TLDR: Japan's Animal Quarantine Service makes no provision for emotional support animals or psychiatric service dogs. Every dog and cat entering Japan must complete the full standard import process including the 180-day waiting period, regardless of their designation, certification, or legal status in the United States. The only confirmed exception to the 180-day wait is for US military members with PCS orders moving into on-base housing.
In the United States, emotional support animals and psychiatric service dogs have specific legal protections under federal housing and disability law. Those protections do not travel with your pet to Japan. Japan's Animal Quarantine Service does not provide any exemption from the standard import process for ESAs or psychiatric service dogs. Every dog and cat entering Japan, regardless of their role, certification, or US legal status, must complete the full standard import process with no shortened timeline.
Japan's pet import system is built around one question: has the animal completed the required health and documentation steps? The answer is either yes or no. The AQS Import Guide PDF and AQS main import page make no provision for emotional support animals, psychiatric service dogs, or any designation beyond the standard import categories. The only confirmed exception to Japan's standard import process is the US military PCS exception for personnel moving into on-base housing.
Every dog and cat entering Japan from the United States must complete the following steps in order regardless of their designation:
A dog or cat that arrives without completing these steps will be placed in detention quarantine for up to 180 days at the importer's expense regardless of their designation.
The confusion is understandable. In the US, the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Fair Housing Act give ESAs and service dogs specific accommodation rights. Owners who have navigated US systems with their ESA or service dog are accustomed to their animal's designation carrying legal weight.
Japan's import system is entirely separate from US disability law. It is a public health and biosecurity framework, not an accommodation framework. The 180-day waiting period exists to protect Japan's rabies-free status, one of the strictest biosafety standards in the world. Japan applies that standard uniformly to every animal regardless of origin, designation, or purpose.
Guide dogs for the visually impaired may have different arrangements under specific AQS provisions or bilateral agreements. If you are moving to Japan with a trained guide dog, contact AQS directly before beginning the standard import process to confirm what applies to your specific situation.
The practical reality for owners of ESAs and psychiatric service dogs moving to Japan is that the timeline is the same as for any other pet, a minimum of six months from the titer blood draw date, and typically seven to eight months from the start of the process. The earlier you begin, the more flexibility you have in your travel planning.
Many owners choose to move to Japan first and have their pet follow once all requirements are complete. This avoids the stress of coordinating a complex move while managing the import process simultaneously and eliminates the risk of detention quarantine due to a documentation error.
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Japan's AQS does not recognize ESA designations. ESAs must complete the full standard import process including the 180-day waiting period.
No. AQS explicitly does not recognize psychiatric service dogs, including those used for PTSD, autism, emotional disorders, or epilepsy, as assistance dogs. Your dog must complete the full standard import process regardless of their certification or training.
The only confirmed exception to Japan's 180-day waiting period is for US military members with PCS orders moving into on-base housing. No other exemption is documented in the AQS Import Guide PDF or AQS main import page.
Your pet will be placed in detention quarantine at an AQS facility for up to 180 days at the importer's expense. The same conditions and costs apply as for any other pet.
Guide dogs for the visually impaired may have different arrangements. Contact AQS directly before beginning the import process to confirm what applies to your specific situation.