European Union · Vets near me · difficulty moderate
A USDA stamp isn't enough for European Union — you need a vet who has actually done the export. Here's how to find one.
To export a pet to European Union you need a USDA-accredited veterinarian — but accreditation alone doesn't mean export experience. Roughly 20–30% of accredited vets actively handle international exports. Confirm the vet has done a European Union certificate before booking.
№ 01Find the right vet
Accredited isn’t the same as experienced
Only a USDA-accredited veterinarian can issue the export health certificate for European Union. But of the Los Angeles-area accredited vets we’ve called, only an estimated 20–30% actively handle international exports — and a European Union certificate has its own quirks. Before you book the final exam, confirm the clinic has done a European Union export recently.
Ask before you book
- ·Have you issued a European Union export certificate in the last year?
- ·Are you USDA-accredited (Category II) and set up for VEHCS electronic endorsement?
- ·Can you meet the certificate timing window for this destination?
Primary source: European Union (unified APHIS template) authority · verified 2026-05-17 · full source ledger →
№ 02Related questions
What people ask about European Union
- ● FIELD NOTEFive destinations require a tapeworm pill before your dog arrives. Five. The other EU countries don’t.
- ● FIELD NOTEBrexit split UK and EU pet entry rules. Northern Ireland kept the EU’s.
- ● FIELD NOTENorthern Ireland is politically UK but uses the EU’s pet entry rules. Don’t fly into Belfast on a UK cert.
- ● FIELD NOTEAirlines refuse to fly snub-nose breeds in cargo. Even when the paperwork is perfect.
● Make it yours
Put European Union on your dates — in sixty seconds.