If you are planning to move abroad with your pet, there is a good chance you have come across the term "rabies titer test" during your research. For many pet owners, it is one of the most confusing parts of the international pet relocation process. The timeline is long, the terminology is unfamiliar, and the consequences of getting it wrong can mean months of quarantine or even denied entry at the border.
This guide explains exactly what a rabies titer test is, how it works, which countries require it, and how to plan around it so your pet's journey goes smoothly.
A rabies titer test, formally known as a Fluorescent Antibody Virus Neutralization (FAVN) test or a Rabies Neutralizing Antibody Titre Test (RNATT), measures the level of rabies antibodies in your pet's blood. The result tells officials whether your pet has built sufficient immunity to the rabies virus, typically as a result of vaccination.
The test does not check whether your pet has been vaccinated. It checks whether the vaccination worked. This distinction matters because vaccination records alone are not sufficient for entry into certain countries. Those countries want laboratory proof that the vaccine produced an adequate immune response.
The acceptable antibody level for most destinations is 0.5 IU/mL (international units per milliliter) or above, which is the threshold set by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH, formerly OIE).
The process involves a blood draw from your pet, performed by a licensed veterinarian. The blood sample is then sent to an approved laboratory for analysis. Not just any lab qualifies. The destination country typically requires that the sample be tested at a laboratory approved by the European Union or recognized by the destination country's government.
In the United States, the only USDA-recognized laboratory for rabies titer testing is Kansas State University's Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. In the UK, the approved laboratory is the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA). Other approved labs exist in Europe, Australia, and Japan.
Results typically take 2 to 4 weeks to come back, though processing times vary by laboratory and time of year.
Not every destination requires a titer test. Whether your pet needs one depends entirely on where you are traveling and, in some cases, where your pet is traveling from.
Some of the most common destinations that require a satisfactory titer test result include:
Many European Union countries do not require a titer test for pets traveling from other EU member states or from countries on the EU's approved list. However, pets traveling to the EU from non-listed countries, including the United States, may face additional requirements.
Requirements change regularly. Always verify current regulations with your destination country's official veterinary authority or work with a professional pet relocation service that monitors these changes on an ongoing basis.
This is where many pet owners run into serious problems. The titer test is not just a box to check. It has timing requirements that must be followed precisely, and the clock does not start when you decide to move. It starts much earlier.
Here is the general sequence for most titer-test-required destinations:
That means from the moment you start the process to the moment your pet is eligible to fly, you could be looking at 7 to 9 months or more depending on the destination and your pet's vaccination history.
If your pet has a documented history of regular rabies vaccinations, some countries will allow the titer test to be performed without starting the clock from scratch. The key is that the vaccination must be current and documented, and in many cases the microchip must have been implanted before the first vaccination on record.
If there is any gap in your pet's vaccination history, or if the microchip was implanted after vaccination, you may need to restart the process from the beginning. This is one of the most common and costly mistakes in international pet travel.
If your pet's titer test comes back below the 0.5 IU/mL threshold, the process does not end there, but it does get longer. Your pet will typically need to be revaccinated and then retested after another waiting period. The timeline resets based on the destination's requirements.
An unsatisfactory result does not mean your pet is unhealthy or that the vaccine did not work. Immune responses vary between animals, and some pets simply produce lower antibody levels than others. In many cases, a booster vaccination followed by a retest will produce a satisfactory result.
This varies by destination. Some countries accept a titer test result indefinitely as long as your pet's rabies vaccinations remain current. Others require a new test after a certain period. Japan, for example, requires that the titer test be performed within a specific window relative to travel.
Always check the specific validity requirements for your destination before assuming a previous test result still applies.
Yes. In most countries that require a titer test, the requirement applies to both dogs and cats. The process is identical. Some countries have species-specific variations in their requirements, but the titer test itself is performed the same way for both.
Start early. There is no way around the waiting periods, so the sooner you begin, the more flexibility you will have with your travel timeline.
Verify your pet's microchip was implanted before vaccination. If it was not, consult with your veterinarian and a pet relocation specialist about your options before proceeding.
Use an approved laboratory. Submitting blood to a non-approved lab will result in a test result that is not accepted by the destination country. Confirm which labs are approved before the blood is drawn.
Keep copies of everything. Your pet's microchip number, vaccination records, titer test results, and any correspondence with veterinarians should all be retained and organized. These documents will be required at multiple points in the process.
Work with your veterinarian and plan around lab turnaround times. Sending a sample right before a holiday period can add weeks to processing time. Build in buffer.
Consider working with a professional pet relocation service. The titer test is one piece of a much larger documentation puzzle. A single error in sequencing or timing can result in quarantine or denied entry. Starwood Pet Travel coordinates the entire process for dogs and cats, including ensuring the titer test is ordered at the right time and submitted to the right laboratory.
A rabies titer test is a blood test that confirms your pet has sufficient rabies antibody levels to meet the import requirements of certain countries. It is not difficult to complete, but it is highly time-sensitive. The waiting periods involved, particularly the 180-day post-result waiting period required by destinations like Australia, Japan, and New Zealand, mean that planning must begin months before your intended travel date.
If you are relocating internationally with a pet and are unsure whether a titer test is required, or where to begin, the best step is to consult with a pet relocation specialist as early as possible. The timeline is unforgiving, but with the right preparation, it is entirely manageable.
Planning an international move with your pet? Request a quote from Starwood Pet Travel and our team will guide you through every step of the process, including titer test requirements for your specific destination.