TLDR: Yes, you can bring your dog to Hawaii for a vacation. No, there is no short-stay exemption. The full import process applies regardless of trip length. If your dog is starting from scratch, plan 4 to 6 months. If your dog already has a passing FAVN result, a few weeks may be enough.
Hawaii's pet import rules apply to every dog entering the state, whether you are moving permanently or visiting for a week. There is no short-stay exemption, no tourist exception, and no expedited path for vacation travelers. If you want your dog on the beach with you, the full preparation process applies, and it takes months.
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Microchip | Required before FAVN blood test |
| Rabies vaccination | Two vaccinations more than 30 days apart; most recent at least 30 days before arrival and not expired |
| OIE-FAVN blood test | Required; result 0.5 IU/ml or greater; 30-day waiting period after lab receives blood |
| Health certificate | APHIS-7001, issued within 14 days of arrival; no USDA endorsement required |
| Tick treatment | Fipronil or equivalent within 14 days of arrival; Revolution not accepted |
| Import form | AQS-279, one per dog, submitted at least 10 days before arrival (Honolulu) |
| Direct release fee | $185 per dog (Honolulu) |
| Short-stay exemption | None |
Hawaii's pet import requirements apply to every dog entering the state regardless of how long you plan to stay. A one-week vacation triggers exactly the same process as a permanent relocation. The same rules apply to puppies and service animals. There are no exceptions based on trip length, residency status, or purpose of travel.
This is the single most common mistake vacation planners make. They assume a short stay means a shorter process. It does not.
The full requirement list is covered on the Hawaii pet import requirements page. For vacation planning purposes, the key requirements are:
Your dog must have a microchip implanted before the OIE-FAVN rabies antibody blood test is performed. Your dog must have two rabies vaccinations more than 30 days apart, with the most recent administered at least 30 days before arrival and not expired. After the second vaccination is at least 30 days old, a USDA-accredited vet draws blood for the OIE-FAVN test and submits it to an approved lab. The lab must receive the blood sample at least 30 days before your dog's arrival in Hawaii. FAVN labs take 6 to 8 weeks to process results. Within 14 days of arrival, your vet issues a domestic health certificate (APHIS-7001) and treats your dog for ticks with an accepted product. Documents must be submitted to the Hawaii Animal Quarantine Station at least 10 days before arrival to qualify for the $185 direct release fee.
Every step must be done in the correct order. Getting one element out of sequence disqualifies your dog from direct release.
If your dog has never been vaccinated for rabies, the minimum preparation time from first vaccine to travel-ready is 4 to 6 months. That timeline does not compress for vacations.
If your dog already has two valid rabies vaccinations on record, the timeline is shorter but still significant. You still need the FAVN blood test with its 6 to 8 week lab processing time, the 30-day waiting period after the lab receives the sample, the health certificate, the tick treatment, and the document submission. Realistically, that is 3 to 4 months from blood draw to travel-ready even with everything in order.
The practical implication: plan your Hawaii vacation date around your dog's paperwork timeline, not the other way around. Most pet owners who decide to bring their dog to Hawaii for a vacation start planning 4 to 6 months before the trip.
That depends on where your dog's documentation currently stands.
If your dog already has a passing FAVN result on file and it was obtained within the last 36 months, the prep time shrinks significantly. You need a current health certificate, tick treatment, the AQS-279 form, and the $185 fee submitted at least 10 days before arrival. A dog in this situation can be Hawaii-ready in a few weeks.
If your dog is starting from scratch, the honest answer is that most short vacations are not worth the preparation involved. Many owners in this situation decide to leave their dog at home for the trip and pursue a longer stay or a relocation once the paperwork is in order.
If you do bring your dog and everything is correct, the arrival experience is straightforward. Your dog qualifies for direct release at the airport and leaves with you the same day.
If your vacation destination is anywhere other than Oahu, the process has an additional step. Direct arrivals at Kona (KOA), Kahului (OGG), and Lihue (LIH) require a Neighbor Island Inspection Permit (NIIP), which cannot be issued until your dog has a confirmed passing FAVN result.
You must make a reservation with an approved veterinary facility on your destination island, submit all documents to the Animal Quarantine Station at least 30 days before arrival (not 10), and have the NIIP issued and printed before your flight. Some airlines do not participate in neighbor island pet transport, so confirm with your carrier before booking.
The neighbor island path adds both lead time and logistical coordination on top of the standard Honolulu process.
Dogs that do not meet all requirements at arrival will not be released at the airport. Your dog will be quarantined for up to 120 days at the Animal Quarantine Station in Aiea. The program fee is $244, with an additional $14.30 charged for each day of quarantine. At the maximum 120-day stay that works out to approximately $1,960 before any additional charges.
If your dog arrives before the 30-day FAVN waiting period has elapsed, quarantine begins immediately at $14.30 per day in addition to the $244 program fee, with no exceptions and no appeals process.
There is no on-site resolution, no grace period, and no way to submit missing documents after your dog lands. Either the paperwork is in order before your dog boards the plane, or it is not.
The Consultation tier is particularly well-suited to vacation planners. Before committing to bringing your dog, you can speak directly with a relocation coordinator to review your dog's current vaccination and FAVN status and get a realistic assessment of what the timeline looks like for your specific trip.
If you decide to proceed, Complete Support and Vet Paperwork Support are both available depending on how much of the process you want to manage yourself.
Get a free quote from PetRelocation and a relocation manager will walk you through your options.
Is there a short-stay or tourist exemption for bringing a dog to Hawaii?
No. Hawaii's pet import requirements apply to every dog entering the state regardless of the purpose or length of the visit. A one-week vacation triggers exactly the same process as a permanent move. There are no exceptions.
My dog already has a passing FAVN test. How much preparation is still needed?
If the FAVN result is current (within 36 months) and your dog's rabies vaccination is not expired, you need a domestic health certificate issued within 14 days of arrival, a tick treatment within 14 days of arrival, and the AQS-279 form with the $185 fee submitted at least 10 days before arrival. A dog in this situation can be Hawaii-ready in a matter of weeks rather than months.
Can I bring my dog directly to Maui or Kauai?
Yes, but only with a Neighbor Island Inspection Permit issued before travel. You need a passing FAVN result, a reservation with an approved vet facility on your destination island, and all documents submitted at least 30 days before arrival. Some airlines do not fly pets directly to neighbor islands, so confirm with your carrier.
What happens if my dog arrives without the correct paperwork?
Your dog will not be released at the airport. Quarantine of up to 120 days begins immediately. The program fee is $244, plus $14.30 per day -- a worst-case 120-day stay costs approximately $1,960. There are no exceptions and no appeals process.
How early do I need to start preparing for a Hawaii vacation with my dog?
If your dog is starting from scratch with no prior rabies vaccination, plan for 4 to 6 months. If your dog has two valid rabies vaccinations but no FAVN test, plan for 3 to 4 months to allow for blood draw, lab processing, the 30-day waiting period, and document submission. If your dog has a current passing FAVN result, a few weeks may be sufficient.