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USA to Croatia with a pet: USDA AHC step-by-step (2026)

Microchip and rabies prep, the EU AHC form, USDA VEHCS endorsement, the 10-day window, airline coordination and arrival in Croatia: a step-by-step for US travelers.

Croatia Pet Guide editorial13 min read
Happy dog and cat with USDA paperwork and a pet carrier after arriving in Croatia

Taking your dog or cat from the United States to Croatia is genuinely doable, Croatia is one of the more welcoming EU countries for pet travelers, but the paperwork process is specific, the timeline is tight, and one wrong step invalidates the whole certificate. The good news: the US is on the EU's approved third-country list, which means no rabies titer blood test is required (unlike travelers coming from many other non-EU countries).

Timeline at a glance

Work backwards from your departure date:

  • Week -8 or earlier: Microchip implanted (if not already done)
  • Week -8 or earlier: First rabies vaccination given (if no valid current vaccination), must be at least 21 days before EU entry
  • Week -3 to -2: Find a USDA-accredited vet in your state; confirm they use VEHCS
  • Week -2: Vet appointment, full clinical examination, EU AHC prepared and filled out
  • Week -1: USDA APHIS endorsement submitted via VEHCS, allow approximately 2 business days
  • Day -10 to Day 0: AHC endorsed and returned; your pet must arrive in the EU within 10 days from the USDA endorsement date
  • Arrival day: Present original endorsed AHC to Croatian Customs at airport or border

The 10-day window is the hardest constraint. Your vet must sign the certificate, USDA must endorse it, and once USDA endorses the non-commercial certificate your pet must arrive in the EU within 10 calendar days from that endorsement date. If your vet signs on Day 0 and USDA endorses on Day 2, your pet must arrive by Day 12 from signing, which is Day 10 from endorsement. If your USDA endorsement is delayed or your flight is rescheduled beyond the endorsement window, the certificate is void and you need a new one.

Microchip requirements

Your pet must have an ISO 11784/11785-compliant microchip. This is the universal standard used in Europe and most of the world. Most chips implanted in the US are 15-digit ISO chips, but some older US chips used a 9 or 10-digit format incompatible with European scanners. If your pet was microchipped more than a few years ago, confirm with your vet that the chip is ISO-compliant.

The microchip must be implanted before the rabies vaccination. If the vaccination predates the chip, even by one day, the vaccination is legally invalid under EU rules, regardless of the actual immunity it confers. A new vaccination given after the chip implant date would then be required, and the 21-day waiting period restarts.

If your pet has an older non-ISO chip, you can implant a new ISO-compliant chip alongside it. The USDA certificate will carry both numbers; the ISO-compliant one is what Croatian Customs will scan.

Rabies vaccination requirements

The requirements are specific:

  • Vaccine type: Inactivated or recombinant only. Live rabies vaccines are not accepted by the EU.
  • Minimum age: The dog or cat must be at least 12 weeks old at the time of vaccination.
  • Microchip first: The chip must be in place before the vaccine is administered, or given on the same date.
  • 21-day wait: At least 21 days must pass between the date of the primary vaccination and the date of entry into Croatia or the EU.
  • Current validity: The vaccination must be within its valid period on your date of entry into Croatia. A lapsed rabies vaccination is not a minor technicality, it means your pet cannot travel until revaccinated and the 21-day period has passed again.

If your pet already has a current, valid rabies vaccination that satisfies all of the above conditions, you do not need to revaccinate. The existing vaccination records are simply entered on the EU health certificate by your vet.

No rabies titer test is required for travel from the USA to the EU/Croatia. The United States is included in Part 2 of Annex II to Implementing Regulation (EU) 577/2013 as a listed country with documented and monitored rabies surveillance. USDA APHIS confirms this on its Croatia-specific page: "rabies testing is not required."

The EU AHC form: which version, where to download

The certificate is officially titled the "Animal Health Certificate for the non-commercial movement to a Member State from a territory or third country of dogs, cats and ferrets", its legal basis is Part 1 of Annex IV to Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) 577/2013, as last amended by Regulation (EU) 2019/1293.

USDA APHIS maintains three variants depending on the travel arrangement:

  1. Owner traveling on the same flight as the pet, the most common scenario; the owner is present with the animal
  2. Designated person traveling on the same flight (owner not present but authorised person accompanies the pet)
  3. Pet shipped as carrier cargo or checked baggage within 5 days before or after owner's arrival

Croatia requires the certificate in bilingual English-Croatian format. Request the Croatia-specific version by emailing LAIE@usda.gov. The subject line should specify: "Croatia non-commercial health certificate, dog/cat" (as applicable). APHIS typically sends the PDF form within a few business days.

Your USDA-accredited vet completes the form. It includes sections for the owner's contact details, the animal's description, microchip number, vaccination records, clinical examination findings, and a vet declaration. Every section must be completed, partially completed or incorrectly dated certificates are rejected.

USDA APHIS endorsement via VEHCS

Your vet must be USDA-accredited to sign the EU health certificate. Most US vets are not automatically USDA-accredited, it requires a separate registration. If your regular vet is not accredited, USDA maintains a locator at aphis.usda.gov/pet-travel/accredited-veterinarians.

Once your vet has signed the certificate, it must be endorsed by USDA APHIS before Croatian Customs will accept it. USDA operates the Veterinary Export Health Certification System (VEHCS) at vehcs.aphis.usda.gov for this purpose. VEHCS is USDA's recommended method, all countries that accept US-origin pet certificates accept VEHCS endorsements, including Croatia.

The USDA APHIS endorsement fee is $101 per certificate for standard pet health certificates with no laboratory tests, including certificates submitted through VEHCS, based on the APHIS Veterinary Services fee schedule revised effective 10 January 2025. Re-verify the current rate on the APHIS Cost To Endorse page (aphis.usda.gov/pet-travel/us-to-foreign-country/cost-to-endorse) before booking, as fees can be adjusted between annual reviews. Service dogs as defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act are endorsed at no charge.

Standard VEHCS processing takes approximately 2 business days from receipt of the complete, correctly filled certificate. Allow a buffer of at least 3 business days to be safe, peak season (May to September) can see delays.

The endorsed original must travel with the pet. Croatian Customs will examine the original document including the USDA stamp and signature. Photocopies are not accepted at the border.

Airline coordination

Getting the paperwork right is only half the challenge. You also need an airline that accepts pets.

Three things to know before you book:

  1. Most routes from the US to Croatia require at least one connection in Europe. Your pet's cabin eligibility (if applicable) must be confirmed on every segment, a pet allowed in cabin on Delta from New York to Frankfurt may face different rules on the Lufthansa or Croatia Airlines onward leg.

  2. Ryanair, easyJet, and Wizz Air, the three largest low-cost carriers operating into Croatian airports, carry no pets in cabin or hold except certified assistance dogs. If your connecting flight in Europe is on one of these carriers, your pet cannot continue to Croatia on that routing.

  3. For the transatlantic leg, most US carriers offer cabin transport only for pets under 8 kg total (pet plus carrier), with in-cabin options on some carriers (Delta, United, American) for pets on domestic legs but generally not in the cabin on international transatlantic routes. On transatlantic flights, pets typically travel as checked excess baggage or manifest cargo in a temperature-controlled hold.

The recommended flight routing for US travelers with pets is via Frankfurt (FRA) or Munich (MUC) on Lufthansa to Zagreb, Split, or Dubrovnik, or via Amsterdam (AMS) on KLM. These carriers have clear pet policies, confirmed hold and cabin options, and direct Croatia connections.

Arrival in Croatia

You do not need to pre-notify Croatian Customs for a non-commercial arrival of up to 5 pets. Present the original endorsed AHC at the first point of entry, for air travel, this is at the Customs hall of your arrival airport. The officer will:

  1. Check the AHC is within its 10-day validity window
  2. Scan the microchip and verify it matches the certificate
  3. Visually check the animal appears consistent with the description in the certificate
  4. Stamp/record the entry

Zagreb Airport (ZAG) is the only Croatian airport operating as a formal Border Inspection Post for live animal commercial entries, but all Croatian airports process non-commercial private pet arrivals. If you are arriving at Split (SPU), Dubrovnik (DBV), Pula (PUY) or Zadar (ZAD), Customs handles the check.

If something is wrong with the documentation, incorrect dates, expired certificate, wrong form version, the animal can be held in a Croatian facility at your expense while the situation is resolved, or refused entry and returned. There is no "let it through this once" discretion on documentation errors.

Common mistakes

Vet appointment and endorsement timing get mixed up. The 10-day clock starts from the USDA endorsement date, not from the vet's signature date. If your vet signs on Day 0 and USDA endorses on Day 2, you have until Day 12 from signing to enter the EU. The risk is leaving too little time for USDA processing before a fixed flight, or letting the endorsed certificate expire after USDA returns it.

Rabies vaccine date and microchip date are in the wrong order. This invalidates the certificate entirely. Verify the dates with your vet before they fill in the form.

Wrong certificate version. The EU updates its AHC forms periodically. Using an outdated form version, particularly relevant for commercial shipments, where the 2024-version commercial certificate was valid only until 11 January 2026, results in rejection. Confirm you have the current version with USDA APHIS.

Not getting the Croatian bilingual version. Croatia requires the bilingual English-Croatian format. A certificate in English only is technically non-compliant. Request the right version from APHIS before your vet appointment.

Brachycephalic breed surprises at the airport. Short-nosed breeds (Bulldogs, Pugs, Boston Terriers, Boxers, Shih Tzus, Persians, etc.) face airline-specific restrictions that go beyond the paperwork. Some carriers ban them from the hold, some from the cabin. Confirm with your specific airline before booking.

Costs breakdown

Approximate out-of-pocket costs for a first-time US to Croatia trip with a dog or cat (not including the flight ticket for the pet):

  • ISO microchip (if needed): $25 to $60
  • Rabies vaccination (if needed): $20 to $45
  • USDA-accredited vet examination plus certificate preparation: $75 to $200
  • USDA APHIS endorsement via VEHCS: $101
  • Pet carrier (Sherpa Original Deluxe or equivalent, if needed): $50 to $130
  • Pet flight ticket (cabin, if allowed): $95 to $200 per segment
  • Pet travel insurance (recommended): $30 to $80 per trip

For pets requiring a rabies titer test (not applicable from the US, but relevant if your pet has spent time in an unlisted country) add $150 to $300 for the test and EU-accredited laboratory processing.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a rabies titer (FAVN) blood test for my pet to enter Croatia from the US?

No. The United States is on Part 2 of Annex II to EU Implementing Regulation 577/2013 as a listed third country with documented rabies surveillance. USDA APHIS confirms on its Croatia page that rabies testing is not required for non-commercial pet movement from the US to the EU, including Croatia.

What happens if my USDA endorsement is delayed and the 10-day window expires before I fly?

The certificate is void and you cannot use it for entry. You will need a new vet appointment, a new EU AHC, and a new USDA endorsement. The 21-day rabies waiting period is unaffected if your pet's rabies vaccination is still current, but the certificate paperwork must be redone end-to-end and re-endorsed within 10 days of the new entry date.

Can my dog or cat travel in the cabin on a transatlantic flight to Croatia?

Rarely. Most US carriers limit cabin pets to 8 kg combined weight (pet plus carrier), and most do not offer cabin pet travel on international transatlantic routes. Lufthansa and KLM, the most pet-friendly options for Croatia routings, accept small pets in cabin under 8 kg on some flights but generally route larger pets in the temperature-controlled hold. Confirm cabin eligibility with your specific carrier on every flight segment before booking.

What documents do I need for the return trip from Croatia to the United States?

As of August 2024, the CDC requires all dogs entering the US to be at least 6 months old, ISO microchipped, and accompanied by a CDC Dog Import Form (online submission, generates a receipt). Dogs from non-high-risk countries (Croatia is on the non-high-risk list) do not need a CDC import permit but must still meet the form and microchip requirements. Re-verify the current CDC Dog Import rules at cdc.gov/importation before flying back.

Do I need to notify Croatian Customs in advance about my pet?

No. Non-commercial movement of up to five pets does not require advance notification. Present the original endorsed AHC at the first EU point of entry. Croatian airports and land border crossings handle non-commercial pet entries without prior notice. Commercial shipments and groups of more than five pets are subject to different rules under EU 576/2013.

Can I bring more than one pet from the United States?

Up to five pets per traveler are allowed under non-commercial rules in EU Regulation 576/2013, provided each animal has its own AHC and meets all microchip and rabies requirements individually. Beyond five pets, the movement is treated as commercial under EU rules and triggers different documentation and inspection.

Are any breeds banned by Croatia or by airlines on the US to Croatia route?

Croatia regulates dangerous dogs under Pravilnik o opasnim psima (Narodne novine 117/2008), which restricts certain pit-bull-type breeds; check the regulation for the current list before traveling. Separately, most carriers ban brachycephalic (short-nosed) breeds, including Bulldogs, Pugs, Boxers, Boston Terriers, Shih Tzus, and Persian cats, from the cargo hold for animal-welfare reasons. Confirm both Croatian breed law and your airline's breed list before booking.

Does my US service dog need different paperwork to enter Croatia?

A US service dog still needs the full EU AHC, USDA endorsement, microchip, and current rabies vaccination, the same regulatory paperwork as any other dog. The USDA APHIS endorsement fee is waived for service dogs as defined under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Croatia recognises trained assistance dogs but does not have a single national service-animal registry; carry your US ADA documentation and vet records to support access at the airport and in accommodation.

Sources and references

  1. USDA APHIS. Pet travel from the United States to Croatia. aphis.usda.gov, accessed April 2026. Primary US authority for pet export certificates and the source for VEHCS endorsement procedure, fee schedule, and the bilingual English-Croatian certificate request process.

  2. USDA APHIS. Veterinary Export Health Certification System (VEHCS). vehcs.aphis.usda.gov, accessed April 2026. Online endorsement portal used by USDA-accredited vets to submit pet health certificates for endorsement. Standard processing approximately two business days.

  3. European Commission. Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 577/2013, Annex IV. eur-lex.europa.eu, 2013, last amended by Regulation (EU) 2019/1293. Sets the model EU non-commercial Animal Health Certificate used for pet movement from third countries including the US into the EU.

  4. European Commission. Regulation (EU) No 576/2013 on the non-commercial movement of pet animals. eur-lex.europa.eu, 2013. The legal framework governing non-commercial movement of dogs, cats, and ferrets across EU borders, including the five-pet limit and microchip and rabies sequencing rules.

  5. Croatian Veterinary and Food Safety Directorate (Uprava za veterinarstvo i sigurnost hrane). Pet entry rules. veterinarstvo.hr, accessed April 2026. Croatian state authority for veterinary border control. Confirms that all Croatian airports process non-commercial private pet arrivals.

  6. Croatian Customs Administration (Carinska uprava Republike Hrvatske). Travel with pets. carina.gov.hr, accessed April 2026. Official source for arrival procedure, including the no-pre-notification rule for non-commercial movement of up to five pets.

  7. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Bringing a dog into the United States. cdc.gov/importation, effective 1 August 2024. Authority for the return-trip rules into the US, including the CDC Dog Import Form requirement, six-month minimum age, and the non-high-risk country list (Croatia included).