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Importing a Shiba Inu from Japan: Complete Owner's Guide

· Updated 24 juni 2026· 4 min lezen

Yes, you can import a Shiba Inu from Japan, but expect 12–16 weeks of quarantine, $3,500–$8,000+ in total costs, and strict USDA/CDC paperwork. The dog must be at least 7 months old, microchipped ISO 11784/11785, and vaccinated against rabies before entering most countries.

Importing a Shiba Inu from Japan: Complete Owner's Guide

Importing a Shiba Inu from Japan is absolutely possible and a popular route for owners seeking original Japanese bloodlines (Shinshu, Mino, or San'in), but it is a long, paper-heavy, and expensive process. Whether you are working directly with a Japanese preservation breeder through NIPPO, using an export-trained agent, or adopting a retired breeding dog, you should plan for a timeline of 3–6 months and a budget of $3,500–$8,000 USD once airfare, bloodline-quality pricing, quarantine, transport, and U.S. (or your country's) import fees are tallied.

The single most important rule: the dog must be at least 7 months of age to meet Japan's export rabies titer requirements (FAVN test, ≥0.5 IU/mL) and your destination country's entry rules. Puppies under 7 months cannot complete the protocol in time.

Why Import from Japan?

  • Original bloodlines: Direct access to NIPPO-registered Shibas, the breed's parent standard written in 1934.
  • Preservation quality: Many Japanese breeders focus on structure, urajiro (the required cream-white ventral markings), and the classic brushwood-dog temperament, not just pet trends.
  • Show prospects: A Japanese-import dog with strong Shinshu or Mino lineage is often highly competitive in NIPPO, AKC, and FCI events.
  • Rescue option: Retirees and breeder-returned adults occasionally surface through Japan Shiba Inu Rescue networks (~$300–$1,200 plus transport).

Step-by-Step Import Process

  1. Identify a breeder or rescue. Search NIPPO registries, Japan Kennel Club (JKC) records, or reputable export agents. Verify OFA/CHIC equivalents (hips, patella, eyes) and ask for a multi-generation pedigree.
  2. Sign a contract and pay a deposit. Reputable breeders charge ¥400,000–¥1,200,000 ($2,700–$8,000) for a pet-quality puppy, more for show prospects. A non-refundable deposit (often 30–50%) reserves the puppy.
  3. Microchip + first rabies vaccine. The puppy must be implanted with an ISO 11784/11785 15-digit microchip before the rabies vaccine is administered. Only USDA-approved vaccines are valid for U.S. import.
  4. Wait for the FAVN titer. Blood is drawn at least 30 days after rabies vaccination and sent to an approved lab. The dog must be at least 7 months old at blood draw.
  5. USDA/CDC endorsement in Japan. Your exporter coordinates USDA APHIS endorsement of the export certificate (Form 7001 for the U.S.). This step is non-negotiable.
  6. Quarantine in Japan. Even healthy, fully vaccinated dogs typically spend 12–16 weeks in an approved Japanese holding facility before flight, depending on the export program used.
  7. Flight + customs clearance. A pet-experienced agent or airline-approved crate ($200–$500), IATA-compliant, is required. The dog flies as manifest cargo, not in-cabin, due to size (Shibas are 8–10 kg).
  8. U.S. arrival. Dogs arriving at a CDC-regulated port may face an additional 24–72 hours of veterinary inspection before release.

Total Cost Breakdown (U.S. import)

Item Estimated Cost (USD)
Pet-quality puppy $2,700–$5,000
Show-quality puppy $5,000–$10,000+
Quarantine (Japan) $1,000–$2,500
Air freight + crate $800–$2,000
USDA endorsement ~$150
CDC inspection $0–$300
FAVN titer + vet $200–$400
Total $4,850–$14,200+

Add $300–$1,500 if you hire a full-service import agent ($1,500–$3,000 in fees) to handle the paperwork.

Red Flags & Common Pitfalls

  • Breeders refusing video calls or vet references. Walk away.
  • "Discount" Shibas under $2,000. Usually a scam, a mixed breed, or a backyard operation with no NIPPO/JKC registration.
  • No microchip pre-rabies-vaccine. This invalidates the entire timeline.
  • Skipping the FAVN titer. A single missing blood test will get the dog refused at the border.
  • Ignoring your state laws. Hawaii, for example, has a 120-day post-arrival quarantine on top of everything else. Guam and some U.S. territories have additional requirements.
  • Skipping health checks. Even imported dogs should receive OFA hips, patella evaluation, and a CAER eye exam within the first year. The breed still carries risk of luxating patella, hip dysplasia (~7.6% OFA), primary closed-angle glaucoma, and PRA.

Is It Worth It?

For most families, a U.S.-bred Shiba from a CHIC-tested parentage is the smarter, faster, kinder choice at $1,400–$2,500. Importing makes sense if you specifically need a show-prospect with verified Japanese bloodlines, want a retired adult from a preservation breeder, or are committed to NIPPO-style conformation. Either way, budget the time and money honestly — a 13–16 year lifespan means a rushed import decision haunts you for over a decade.

FAQ

How long does it take to import a Shiba Inu from Japan to the U.S.?

Plan on 3–6 months total. The dog must be at least 7 months old to complete Japan's rabies titer protocol, then typically spends 12–16 weeks in approved Japanese quarantine before a manifest-cargo flight and 1–3 days of CDC inspection on arrival.

How much does it cost to import a Shiba Inu from Japan?

Total costs run $4,850–$14,200+ USD. A pet-quality puppy is $2,700–$5,000, show-quality $5,000–$10,000+, plus $1,000–$2,500 Japanese quarantine, $800–$2,000 air freight, and roughly $350 in vet, USDA, and CDC fees.

What is the minimum age to import a Shiba Inu from Japan?

7 months is the hard minimum. The dog must be at least 7 months old at the time the FAVN rabies titer blood sample is drawn, and the ISO-compliant microchip must be implanted before the first rabies vaccine.

Is importing a Shiba Inu from Japan better than buying domestically?

Only if you need verified Shinshu, Mino, or San'in bloodlines for show/breeding, or want a retired adult from a preservation breeder. For typical family pets, a U.S.-bred CHIC-tested Shiba at $1,400–$2,500 is faster, cheaper, and ethically equivalent in health and temperament.

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