Pet Travel: Traveling via Cargo with a Snub-Nosed Pet

There are certain precautions every pet owner must take when your pet is traveling in the cargo area of a plane. You want to make sure your pet is acclimated to the crate, properly hydrated so your pet travels as safe and as comfortably as possible.

For the snub nosed pet owner, things can get risky. Here are dogbreeds that can be considered as snub-nosed depending on your airline: Affenpinscher, American Bully, American Pit Bull Terrier/Pit Bull, American Staffordshire Terrier/”Amstaff,” Belgian Malinois, Boston Terrier, Boxer, Brussels Griffon, Bulldog, American Bulldog, English Bulldog, French Bulldog, Old English Bulldogges, Shorty Bulldogs, Spanish Alano/Spanish Bulldog/Alano Espanol, Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Chow Chow, English Toy Spaniel/Prince Charles Spaniel, Japanese Chin/Japanese Spaniel, Lhasa Apso, Mastiff, American Mastiff, Boerboel/South African Mastiff, Bullmastiff, Ca de Bou/Mallorquin Mastiff, Cane Corso/Italian Mastiff, Dogo Argentino/Argentinian Mastiff, Dogue de Bordeaux/French Mastiff, English Mastiff, Fila Brasileiro/Brazilian Mastiff/Cao de Fila, Indian Mastiff/Alangu, Kangal/Turkish Kangal, Neapolitan Mastiff/Mastino Napoletano, Pakastani Mastiff/Bully Kutta, Pyrenean Mastiff, Presa Canario/Perro de Presa Canario/Dogo Canario/Canary Mastiff, Spanish Mastiff / Mastin Espanol, Tibetan Mastiff, Tosa/Tosa Ken/Tosa Inu/Japanese Mastiff/Japanese Tosa, Pekingese, Pug, Dutch Pug, Japanese Pug, Shar-Pei/Chinese Shar-Pei, Shih-Tzu, Staffordshire Bull Terrier/”Staffys,” and Tibetan Spaniel.

Also, the following cat breeds are also snub-nosed:?Exotic Shorthair, Himalayan and Persian.

These short nosed (also called “brachycephalic”) pets have difficulty breathing and acclimating to certain weather conditions. Even though these pets are considered ?at risk?, taking necessary precautions and using the proper flight itinerary on a pet-safe, pet friendly airline will help reduce the chances of an incident. Below is an airline chart to help pet owners who are considering traveling via cargo with their sub-nosed breed.

Most airlines require a health certificate within 10 days prior to your travel date for pets flying in the cargo hold. (International immigration requirements also apply if traveling outside country borders)

Weather restrictions: When temperatures exceed 80-85 degrees F (27-30 degrees C) in any airport on your pet’s itinerary, the airlines restrict animals that will be accepted as checked baggage or cargo. These restrictions are enforced for the safety of your pet. The restrictions are as follows:

Summer Heat Embargo: May 15 through September 15

Winter Embargo: November 1st through March 31st

Delta: Delta has changed their banned breed policies and will no longer transport dog or cat breeds considered as snub-nosed in the cargo hold.

United: United will no longer transport snub-nosed pets in the cargo hold. See their snub-nosed breed restrictions here..

American Airlines: American Airlines has issued a permanent embargo on all breeds of snub-nosed dogs and cats.

Frontier Airlines: Frontier no longer offers checked baggage or air cargo services for live animals. If you want to fly with your pet on this airlines, it must fit in an airline-compliant pet carrier that will fit under the seat in front of you.

Alaskan Airlines: snub-nosed breeds are no longer permitted to fly Alaska Airlines in the cargo hold.

Lufthansa: Snub-nosed breeds will be transported as long as temperatures do not exceed 75 degrees F anywhere on the itinerary.

KLM Airlines: KLM will only fly snub-nosed breeds as air cargo. Four breeds of snub nosed dogs will no longer be allowed in the cargo hold on KLM aircraft: English Bulldog, French Bulldog, Boston Terrier, and Pug

When your snub-nosed dog or cat are flying in the cargo hold, here are tips to keep them safe:

  • Use a pet crate that is one size larger than is normally required
  • Use a crate with ventilation on 4 sides. (If the kennel does not have ventilation on 4 sides, modify the kennel by drilling 7 holes in the rear top and 7 holes in the rear bottom of the kennel using a 3/4 inch keyhole bit).
  • Acclimate your pet to its crate by letting the animal spend time in the kennel for several days before its departure.
  • Do not place food in the kennel during the flight, just water.
  • Provide plenty of water to your pet. Frozen water bottles with tiny holes punched in the sides make a great watering tool for several hours when placed in the crate’s watering dish. Find the largest pet crate water bowl that you can.

It is always wise to call your airlines when making your reservation and disclose the breed of your dog. Also, it is a good idea to let the Captain know that you are traveling with a pet. Preparing in advance is an important part of pet travel.

More information on airline pet policies.


Comments

Pet Travel: Traveling via Cargo with a Snub-Nosed Pet — 404 Comments

  1. Adele – are you having problems finding requirements to travel to Amsterdam or an airline to fly your Bulldog?
    Jason

  2. mike – as you no doubt know, English Bulldogs are the most difficult breeds to transport. Hopefully, you are PSCing early in May and temperatures will not be an issue. Last we heard, Asiana Airlines, EVA Airlines and Thai Airways will take them. Are you traveling with your pet or not?
    Susan

  3. I’m in the US military station in Japan and I am PCSing to Kansas in May. I have a English bulldog I trying to fly back to the States. Even if I cant fly her to Kansas I just need someone to fly her to the States and i will drive with her to Kansas. If anyone know a carrier that will fly bulldog from Japan to the US please help.

  4. I’m travelling from Toronto to Amsterdam for 90 days and I’m struggling trying to take my French bulldog can anyone PLEASE help me in this matter

  5. Hi there – does anyone have any success stories? We’re about to PCS to Germany and we’re shipping our 3 y/o English Bulldog with Lufthansa. We’re flying overnight in May to avoid temperature issues. I’d love to hear about people’s positive experiences rather than all the “warnings” I’ve heard in the last few months.

  6. I have 2 lab/ pit mixes that i am moving to Hawaii with my wife in a few months. We have gone thru all the the proper procedures with the department of agriculture. My only problem is finding an airline that will take them. Both of their vet paper work say Lab Retriever Mix. My one dog looks just like a lab, and the other you can tell has some form of pit in him. They were both rescue dogs so we are not exactly sure what they are. They are currently in Michigan and we need to fly them to Maui. We are also willing to drive somewhere if we have to leave from a different destination. Does anyone know what we can do?

  7. Andrea – this restriction varies by airline. Some do not restrict cats at all. Ask your veterinarian whether he can be listed as a mixed breed and whether he or she would consider your cat bracycephalic.
    Susan

  8. Hi, I am planning to fly BKK to CDG with my 3 cats, they were all strays I adopted while being here in Thailand. However, I am not sure if one of them will be considered Burmese as he has similar colouring but no snub nose ( I don’t think so anyway !) Is it only pedigree Burmese that have the travel restrictions ? Thank you so much for any help !

  9. Hello I was wondering which airlines would accept my 3 French bulldogs to ship from Hawaii to Orlando Florida as we are moving thanks!

  10. Hi Keith – am checking on banned breeds in SA as we have not seen any published. You can find requirements that must be fulfilled here along with links to instructions and forms if you need them: https://www.pettravel.com/immigration/SouthAfrica.cfm Your pet must be microchipped, vaccinated for rabies and have other blood tests ahead of time. A veterinary certificate will also be needed.

    You need to contact the cargo department of an airline that flies the entire route. Most all airlines deliver live animals to SA as manifest cargo. Be careful how you route your trip and stay clear of London if possible. Layovers, if any, should be less than 2 hours. Let us know if you have further questions after reviewing the requirements.
    Jason

  11. I am planning to fly to South Africa and probably move there soon.

    I have an american pitbull terrier adult 6 yrs old that I want to take with me.

    Need help

  12. Rhonda – We don’t know of a commercial airline that flies out of Honolulu that accepts English Bulldogs. You may want to look at a pet friendly cargo airline that flies out of Honolulu.
    Susan

  13. Hello we are PCS from Hawaii and I will be shipping my 9 month old English Bulldog to Oklahoma to my family May 2015 to beat the heat deadline.
    Which airlines will ship from Honolulu to Oklahoma
    ( or as close to OK as possible) I have contacted hawaii pet movers, but no reply yet. I’m very knowledgable on shipping so I would prefer to do it myself.
    Thank you
    Rhonda

  14. I have a 2 year old English bulldog I am trying to fly from San diego to Seattle does anyone know of any airlines to will transport him. Thanks for the help

  15. Ray – have you tried Interjet or Air Canada? Remember that you may have to transport your pet as manifest cargo, so contact their cargo department if you do not have luck with reservations.
    Phil

  16. Hi im tryingto bring my dog from mexico coty to new york hes an olde english bulldogge but im havin alot of problems with the airlines i need help what can i use or do

  17. Jodi – not a lot of variety on this route. Alaskan Airlines just stopped flying snub-nosed pets. You may want to contact an agent to see if they can find an airline that will carry your Schichon. We don’t see one unless it would be small enough to fly in-cabin with you. There is a cargo company that flies from Seattle to LA (http://www.cargolux.com/AirfreightServices/?mid=1) and they carry animals. Perhaps this will help.
    Susan

  18. My daughter needs to be hospitalized for an extended time, and I have zero options for the care taking of our dog. He’s a 5 year old Shichon. I was hoping to fly him from Seattle to San Diego to stay with my ex-husband, but I can’t find an airline that accepts Shih Tzus. Any advice? (He was hit by a car as a puppy and has some brain damage according to the vet. He doesn’t like anyone he met after the accident, so that leaves six people in the world that he won’t try to bite.)

    Thank you!!!

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