Introduction

The travel crate is your pet's "temporary home" for the entire flight — and it's the item airlines inspect most closely. A crate too small by even an inch can be rejected at check-in. This guide from Convey explains the IATA crate standard, how to measure your pet for the right size, and the rejection checklist that airlines run through.

What the IATA crate standard is

IATA Live Animals Regulations (LAR) is the international rulebook most airlines follow. It specifies materials, dimensions, ventilation, and structural strength. Acceptable materials include metal, hard plastic, wood, or welded wire mesh of sufficient strength (twin-shell plastic crates are the most popular for typical dogs and cats).

Note: For breeds classified as particularly strong or aggressive, you may need a reinforced crate per CR82 specifications. Convey will flag this if your case applies.

The 3-measurement formula for sizing the crate

The right crate is sized by measuring your pet, then calculating crate dimensions — not guessed from body weight. Measure these three values while your pet is standing.

MeasurementHow to measureCalculation
A = LengthFrom nose tip to base of tailCrate length ≥ A + front leg length
B = HeightFloor to top of head or ear tipsCrate height ≥ B (head/ears must not touch ceiling)
C = WidthWidest point of bodyCrate width ≥ C × 2

The core criterion is that your pet must be able to stand, sit, turn around, and lie down comfortably in a natural posture, with no head or ear contact against the ceiling.

Ventilation

The crate must have ventilation openings totaling at least ~16% of the wall area, with vents on all four sides. The openings must be small enough that nose and paws cannot poke through.

Rejection checklist — what airlines look for

Before you reach the counter, verify all six of these.

Getting your pet used to the crate before flying

A compliant crate isn't enough on its own. If your pet is anxious about the crate, the Convey team recommends acclimation weeks in advance.

FAQ

Q: Is it better to buy a bigger crate for extra space?
A: Not necessarily. A crate that's too large lets your pet bump around during turbulence and adds weight/size that increases cargo cost. The right size — per the formula — is both safer and more cost-effective.
Q: What about brachycephalic breeds (Pug, French Bulldog, Persian)?
A: Flat-faced breeds have harder time breathing. Many airlines recommend or require a crate one size larger than standard for better ventilation, and some airlines have additional restrictions. Verify before booking.
Q: Can I use a regular plastic crate from a pet store?
A: Only if it's specifically labeled IATA compliant and meets the size, ventilation, and structural requirements. Show-style or car-style crates may not pass. Have the team verify before buying.
Q: I measured my pet but I'm not sure about sizing — what now?
A: Send your three measurements (length, height, width) and your pet's weight to Convey. We'll recommend a specific crate model that meets airline requirements.