Introduction

Exporting a pet from Thailand doesn't get stuck on "do you love your pet enough." It gets stuck on paperwork done in the wrong order — like getting the rabies vaccine before the microchip, which makes that vaccine invalid in the destination country's eyes. This guide from Convey lists all seven documents you need, in the correct sequence, so you can prepare everything in one pass.

The 7-document checklist

This is the core paperwork most destinations require (additional documents depend on the specific country).

#Document / StepIssued byCommon mistake
1ISO 11784/11785 microchipVetMust be implanted before the rabies vaccine
2Vaccination record (Rabies + core)VetDate must be after the chip implant date
3Rabies Titer blood test resultDestination-accredited labDrawn after vaccine, on the schedule
4Destination Import PermitDestination authoritySome countries take weeks to issue
5Health Certificate (in English)Government vet / DLDLimited validity; issue close to flight
6Export permit (Form R.9)DLD (Department of Livestock Development)Filed via the e-Movement system
7Owner identificationOwnerID card / passport / house registration

The order you can't reverse — the golden rule of exporting

The heart of pet export paperwork is the order of dates. Get the sequence wrong and the destination has every right to reject the entry.

1.1 Always implant the microchip first

The microchip is your pet's "ID card" — it ties every other document together. Nearly all destinations require the ISO chip to be implanted before the rabies vaccine. If you vaccinate first and chip later, that vaccine is treated as invalid and has to be repeated.

1.2 Vaccine after the chip, then the blood test

After the chip is in, get the rabies shot (your pet must be at least 12 weeks old). Then draw blood for the rabies titer, which must come back at ≥ 0.5 IU/mL to meet the international standard.

Golden rule from the Convey team: Chip → vaccine → blood test → wait per destination. This sequence can't be reversed, and it's the single biggest cause of delays we see.

The Thailand DLD process

Once the medical paperwork is done, the last step is filing with the Department of Livestock Development.

FAQ

Q: How long is the Health Certificate valid?
A: Generally issued close to the flight (within a few days to 10 days before, depending on destination). Schedule the inspection so it lines up with the flight — issued too early and it expires; too late and you risk missing the flight.
Q: If I vaccinated the rabies shot before chipping, what do I do?
A: Unfortunately you have to chip first, then re-vaccinate. The destination only counts vaccines administered after a chip is on record. This is why getting the sequence right at the start matters.
Q: Do all documents need to be in English?
A: The Health Certificate from DLD is issued in English already. Other documents may need certified translations depending on destination. Convey verifies this per country.
Q: Can I file e-Movement myself or do I need an agent?
A: Owners can file directly, but you need to understand the process and have documents in the correct order. Many use an agent to reduce the risk of paperwork errors that affect the flight date.