Traveling With Pets After Brexit πΆβοΈ
This article highlights a real headache for pet owners in the UK:
π Taking your pet to Europe has become more complicatedβand more expensive.
What Changed?
Before Brexit:
- You could travel easily with:
- Microchip
- Rabies vaccine
- EU pet passport
After Brexit (since 2021):
π You now need an Animal Health Certificate (AHC)
What Is an AHC?
- Must be issued within 10 days of travel
- Valid for:
- One entry into the EU
- 4 months of onward travel
- Needs a vet appointment every trip
π Thatβs where the cost and hassle come in.
The βShortcutβ Some Owners Use
Some UK pet owners try to avoid AHC costs by:
- Getting an EU pet passport abroad (e.g. Belgium)
- Using it instead of an AHC
This is popular in:
- Van life communities π
- Frequent travelers
Why This Is Risky β οΈ
Experts warn this workaround can backfire:
- EU pet passports are only valid for EU residents
- A UK-based owner using one = invalid document
π Possible consequences:
- Pet refused entry at the border
- Travel disruption
- Serious stress for both pet and owner
Why Itβs So Expensive
AHCs can cost:
- Over Β£250 per pet in some places
- Around Β£69βΒ£124 in cheaper areas
Reasons:
- More paperwork than old passports
- Time-consuming for vets
- Business costs vary
What Might Change
Thereβs some good news:
π The UK and EU have agreed in principle that the UK will rejoin the pet passport scheme
- This would make travel easier again
- But no confirmed date yet
The Bigger Picture
This ties into a broader theme across your articles:
- Systems affecting animals (travel, healthcare, conservation)
- Often becoming more complex or costly
- Leaving owners and animals caught in the middle
Final Thought
π Trying to βcheat the systemβ might seem like a smart shortcutβ¦
β¦but when it comes to your pet:
πΎ It could end up being a very stressful (and risky) mistake