Yes, I have a big question. Please help me guys. My fiance will bring her dog. She is coming from high risk country for rabies. We got to her titer blood test, and results came beginning June. We will do 30 days before arrival to US rabies vaccine. (2nd one) The question is does we must to do cdc registered animal care appointment in JFK or Miami Airport? And even we have blood titer test and 2nd vaccination we still have to pay for that checking test? Or how that works ? Thank you so much
@@ufcmmafighter1921 Hi, if your dog is flying into the US from a high risk rabies country after the 1st of August, 2024 and the permit is also issued after the 1st of August, then you need to fly into an airport where there is a CDC Animal Care Facility as well. You would need to make an appointment with them. The purpose is to evaluate your dog and revaccination of rabies vaccine even if you have a rabies titer test. The appointment and revaccination is chargeable. If you're planning on importing your dog before the 31st of August, 2024 and you can also apply for the permit by the 31st of July, 2024. Then you would be able to fly in under the current guidelines which doesn't require an appointment with the CDC Animal care facility or revaccination. You find the steps here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KApt3hqHU_A.htmlsi=ywNUyTiiu1EsIttS hope this helps, safe travels
Thank you so much your information. Is that for sure we will need revaccination and we will have titr ? Or it's just for not sure thing ? And my fiancée has final destination to North Carolina. I just do not know how to get her flight tickets then, separate it or like together with one day lay over ?! So confused.
What about the low risk countries like Denmark (to the U.S)? Scandinavian airlines declined to board our (tested, vaccinated, certified) dogs and now we are having to rely on dog cargo service to bring back our dogs to the U.S
I’m in category 1 but I brought my dog to the DR on July 10th, the cdc import form was not available by that time, I have the health certificate but it’s been more than a month here, and we’re returning this Friday do I need to get a new health certificate from here or the one from July 10th will still be valid?
This video is very helpful. I think at one point you posted an example of a letter your vet wrote stating that your dog was free of screw worm and foot & mouth disease? Could you repost it, I can not find it anymore. Many thanks!
They are hurting honest breeders to stop the actions of dishonest shippers. People adopting puppies to train for service work need to get them as early as possible, not wait for six month after birth. You miss critical bonding periods .
2 question. First one. Coming in from high risk country with foreign vax and all proper paperwork but my flight connects to an airport not inspection approved. Example connects into Texas before going on to lax where my resv is with. Will they take my cabin pet away from me?. 2nd question is, you said lax is charging over a 1,000 but there is another place on that list that qoute 900.00 just an fyi.
Hey Cindy, Thanks for your comment. This is a great question. Based on my experience traveling in the US, all passengers with connecting flights in the US would need to exit the aircraft and clear US immigration and customs. This means the connecting city would actually be the Port of Entry (if you are traveling with a pet in the cabin or pet as excess baggage). In this case, this would not be allowed and may cause some issues. I would get in touch with a CDC-Animal Care Facility as they would be able to best advise on this.
Thanks for this updated video! I do have a question. We are in Brazil and dogs get vaccinated yearly for rabies here, not every three years. Our dog got her first rabies vaccine on Sept. 8, 2023 at 13 weeks. So she is due for next vaccine in September. We are flying with her in mid October. Her titer was drawn last week. Are you saying she would need another titer drawn 30 days after second vaccine? I understood that as long as she gets vaccinated on schedule she does not need another titer??
Hey Charlotte, Thanks for your comment and question. The CDC website is not so clear about this situation. If another rabies vaccine is given, you may have to get another titer test done. But it would be best to double-check with a CDC Animal-Care Facility on this.
I received a response from the Quarantine coordinator/ Pet Limo in Miami. They stated "The titer is valid for one year, so she (our dog) would not need another".
@@CharlotteHesterbergaccording to cdc the titer will now be life time as long as the pets vaccine does not expire and is re-vax prior to vaccination. Cdc say you will not need a new titer test. If you let the vaccine expire with no new vaccine then you would need to reapply for titer after the year.
I started a petition to revoke this law ... message me if youre interested in the link ... i understand these laws for high risk countries but not low-risk some laws should stay like vaccines rabies cert but everything else is ridiculous
Hi , question, I travel with my dog every year from the us to dr, then dr back to the us yearly, he has us vaccines. after July 31st, will i need to fill out any forms to leave the dr?
Hi Johana, Thanks for your comment. After August 1, 2024, there will still be documents for dogs vaccinated in the US with a US-issued rabies vaccine. You’ll need to follow the instructions at 02:32: "Dogs vaccinated in the USA and have been in a High-Risk Rabies Country in the last 6 months” The CDC Import Form will be made available after July 15, 2024. If you’re traveling before August 1, 2024, then you can follow the instructions mentioned in this video below: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KApt3hqHU_A.html Safe travels
Hello, I have a big question. Please help me guys. My fiance will bring her dog. She is coming from high risk country for rabies. We got to her titer blood test, and results came beginning June. We will do 30 days before arrival to US rabies vaccine. (2nd one) The question is does we must to do cdc registered animal care appointment in JFK or Miami Airport? And even we have blood titer test and 2nd vaccination we still have to pay for that checking test? Or how that works ? Thank you so much
@@ufcmmafighter1921 Hi, if your dog is flying into the US from a high risk rabies country after the 1st of August, 2024 and the permit is also issued after the 1st of August, then you need to fly into an airport where there is a CDC Animal Care Facility as well. You would need to make an appointment with them. The purpose is to evaluate your dog and revaccination of rabies vaccine even if you have a rabies titer test. The appointment and revaccination is chargeable. If you're planning on importing your dog before the 31st of August, 2024 and you can also apply for the permit by the 31st of July, 2024. Then you would be able to fly in under the current guidelines which doesn't require an appointment with the CDC Animal care facility or revaccination. You find the steps here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KApt3hqHU_A.htmlsi=ywNUyTiiu1EsIttS hope this helps, safe travels
Heya! If you are traveling after August 01, 2024, the from will be available through the following link on July 15, 2024. www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/required-forms-for-importing-dog-united-states.html
Honestly, I’m not sure, but there are a few petitions trying to reverse the new rules. www.change.org/p/revise-the-cdc-s-new-import-requirements-for-dogs?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR2FDBW-bhF-RmTR1a_lQz1nt1k1htrspVLi3Na2q-LvZhO91nvBqnuhmyM_aem_AVKjYZtAHzVuR7wo4nF3s9_DOoUsV9q1z7mMsTYkH9TMHMRH1evLKiVv64Bvdy89qZIzlesOsV99rB0ga8ZrVX9v www.speciesunite.com/cdc-dog-ban-petition?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR1S-3O4N87uf9wvwnmG5G0Tp510hml1gH2AXUkH6GU3Y9Esm9B6WS0wksc_aem_AVLARczU19PPtWEtHUKUDqEHTPwWBnjP-GRuVHQ3GWTLdsO1qkG7sq5RG-Avi288naT9kFC_JMs4NDlX3tfBqvG8 www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR26PivG7-iSOQxBIbw5QqkcBbDM1-Yvl5SYlAB1wBJFpQzQwWl7krRkhLM_aem_AVIcXQHyrw2naf1JSZu-KxZw1Fs1Lo4G3R7-JGj2j3TFxuxaWQhRljRMbqGY7yqHI-Xpxz06oaeESzPplIeQtiGh
If you're traveling into the US from a low-risk country, then no, this wouldn't all apply. But some rules do. You can find the most up to date information using the CDC's Dog Bot. www.cdc.gov/importation/bringing-an-animal-into-the-united-states/dogs.html Hope this helps