Transporting your pet to Norway? Our team of experts is here to assist you and ensure that this aspect of your relocation is as stress-free as possible, allowing you to concentrate on the human side of your move.
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In This Guide
Norway follows EU pet import rules through the EEA agreement, but it is not an EU member state. For dogs, Norway adds one critical requirement that most EU countries do not: mandatory tapeworm (Echinococcus) treatment before arrival. Norway also bans 6 dog breeds and wolf-dog hybrids. Here is exactly what you need to bring your dog or cat from the USA.
Entry Requirements at a Glance
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Microchip | ISO 11784/11785 compliant; must be implanted before or same day as first rabies vaccination |
| Rabies Vaccination | Required; 21-day wait after primary vaccination; no wait required after a valid booster with no lapse in coverage |
| Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs Only) | Praziquantel, 1-5 days before arrival (non-commercial) or 1-2 days before departure (commercial) |
| Health Certificate | EU non-commercial health certificate (Annex IV), English-only accepted; USDA APHIS must endorse; pet must arrive within 10 days of endorsement |
| Titer Test | Not required from the USA (USA is an EU-listed country) |
| Quarantine | None for compliant pets |
| Breed Restrictions | 6 breeds and wolf-dog hybrids banned |
Microchip
Your pet must have an ISO 11784/11785 compliant microchip implanted before receiving its rabies vaccination. Your veterinarian must scan the microchip before every rabies vaccination. A rabies vaccination administered before microchip implantation or without scanning the microchip first does not count under EU rules.
Rabies Vaccination
Primary rabies vaccination: The first rabies vaccination your pet receives after microchip implantation, or after any lapse in coverage, is a "primary" vaccination. A primary vaccination is valid for only 1 year, even if your vet administers a 3-year vaccine. Your pet must wait at least 21 days after a primary vaccination before traveling.
Booster rabies vaccination: If your pet receives its next rabies vaccination within 1 year of the primary (with no lapse in coverage), that vaccination is a "booster" and can be valid for 1 to 3 years per the manufacturer's instructions. No 21-day wait is required after a valid booster. Keep all previous rabies vaccination certificates to prove continuous coverage.
Other vaccinations (DHLPP and Bordetella for dogs; FVRCP for cats) are not required for entry into Norway but are recommended for your pet's general health.
Tapeworm Treatment (Dogs Only)
This is Norway's most important additional requirement. All dogs entering Norway must receive treatment against the tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis before arrival.
Non-commercial moves: Your dog must be treated with praziquantel (or an equivalent approved product) no earlier than 5 days and no later than 1 day before arriving in Norway. The treatment must be administered by a veterinarian and recorded on the health certificate.
Commercial moves: Your dog must be treated 1 to 2 days before departure from the US.
Cats and ferrets are exempt from the tapeworm treatment requirement.
This treatment must be timed precisely. If your dog is treated too early (more than 5 days before arrival for non-commercial) or too late (on the day of arrival), it does not meet the requirement and your dog may be refused entry.
EU Health Certificate and USDA Endorsement
Your USDA-accredited veterinarian issues the EU non-commercial health certificate (Annex IV). This is a single document that covers your pet's microchip, rabies vaccination, health examination, and tapeworm treatment (for dogs). Norway accepts English-only health certificates. No bilingual translation is required.
Your vet completes and signs the certificate, then USDA APHIS must endorse it by countersigning and embossing the document. USDA APHIS mails back the original ink-signed, embossed hard copy certificate. This physical document must travel with your pet. A digital copy or scanned version is not accepted at the Norwegian border. Include a prepaid return envelope when you submit to your APHIS endorsement office and confirm current mail turnaround before booking your travel date.
Certificate Validity
The health certificate is valid for 30 days from the date your vet signs it. USDA endorsement and your pet's arrival in Norway must both occur within that 30-day window. Your pet must arrive in Norway within 10 days from the date APHIS endorses the certificate, not from the date your vet issues it.
Important timing note: Because the tapeworm treatment must be administered 1-5 days before arrival, and APHIS endorsement must happen before travel, coordinate all three steps carefully: vet appointment (including tapeworm treatment for dogs), APHIS endorsement, and travel date.
The non-commercial certificate remains valid for up to 4 months for onward EU travel, as long as your pet's rabies vaccination does not expire during that period.
Owner's Declaration
The owner or a designated person must complete and sign the Declaration on the final page of the health certificate before travel.
For Commercial Moves
If you cannot meet the 5-day rule, the move becomes a commercial move: the commercial health certificate must be issued and endorsed, and your pet must depart the US within 48 hours of vet issuance. The 2025 version of the commercial certificate is now required; the 2024 version expired on January 11, 2026.
Titer Test
Not required from the USA. The United States is an EU-listed country, so no rabies antibody titer test is required. Titer tests only apply to pets arriving from unlisted (non-EU, non-approved) countries.
No Quarantine
Norway does not require quarantine for dogs, cats, or ferrets arriving from the USA with compliant documentation, including tapeworm treatment for dogs. Non-compliant pets may be refused entry or quarantined at the owner's expense.
The Five-Day Rule: Non-Commercial vs. Commercial
For non-commercial moves, the owner or designated person must travel within 5 days before or after the pet. The move must also involve 5 or fewer pets.
If you cannot meet the 5-day window, the move is classified as commercial. Commercial moves have a tighter documentation timeline (48-hour window from vet issuance to departure), may involve additional costs, and use a different health certificate. The tapeworm treatment window also changes: 1 to 2 days before departure instead of 1 to 5 days before arrival. Your relocation manager will coordinate the correct certificate and timeline.
Breed Restrictions
Norway bans the import, ownership, and breeding of 6 dog breeds and their crosses under the Norwegian Dog Act (Hundeloven) and Dog Regulation (Hundeforskriften):
Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, Dogo Argentino, Fila Brasileiro (Brazilian Mastiff), Tosa Inu, and Czechoslovakian Wolfdog.
Wolf-dog hybrids of any breed combination are also banned, regardless of the degree of crossbreeding.
The ban applies to crossbreeds where any of the listed breeds are present in any proportion. If police or customs have doubt about your dog's breed, they may require documentation proving its breed. Dogs found to be banned breeds may be euthanized or ordered out of the country.
Norway also prohibits dogs that have been trained to attack or defend against people or other dogs, regardless of breed.
Banned species: Reptiles are generally prohibited from import into Norway, with limited exceptions listed by the Norwegian Food Safety Authority (Mattilsynet). Other exotic species and protected animals are also restricted.
Entry Points and Customs
Oslo Gardermoen Airport is the primary entry point for pets arriving in Norway by air. Bergen Airport (Flesland) and Stavanger Airport (Sola) also accept international pet arrivals. Confirm your specific arrival airport's current BIP status before booking, as accepted entry points can change.
Airline and Transport Options
Airlines set their own policies for pet transport, including crate requirements, breed restrictions, and seasonal temperature embargoes. Confirm your airline's specific rules before booking, as these are separate from Norway's import requirements.
Pets traveling as cargo must meet IATA Live Animals Regulations for crate size, construction, and labeling.
Timeline: USA to Norway
3 to 4 months before travel: Confirm your pet has an ISO-compliant microchip implanted before rabies vaccination. If a primary vaccination is needed, schedule it now and note the 21-day wait. Confirm your dog is not one of Norway's 6 banned breeds or a wolf-dog hybrid before proceeding with any planning.
30 days before travel: If your pet needs a primary rabies vaccination, have it administered at least 21 days before travel. Book airline cargo or excess baggage space.
10 days before travel: Your USDA-accredited vet completes and signs the EU health certificate. Submit to USDA APHIS for endorsement. Include a prepaid return envelope for the physical endorsed certificate.
1 to 5 days before arrival (non-commercial, dogs only): Your USDA-accredited vet administers tapeworm treatment (praziquantel) and records it on the health certificate. This window is fixed. Treatment given too early or too late will not be accepted.
1 to 2 days before departure (commercial, dogs only): Tapeworm treatment administered within the tighter commercial window.
Day of travel: Your pet travels with the USDA-endorsed EU health certificate (ink-signed, embossed paper copy), all rabies vaccination certificates, and signed Owner's Declaration. Confirm your travel is within 5 days of your pet's travel (non-commercial).
Common mistakes that cause problems:
- Microchip implanted after rabies vaccination: vaccination does not count, must revaccinate and wait 21 days.
- Tapeworm treatment given outside the 1-to-5-day window: dog can be refused entry. This is the most common Norway-specific failure.
- Primary vaccine assumed valid for 3 years: under EU rules a primary is only valid for 1 year regardless of vaccine label.
- 10-day window miscalculated: the window runs from USDA endorsement, not vet signature. Build in buffer for USDA processing and mail return.
- Missing physical endorsement: VEHCS electronic submission alone is not sufficient. APHIS must mail back the physical ink-signed, embossed certificate.
- Using non-commercial tapeworm timing on a commercial move: commercial requires 1 to 2 days before departure, not 1 to 5 days before arrival.
- Attempting to import a banned breed or wolf-dog hybrid: enforcement is strict and dogs may be euthanized.
How PetRelocation Can Help
Complete Support: We coordinate the full move: health certificate facilitation, USDA endorsement and physical mail-back logistics, tapeworm treatment timing, airline cargo booking, and customs documentation at destination.
Vet Paperwork Support: We manage the documentation chain while you handle airline logistics.
Consultation: Direct access to our team to work through your timeline and questions.
Ready to start? Get a free quote from PetRelocation and a relocation manager will walk you through every step.
For official requirements, see the USDA APHIS EU pet travel page (Norway uses the same APHIS Echinococcus framework as Finland, Malta, and Ireland).