait three months from the date of the blood sample before the pet can travel to the UK.

If you did the titer test before you ever left for Thailand and it has stayed valid, you may avoid that wait. If not, build three months into your plan.

Tapeworm and other requirements

Dogs additionally need a tapeworm treatment administered by a vet within a set window (commonly 24–120 hours) before arrival in the UK. Your pet also needs the microchip and the correct UK entry documentation, and must travel on an approved route and carrier into the UK.

Plan the route

The UK only permits pets to enter via approved transport routes and carriers. Confirm the current rules with the UK government and choose an airline and route that satisfies them — a relocation agent is genuinely useful here.

Frequently asked

How long does it take to move a pet from Thailand to the UK?

Plan for several months if the titer test still has to be done — the three-month wait after the blood sample is unavoidable. If a valid titer test is already in place, it can be considerably faster.

Does my dog need a tapeworm treatment?

Yes — dogs entering the UK need a vet-administered tapeworm treatment within a set time window before arrival. Confirm the current window with the UK authorities.

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.