TLDR: Singapore requires a physical ink signature and embossed seal from a USDA APHIS Veterinary Medical Officer on Section IV of the health certificate. VEHCS can be used by the veterinarian to submit the certificate to USDA for endorsement, but USDA must ink-sign and emboss the paper original. A digitally endorsed certificate is not accepted. The ink-signed paper original must physically accompany the pet on the flight to Singapore.
The United States Department of Agriculture offers a digital endorsement system called VEHCS, the Veterinary Export Health Certification System. For many countries, USDA can endorse health certificates digitally through VEHCS and return them electronically. Singapore is not one of those countries. For Singapore, USDA must physically ink-sign and emboss the paper health certificate. The endorsed paper original must travel with your pet. A digitally endorsed certificate is not accepted at CAPQ regardless of its content.
The Singapore health certificate must bear a physical ink signature from a USDA APHIS Veterinary Medical Officer on Section IV of the certificate. The same VMO must apply an embossed seal to the document. The ink-signed, embossed paper original is the only form Singapore accepts at CAPQ inspection.
USDA-accredited veterinarians can use VEHCS to electronically complete and submit the health certificate to USDA for endorsement. That part of the process is acceptable. The distinction is in what USDA returns: for Singapore, USDA must ink-sign and emboss the physical paper certificate and return it by mail. USDA cannot digitally endorse and return it electronically the way it can for countries that accept digital endorsements.
A digitally endorsed certificate, including one processed through VEHCS and returned electronically, is rejected at CAPQ regardless of its content or compliance with all other requirements. The rejection is based on the form of endorsement, not the substance of the certificate.
VEHCS is the standard US government submission platform. Many veterinarians use VEHCS routinely for international pet exports and are accustomed to receiving digitally endorsed certificates back electronically. For destinations that accept digital endorsements, this works seamlessly.
The risk for Singapore moves is that a veterinarian or relocation coordinator may submit via VEHCS expecting a digital return, without flagging that Singapore requires the physical ink original. By the time the error is discovered, typically at CAPQ inspection, the pet has already traveled. A rejected health certificate at CAPQ means clearance cannot be completed.
The Singapore ink endorsement requirement must be communicated explicitly to every party involved in the documentation process: the attending veterinarian, the USDA APHIS office handling endorsement, and anyone coordinating the return shipment of the certificate.
Because the endorsed certificate must be a paper original that physically travels with the pet, the logistics of getting the document from the USDA endorsing office to the owner before the pet's departure date must be planned carefully.
The process runs in this sequence: the attending veterinarian completes Sections I through III of the health certificate within the 2 to 7 day window before export. The completed certificate is submitted to USDA APHIS for Section IV endorsement, either via VEHCS or directly. USDA ink-signs and embosses the paper original and returns it by mail. The owner or agent presents the original at check-in and it physically accompanies the pet on the flight to Singapore.
Every step in this chain takes time. Turnaround varies by state and submission method. Confirm with your USDA APHIS office before scheduling the veterinary appointment. If you are mailing the certificate for endorsement, add the courier transit time in both directions. In practice this means the veterinary appointment should happen as close to day 7 as possible, not day 2, to give maximum time for the endorsement and physical delivery before departure.
Map the full document chain before booking the veterinary appointment:
If the total is more than 5 days, book the veterinary appointment earlier in the 2-7 day window to create buffer.
When booking the pre-export veterinary appointment, tell your veterinarian explicitly:
Do not assume your veterinarian knows this. For destinations that accept digital endorsements, VEHCS returns the certificate electronically and no physical mailing is involved. The Singapore exception breaks that workflow. A veterinarian who expects a digital return without being told otherwise will not arrange for a physical mailing and the paper original will not arrive in time.
When submitting the certificate for endorsement, confirm explicitly with the USDA APHIS office that the destination is Singapore, that Singapore requires a physical ink signature and embossed seal, and that the paper original must be returned by courier with tracking. Confirm the current turnaround time and factor it into your timeline before the veterinary appointment is booked.
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Yes. VEHCS can be used to submit the certificate to USDA. However USDA must ink-sign and emboss the physical paper certificate and return it by mail. Singapore does not accept a digitally endorsed certificate as the final output, regardless of how it was submitted to USDA.
No. The ink-signed embossed paper original must physically accompany the pet. A scan, photocopy, or digital version of the endorsed certificate is not accepted.
The health certificate will be rejected at CAPQ inspection. Clearance cannot be completed without a compliant ink-endorsed original. Confirm the endorsement type before the certificate leaves the USDA office.
Contact your state's USDA APHIS Veterinary Export Trade Services office. Confirm that you need a physical ink signature and embossed seal for Singapore, and request the paper original be returned by tracked courier. Confirm the current turnaround time before scheduling the veterinary appointment.
Yes. The requirement applies to all pets importing into Singapore from the US regardless of species.