Travelling With Your Pet: The Complete Planning Guide

Everything about travelling with dogs and cats — from car trips to flying, plus accommodation tips.

Travelling With Your Pet: The Complete Planning Guide

Travelling With Your Pet: The Complete Guide

Whether it's a road trip or a flight, proper planning makes pet travel safe and stress-free.

Road Trips

Safety First

  • Secure your pet: Crash-tested crate, seatbelt harness, or back-seat barrier. An unsecured 30kg dog in a crash at 50km/h exerts 1,500kg of force.
  • Never in the front seat — airbags can be fatal to pets
  • Never alone in a parked car — temperatures rise 20°C in 10 minutes, even with windows cracked

During the Drive

  • Stop every 2 hours for water, bathroom breaks, and leg stretches
  • Keep the car cool — pets overheat faster than humans
  • Bring their blanket — familiar smells reduce anxiety
  • No head out the window — debris can damage eyes and ears

Car Sickness

Affects up to 50% of puppies (most outgrow it).

Prevention: Face them forward, keep the car cool, crack a window slightly for fresh air, don't feed 2-3 hours before travel.

Medication: Cerenia (prescription anti-nausea) for severe cases.

Flying

Cabin vs Cargo

  • Cabin: Pets under 7-10kg in an airline-approved carrier under the seat. Safest and least stressful.
  • Cargo: Temperature-controlled, pressurised hold. Riskier — avoid if possible.

Airline Requirements

  • Health certificate from vet (usually within 10 days of travel)
  • Up-to-date vaccinations
  • Airline-approved carrier (specific dimensions)
  • Booking fee ($100-$300+ each way)

Tips

  • Book direct flights to minimise time in transit
  • Avoid flying brachycephalic breeds (Bulldogs, Pugs, Persians) — breathing risks at altitude
  • Exercise well before the flight
  • Don't sedate unless vet-recommended (sedation can cause breathing issues at altitude)
  • Freeze water in a bowl so it doesn't spill but provides hydration

International Travel

Common Requirements

  • Microchip (must be ISO 11784/11785 compliant)
  • Rabies vaccination (often 30 days before, sometimes 6 months)
  • Health certificate (endorsed by government vet)
  • Import permit (some countries)
  • Blood titre test (for rabies-free countries like Australia, Japan, UK)
  • Quarantine (varies: 10 days to 6 months)

Start planning 6+ months ahead for international travel. Requirements are strict and time-sensitive.

Pet-Friendly Accommodation

Finding Options

  • Filter for "pet-friendly" on booking platforms
  • Call ahead to confirm — online listings are sometimes outdated
  • Ask about: weight limits, breed restrictions, additional fees, designated pet areas

Hotel Etiquette

  • Bring a portable crate for when you leave the room
  • Pack extra towels for muddy paws
  • Clean up immediately — indoors and outdoors
  • Don't leave a distressed pet alone in the room
  • Tip housekeeping extra if your pet is shedding

Packing List

  • Food (enough for the trip + 2 extra days)
  • Collapsible food and water bowls
  • Medications
  • Poo bags
  • Collar with ID tags showing your phone number
  • Lead/harness
  • Favourite toy and blanket
  • First aid kit
  • Recent photo (in case they get lost)
  • Vet records and vaccination certificate
  • Car seatbelt harness or carrier

Should Your Pet Stay Home?

Travel isn't right for every pet. Consider leaving them with a trusted sitter if:

  • They have severe travel anxiety
  • They're elderly or have health conditions
  • The destination isn't pet-friendly
  • The trip is very short (the travel stress outweighs the benefit)

Pet Capsule's vault stores all travel documents, vaccination certificates, and vet records for quick access at borders and check-ins.

Quick Answers

How do I create a pet care routine?

A good routine includes daily feeding at consistent times, fresh water, breed-appropriate exercise, weekly brushing, monthly nail checks, and annual vet visits. Pet Capsule helps you set reminders and track every aspect of your pet's daily care.

How often should pets see a vet?

Healthy adult dogs and cats should see a vet annually. Puppies and kittens need monthly visits for their first 4 months. Senior pets over 7 years benefit from twice-yearly checkups to catch age-related conditions early.

What are the most important things to track for pet health?

Track weight monthly, appetite and water intake daily, stool consistency, energy levels, coat condition, and any new lumps or behaviour changes. These patterns help your vet identify issues early.

Track your pet's health with AI

Pet Capsule helps you monitor health, manage daily care, and cherish every moment. Join the waitlist for early access.

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