Transportation Built
Around Animal Care

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

 

Transportation Built
Around Animal Care

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

 

We move your friend
as your life moves

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

Go Pet Go • Pet Travel Preparation

Preparing Your Pet for Travel Day

A smoother travel day starts before the airport, before the pickup window, and before the crate is loaded into the vehicle. Feeding, hydration, bathroom timing, crate familiarity, medication planning, and stress reduction can all affect how your pet tolerates transportation.

Go Pet Go helps families think through the practical details that make pet relocation safer, calmer, and more predictable for cats, dogs, senior pets, nervous travelers, and medically sensitive animals.

Feeding timing Hydration Crate comfort Airport timing Nervous pets Travel-day planning
Cat traveling through an airport in a carrier
Travel-day preparation should account for timing, handling, food, water, bathroom needs, crate comfort, and the animal’s stress load.
First thing to know

Travel Day Begins Before Travel Day

Pet transportation goes better when preparation starts early. A pet who has never seen the crate, missed normal routines, skipped water, or experienced a chaotic morning may enter travel already stressed.

The goal is not to make travel completely stress-free. The goal is to reduce avoidable stressors and keep the animal as regulated, hydrated, and prepared as possible.

Good travel planning reduces surprises for both the pet and the people coordinating the move.
Crate acclimation

Help Your Pet Become Familiar With the Crate

The travel crate or carrier should not appear for the first time on travel day. When possible, introduce the crate ahead of time so your pet can investigate it, smell it, rest near it, and associate it with something other than sudden confinement.

Place the crate in a familiar area before travel.
Add familiar bedding if allowed by the airline or transport provider.
Let your pet explore the crate without pressure when possible.
Avoid turning the crate into a last-minute struggle.
Feeding timing

Plan Food Timing Carefully

Feeding plans depend on the pet, route, age, medical needs, and veterinarian guidance. Some pets do better with a lighter meal before travel, while others — especially diabetic or medically managed pets — may need more specific feeding instructions.

Do not make major diet changes right before travel unless directed by your veterinarian.

Hydration

Hydration Matters Before and After Travel

Travel can disrupt normal drinking patterns. Pets may drink less during unfamiliar handling, airport movement, crate confinement, or environmental change.

Encourage normal water intake before travel unless your veterinarian or airline instructions say otherwise. After arrival, monitor water interest, appetite, elimination, and overall behavior.

Bathroom timing

Give Dogs a Bathroom Opportunity Before Pickup or Check-In

Dogs generally benefit from a calm bathroom break before travel, especially before long airport check-in windows or extended vehicle transport.

Cats are different. Many cats will not eliminate on command, and litter logistics depend on the route, boarding plan, carrier type, and travel duration.

Exercise and energy

Use Gentle Exercise, Not Exhaustion

Some dogs benefit from a relaxed walk before travel so they can stretch, eliminate, and settle. The goal is not to exhaust the pet or create overheating, panting, or overstimulation before transport.

Keep pre-travel activity calm, familiar, and appropriate for your pet’s age, health, temperature tolerance, and stress level.

Nervous pets

Nervous Pets Need Lower-Stress Preparation

Nervous pets may become more reactive when routines change. Loud packing, rushed handling, unfamiliar people, unusual timing, and emotional household stress can all affect travel tolerance.

Keep the morning calm and predictable when possible.
Avoid unnecessary visitors, noise, or handling immediately before pickup.
Prepare supplies, paperwork, and crate setup before the pickup window.
Let the transport team know about known fears or handling sensitivities.
Medication planning

Discuss Medication Questions With Your Veterinarian

Medication decisions should be made with a veterinarian who knows your pet’s medical history. This is especially important for pets with heart disease, respiratory issues, diabetes, seizure history, anxiety, kidney disease, mobility concerns, or brachycephalic anatomy.

Do not give a new sedative, calming medication, supplement, or dose for the first time on travel day without veterinary guidance.

Airport timing

Airport Pet Travel Requires Extra Time

Airline cargo and pet check-in windows are often much earlier than passenger arrival times. Cargo facilities may be separate from the main terminal, paperwork may need to be reviewed, and crates may be inspected before acceptance.

Rushing at the airport increases stress and can cause missed check-in windows. Transportation plans should be built around the airline’s live-animal timing requirements.

What not to do

What Not To Do on Travel Day

Do not introduce a brand-new food immediately before travel.
Do not wait until pickup to assemble the crate or carrier.
Do not give untested sedatives, calming products, or supplements without veterinary guidance.
Do not assume passenger check-in timing applies to pets traveling through cargo.
Do not hide medical, behavioral, or handling concerns from the transportation team.
Final thought

Preparation Supports Safer, Calmer Transportation

Pet travel involves more than the route itself. The animal’s condition before travel — appetite, hydration, bathroom timing, stress level, medication plan, and crate readiness — can affect how the trip unfolds.

Thoughtful preparation helps reduce avoidable friction and gives the transportation team better information for supporting your pet.