Where Does My Pet Fly?
Pet air travel depends on your pet’s size, species, airline rules, route availability, weather, and crate requirements. Some pets travel in the cabin with their guardian, while others travel through airline cargo or other approved transport channels.
Go Pet Go helps families understand the moving parts so pet travel can be planned around safety, timing, weather conditions, airline requirements, and the real needs of the animal.
Pets Do Not All Fly the Same Way
There is no single pet travel system. A small cat in a soft-sided carrier may be able to fly in cabin with a passenger. A large dog may need to travel through airline cargo in an airline-approved crate. Some moves require ground transport, airport transfers, boarding support, or coordination with multiple vendors.
The right travel plan depends on the animal, the route, the airline, the weather, and the services available at the origin and destination airports.
How Cabin Travel Works for Small Dogs and Cats
Small dogs and cats may be eligible to travel in the aircraft cabin when they fit inside an airline-approved soft-sided carrier that can be placed under the seat in front of the passenger.
How Airline Cargo Works for Larger Dogs
Larger dogs usually cannot travel in cabin because they cannot fit under the seat in an approved carrier. When air travel is available, they may need to fly through an airline cargo program in a hard-sided, airline-approved crate.
Cargo travel uses different check-in locations, timing windows, crate standards, weather rules, and handling procedures than passenger cabin travel.
Why Size Changes the Travel Plan
Small Dogs
May qualify for cabin travel if carrier and airline requirements are met.
Cats
Often travel in cabin or through cargo depending on route, guardian travel, and airline policy.
Medium Dogs
May be too large for cabin but may still fit cargo crate requirements.
Large Dogs
Often require oversized crates, cargo routing, and more careful weather planning.
Why Weather Can Limit Cargo Shipping
Pet cargo transportation is often weather-dependent. Airlines may restrict or suspend pet cargo travel during periods of heat, cold, storms, or unsafe conditions at the origin, destination, or connecting airport.
This means a route that looks available one day may become unavailable if temperatures change. Pet travel must be coordinated around weather permitting, not just the client’s preferred date.
Most Pet Shipping Requires Multiple Service Providers
Pet relocation often involves several different providers working together. Go Pet Go may coordinate or work alongside airlines, drivers, airport cargo teams, boarding facilities, veterinary offices, and relocation companies depending on the move.
Pet Travel Has More Moving Parts Than Passenger Travel
A passenger can often rebook a flight quickly. A pet may need a new crate check, updated timing window, revised health documentation, different cargo routing, new ground transportation, or temporary boarding if a flight changes.
That is why pet shipping is not simply “buying a plane ticket.” It is a coordinated service built around airline rules, live-animal handling, third-party availability, and real-time problem solving.
Need Help Choosing the Right Travel Option?
Tell us your pet’s species, size, origin, destination, timeline, and travel concerns. We will review available options and help determine whether cabin travel, cargo travel, ground transportation, or a mixed plan is most practical.
