International pet travel — proving rabies immunity
A handful of countries are officially rabies-free — Japan, Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand, and most of the EU. Their border rules are strict for one reason: to keep rabies out. A rabies vaccine certificate isn't enough on its own. They want lab proof that your pet's immune system actually responded to the shot.
That proof is the FAVN test (Fluorescent Antibody Virus Neutralization), also called a rabies titer test. The internationally accepted pass mark is 0.5 IU/mL or higher — the antibody level that says "this animal is protected."
What has to happen before the blood draw
Before any blood can be drawn for FAVN, your pet needs:
- An ISO-standard microchip implanted
- A rabies vaccine that's at least 30 days old at the time of the draw
- For some destinations, two rabies vaccines on record before the sample can be collected
Waiting period by destination
Each country sets its own waiting period after the blood is drawn. This is the part that catches most pet owners off guard — the rules vary widely.
| Destination | Wait after blood draw |
|---|---|
| 🇪🇺 EU countries | 3 calendar months (90 days) |
| 🇯🇵 Japan | 180 days minimum |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | 180 days minimum |
| 🇰🇷 South Korea | No wait — travel as soon as the report arrives |
| 🇮🇩 Indonesia | No wait — travel as soon as the report arrives |
Plenty of other countries require a FAVN report but don't impose a waiting period — South Korea and Indonesia being the most common examples. The titer just needs to be on hand at travel time.
Frequently asked questions
Plenty of other countries require the titer report but no waiting period — for example, South Korea and Indonesia. Travel as soon as the report is in your hand.
Ask Convey for a quote tailored to your case before committing.
Other countries cap validity at 1 to 2 years, counted from the day blood was drawn to the day of travel.
Not sure if your existing titer is still valid? Send the report and vaccine record to Convey and we'll check it for you.
If your pet's travel plans cover multiple countries — or if the destination is in the strict group — it's safer to send the sample to a top European lab from the start, so the result is accepted everywhere.
In short
A rabies titer test sounds straightforward, but the paperwork details matter a lot — wrong order, wrong lab, or one missed booster, and you start over.
If you want to be sure the FAVN report will actually work for your destination, send the details to Convey before you start. Better to spend ten minutes upfront than three months redoing it.