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Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales)
Pet Types
ferret Regulations
Vaccinations
Your ferret must be vaccinated against rabies before travel. The first (primary) course can be one or more doses. You must wait at least 21 full days after the first rabies vaccination (or last of the primary course) before travel. Boosters must be kept up to date.
- Ferret is at least 12 weeks old at time of vaccination
- Microchip before/at same visit as rabies vaccination
- Wait at least 21 full days after first/primary vaccination (Day 1 is the day after vaccination)
- Use an inactivated or recombinant vaccine approved in country of use
- Keep boosters current; restart primary course if coverage lapses
- If traveling from a ‘not listed’ country: rabies antibody (≥0.5 IU/ml) blood test at EU-approved lab ≥30 days post-vaccination, then 3-month wait from blood draw
Certifications
Document depends on origin: valid EU pet passport (from EU or certain territories), GB pet health certificate, or GB AHC (issued in GB in last 4 months) for travel from EU. GB pet passports issued before 1 January 2021 remain valid.
- EU pet passport (EU/qualifying territories) OR
- Great Britain pet health certificate OR
- Animal Health Certificate (AHC) issued in GB in last 4 months (from EU) OR
- GB pet passport issued before 1 January 2021
Microchip
Ferret must be microchipped before or at the same time as rabies vaccination. ISO 11784/11785 chips are read on approved routes; if unreadable, entry can be refused or quarantine imposed.
Origin Requirements
No origin-specific requirements for this pet.
More Info
No tapeworm treatment requirement for ferrets. Arrival checks apply; pets can be quarantined or refused entry if documentation/preparation is incomplete.