Introduction

A microchip is your pet's "ID card" — the thread that ties all the paperwork together. But if that chip isn't ISO 11784/11785 standard, the reader at the destination border may not be able to scan it. Your pet can be turned away even if the vaccines and documents are all in order. This guide explains the four things Convey wants every owner to know to make sure your pet's chip will pass before the flight.

What ISO 11784/11785 actually is

ISO 11784 and 11785 are the international standards that define the data structure and communication method between the chip and the reader. In plain language, they're the "common language" that lets readers anywhere in the world correctly identify the same chip.

What a proper ISO chip looks like

Why this matters for flying

The World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA) recommends ISO chips so pets can move and be identified worldwide. Most destinations — UK, EU, Australia and beyond — require this standard.

AspectISO chip (FDX-B, 15 digits)Non-ISO chip
Readable at destinationUniversallyMay not scan
Border acceptancePassesRisk of rejection
If it doesn't workCarry your own reader, or re-chip
Convey team's advice: If your pet's existing chip isn't ISO, the safest path is to implant a new ISO chip and restart the vaccine timeline. The destination only counts the chip the reader can read.

The critical sequence: chip before rabies vaccine, always

This is the most common mistake. Nearly all destinations require the ISO chip to be in place before the rabies vaccine. The chip is what ties the vaccine and titer test back to your pet. If you vaccinate before chipping, that vaccine is invalid and has to be repeated (see our export documents checklist for details).

FAQ

Q: How do I tell if my pet's chip is ISO?
A: Check the digit count — ISO chips are 15 digits long. If it's 9 or 10 digits or has letters, it's probably not ISO. Your vet can scan and verify, or send the chip number to Convey for a check.
Q: Can the chip migrate? Will it cause scanning issues at the border?
A: Chips can shift slightly. We always recommend scanning to confirm it's still readable and matches the number in the paperwork before travel. We do this as a standard pre-flight check.
Q: If the existing chip is readable but not ISO, do I need to re-chip?
A: Some destinations let you bring your own reader. But for safety, implanting a new ISO chip is the lowest-risk path. You'll need to restart the vaccine timeline though.