Introduction

Moving your pet to Ireland follows the EU Pet Travel Scheme, like all 27 EU member states (plus Switzerland through harmonization). The basics are the same — ISO microchip, rabies vaccine, FAVN titer, the 3-month wait, and the EU Health Certificate. What differs is the airport, the verification agency, and a few country-specific details. This guide covers what you need to know for Ireland specifically.

The EU baseline — what every EU country requires

Because Thailand is a non-listed third country, the EU treats pets from Thailand under the strictest path:

Ireland-specific details

AspectDetail
Entry airportDublin (DUB)
Verifying agencyDAFM (Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine)
Quarantine on arrival?No, if all EU baseline conditions met
RoutingMost cases route via London (GVA-equivalent) before Dublin.

Ireland is strict on timing: tapeworm treatment 24–120 hours before entry is mandatory for dogs.

Convey team's note: The EU baseline is uniform — once you're set up for one EU country, you could redirect to another with minimal additional paperwork. The choice of destination mostly affects the airport and the routing.

Timeline summary

StepTime
Microchip + rabies vaccineDay 0
FAVN blood draw (≥ 30 days after vaccine)+30 days minimum
3-month wait (counted from lab arrival date)+90 days from lab arrival
EU Health Certificate issuance≤ 10 days before flight
Total minimum~4-5 months from start to flight

FAQ

Q: How long does the FAVN titer + 3-month wait actually take for Ireland?
A: Plan at least 4-5 months from start to flight. Microchip and vaccine prep takes 1-2 months, then blood draw, then the mandatory 3-month wait counted from the lab arrival date. DAFM won't accept entry until the wait period is complete.
Q: Do I need to file paperwork with DAFM in advance?
A: Yes. The EU Health Certificate has to be issued in Thailand close to the flight, and DAFM verifies it on arrival. Some countries also want advance notification.
Q: What about quarantine?
A: With complete paperwork and the 3-month wait satisfied, there's no quarantine in Ireland. Detention only happens when documents or timing don't meet requirements.