Bringing Your Pet to Spain from Latin America: Real Requirements and Deadlines 2026
The reason is straightforward: Latin America is classified as a rabies-risk zone by the European Union. That triggers a special protocol that most people don't know about until they've already bought their ticket.
The most expensive mistake: finding out when you already have your flight
Thousands of people arrive in Spain without their pet, thinking they'll bring them "on the next trip" because they didn't find out in time that the process takes months. Others pay breeders or foster families for months because they didn't plan ahead.
The most common trap is thinking the rabies vaccine is enough. It's not. For Latin American countries, the EU also requires a serological test proving your pet has sufficient antibodies. And that test has deadlines you can't compress.
The real timeline: 7 months minimum
| Step | What to do | When |
|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Implant the 15-digit ISO microchip. Afterwards (or the same day), rabies vaccine | Chip first, then vaccine |
| Day 30+ | Blood draw for serological test at an EU-approved laboratory | At least 30 days after the vaccine |
| Weeks 5–8 | Wait for laboratory results | 2 to 6 weeks depending on the lab |
| 3 months from the blood draw | Mandatory waiting period counted from the day the blood was drawn | 90 fixed days, non-negotiable |
| 10 days before the flight | Official health certificate issued by an accredited vet | Expires after 10 days |
Add it all up: a pet vaccinated today cannot enter Spain for 7 months. And that's if everything goes right the first time.
The laboratory: not just any lab will do
This is the point where most money gets wasted. The serological test must be done at a laboratory approved by the European Union. It's not a test your local vet clinic can run. It's a specialized laboratory with specific EU accreditation for this analysis.
In Latin America there are some accredited laboratories, mainly in Argentina and Brazil. In Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela, or Ecuador, it's common to have to send the blood sample abroad: to a laboratory in the US or Europe.
That adds both cost and time. The sample travels refrigerated. International shipment of biological samples has specific requirements. Your vet needs to know how to handle this.
The total cost of the test, including the blood draw, sample shipping, and analysis, ranges from €80 to €250, depending on where you are and which laboratory you use.
The documents you need to bring to the airport
- ISO 11784/11785 microchip (15 digits). If your pet already has a chip in a different format, you may need to have a new compatible one implanted.
- Valid rabies vaccine at the time of entry into Spain. If it expires before your flight, you need to re-vaccinate.
- Original serological test result from the EU-approved laboratory. Bring the original and several copies.
- Official health certificate in TRACES format (the format the EU requires). It's issued by an official vet in your country. They need to know this specific format. If they issue it in a different format, it won't be accepted.
- Complete vaccination history. It's not always mandatory, but inspectors routinely ask for it.
Watch out: the certificate expires in 10 days
The official health certificate is only valid for 10 days from the date it's issued. If your flight gets cancelled or postponed, you may need a new one.
Your pet can't land at just any airport
This is another detail that catches a lot of people off guard. To enter Spain from Latin America, your pet must go through an airport with a Border Inspection Post (BIP) authorized for companion animals arriving from non-EU countries.
The main ones for flights from Latin America:
- Madrid Barajas — the most common and best equipped for these arrivals
- Barcelona El Prat
- Other airports with more limited capacity
Before buying your ticket, confirm with the airline and the airport that it's authorized for pet entry from non-European countries. Don't