There are specific rules that you must follow when trading in pigs or with semen, ova and embryos from pigs. The rules differ depending on whether you are trading with EU Member States or countries outside the EU. Additionally, the rules for bringing animals into Sweden and moving them out of Sweden, respectively, are different.
Pigs include, for example, domestic pigs, mini-pigs and wild boar.
Please observe that national rules apply to preserve national status for PRRS in pigs. To prevent spread of the disease special rules apply when the animals enter your premises. Read more about the national rules for PRRS further down the page under the heading Bringing in pigs from other countries.
These rules apply to all EU Member States as well as Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Monaco or San Marino. Please note that the United Kingdom is now counted as a country outside the EU.
This page provides an overview of the rules that apply. We will shortly be publishing an information sheet with more detail. Until then, you are welcome to contact us for more information.
If pigs are to be moved from your establishment to another EU Member State or to Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Monaco or San Marino, it is important that your establishment has been registered for at least 4 weeks before the pigs are due to move.
This is because the Swedish Board of Agriculture must enter the information about the establishment in the EU-wide computer system Traces, which is used in connection with the transport of animals.
In order for you to be permitted to bring in animals to Sweden, you must be registered for import with the Swedish Board of Agriculture. You have to register in our e-service at least 30 business days before the expected date of the first occasion of import.
The registration is valid for 2 years from the date on which you are registered. Registration costs SEK 150.
The EU common health certificate, which must be used for any movement of animals within the EU, certifies that the animals do not carry very serious diseases or diseases that affect different EU regions to variable degrees. It is the responsibility of the official veterinarian in the country of dispatch to ensure that the animals comply with the requirements of the certificate. Sweden does not impose any additional mandatory requirements in addition to those of the EU on the country of dispatch or the dispatching establishment.
The animals must meet the requirements of the national salmonella programme as well as the national national PRRS rules which apply when you move new pigs into your establishment. If the animals you accept do not have the required status, they must be isolated and tested according to the rules.
In accordance with the programme, pigs are to be examined for salmonella before they can be introduced to the recipient herd if they are brought in from a country which does not have a salmonella control programme which has been approved by the European Commission and which is equivalent to the Swedish salmonella control programme. Such examination should be carried out in an isolation facility on the receiving establishment. Contact us for more information.
The national rules apply whether you bring animals from Swedish establishments or from establishments in other countries, but these are not entry requirements; they apply after the animals have entered Sweden, if they are animals from abroad. The requirements differ depending on whether or not the establishment, from which the animals are coming, is free of PRRS. Swedish pig holdings are generally considered free of PRRS. This is true on the condition that any pigs that are brought in from other countries have been taken into the establishment in an epidemiologically safe manner, meaning that they have been introduced in accordance with the national rules.
Animals coming from establishments which are not free of PRRS need to be tested in an isolation facility which must first be approved by the Swedish Board of Agriculture.
More information about the national rules and the criteria for a documented good status concerning isolation for PRRS can be found on the page for diseases, hygiene rules and antibiotic resistance in pigs, as well as in the regulations (SJVFS 2021:24).
It is important that you follow the rules on isolation and testing of animals if you bring in animals from other countries where PRRS is present, as the disease has detrimental impacts on animal health as well as on production. Testing for PRRS and salmonella (in cases where such testing must be carried out) may be advantageously coordinated, where in both cases the animals are to be kept in isolation.
If you have any questions about PRRS, contact us:
The animals must be marked with an ID marking which is approved in the country from which the animals are coming.
Pigs that have been brought into Sweden must be reported to the movement registry for pigs at the latest 20 days after they have arrived at the first Swedish establishment (previously called the production facility).
There may be areas with restrictions on the transport of pigs, due to infectious animal diseases. There may be special rules for the transport of pigs in such areas. You must ensure that you know in advance about these areas, so that the animals are not stopped somewhere along the way.
If you are transporting animals to or from Sweden, you must be registered as a transporter. You register as a transporter using our e-service. Please note that a registration as a transporter is not the same as the transporter’s permit required to transport animals as part of your business activities.
When you bring pigs from EU Member States, Norway, Andorra, Switzerland or the Faroe Islands, the animals may enter only via a customs post. When the animals pass the border, you must notify the customs post in question of the import. Our recommendation is that you notify the customs post well in advance that the transport is on its way, and let them know when the transport is expected to arrive at the border.
You are only allowed to bring pigs into Sweden from certain countries outside the EU. Contact our disease control unit to find out which countries these are.
This page provides an overview of the rules that apply. We will shortly be publishing an information sheet with more detail. Until then, you are welcome to contact us for more information.
If you are receiving pigs to your establishment from countries outside the EU, it is important that your establishment is registered at least 4 weeks before the pigs are moved.
This is because the Swedish Board of Agriculture must enter the information about the establishment in the EU-wide computer system Traces, which is used in connection with the transport of animals.
In order for you to be permitted to bring in animals to Sweden, you must be registered for import with the Swedish Board of Agriculture. You have to register in our e-service at least 30 business days before the expected date of the first occasion of import.
The registration is valid for 2 years from the date on which you are registered. Registration costs SEK 150.
The EU common health certificate, which must be used for any movement of animals to the EU, certifies that the animals do not carry very serious diseases or diseases that affect different EU regions to variable degrees. It is the responsibility of the official veterinarian in the country of dispatch to ensure that the animals comply with the requirements of the certificate. Sweden does not impose any additional mandatory requirements in addition to those of the EU on the country of dispatch or the dispatching establishment.
When you move pigs into your establishment, the animals must meet the requirements of the national salmonella programme and the national rules for PRRS. If the animals you accept do not have the required status, they must be isolated and tested according to the rules.
In accordance with the programme, pigs are to be examined for salmonella before they can be introduced to the recipient herd if they are brought in from a country which does not have a salmonella control programme which has been approved by the European Commission and which is equivalent to the Swedish salmonella control programme. Such examination should be carried out in an isolation facility on the receiving establishment. Contact us for more information.
The national rules apply whether you bring animals from Swedish establishments or from establishments in other countries, but these are not entry requirements; they apply after the animals have entered Sweden, if they are animals from abroad. The requirements differ depending on whether or not the establishment, from which the animals are coming, is free of PRRS. Swedish pig holdings are generally considered free of PRRS. This is true on the condition that any pigs that are brought in from other countries have been taken into the establishment in an epidemiologically safe manner, meaning that they have been introduced in accordance with the national rules.
Animals coming from establishments which are not free of PRRS need to be tested in an isolation facility which must first be approved by the Swedish Board of Agriculture.
More information about the national rules and the criteria for a documented good status concerning isolation for PRRS can be found on the page for diseases, hygiene rules and antibiotic resistance in pigs, as well as in the regulations (SJVFS 2021:24).
It is important that you follow the rules on isolation and testing of animals if you bring in animals from other countries where PRRS is present, as the disease has detrimental impacts on animal health as well as on production. Testing for PRRS and salmonella (in cases where such testing must be carried out) may be advantageously coordinated, where in both cases the animals are to be kept in isolation.
If you have any questions about PRRS, contact us:
The animals must be marked with an ID marking which is approved in the country from which the animals are coming.
Upon arrival at the receiving herd in Sweden, the animals must be additionally marked with Swedish ear tags.
Pigs that have been brought into Sweden from a country outside the EU must be reported to the movement registry for pigs at the latest 20 days after they have arrived at the first Swedish establishment (previously called the production facility).
There may be areas with restrictions on the transport of pigs, due to infectious animal diseases. There may be special rules for the transport of pigs in such areas. You must ensure that you know in advance about these areas, so that the animals are not stopped somewhere along the way.
If you are transporting animals to or from Sweden, you must be registered as a transporter. You register as a transporter using our e-service. Please note that a registration as a transporter is not the same as the transporter’s permit required to transport animals as part of your business activities.
Animals from approved countries outside the EU, except for Norway, Andorra, the Faroe Islands and Switzerland, may only be brought in via an approved border control station.
When you bring in animals, you must notify the border control veterinarian at least one working day in advance of arrival to the border control post. You must also report the animals to the border control post in the Trace system via a CHED (Common Health Entry Document). The person who creates the CHED can be a private person, a company importing the animals, or a company in charge of organisation of shipping.
There is currently no border control station in Sweden that is approved to receive cattle. Therefore, you must bring the animals in via an approved border control station in another country. The transport will then be handled as an import from another EU country.
If the import takes place via another EU country, it must be reported to the border control post where the animals enter the EU.
When the animals cross the border into Sweden, you must report the entry to customs.
If the import takes place via another EU Member State, a notification must be made to the border control post where the animals will enter the EU.
When the animals pass the border into Sweden, you must register the import with the Swedish Customs.
When the animals pass the border into Sweden, you must also register the import to the customs. Our recommendation is that you notify the customs post well in advance that the transport is on its way, and let them know when it is expected to arrive at the border.
Please note that the United Kingdom is now counted as a country outside the EU.
This page provides an overview of the rules that apply. We will shortly be publishing an information sheet with more detail. Until then, you are welcome to contact us for more information.
If pigs are to be moved from your establishment to another EU Member State or to Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Monaco or San Marino, it is important that your establishment has been registered for at least 4 weeks before the pigs are due to move.
This is because the Swedish Board of Agriculture must enter the information about the establishment in the EU-wide computer system Traces, which is used in connection with the transport of animals.
You must have contacted an official veterinarian in good time, who shall examine the animals and issue a health certificate within 24 hours prior to departure. The veterinarian must also be able to certify that the animals meet all the requirements of the health certificate. The animals must be accompanied by the original on paper. The health certificate is also sent electronically between countries through the EU's common Traces database.
There are two health certificates that are used for pigs: for breeding, or direct to slaughter. The health certificate for breeding is to be used for all animals that are not intended for immediate slaughter. This also applies to any animals that may be castrated.
The animals must have been in the dispatching establishment for at least 30 days before they can be sent to another EU Member State. The official veterinarian must certify that this is the case in the certificate. If the animals have not been in isolation, no new animals may have been added to the herd for that period.
For animals that are to be used for breeding, a zootechnical certificate must also be provided.
The animals must be accompanied by a travel plan during any transport which exceeds 8 hours. This travel plan is to be prepared by the official veterinarian, approved by the Swedish Board of Agriculture, and must accompany the animals.
The animals must be correctly marked for identification and the transport must be registered with the central pig registry.
If you are sending animals from multiple herds to another country, you may need to assemble the animals. Assembly may take place via an approved assembly centre, or en route according to special rules. You must seek an approval from the Swedish Board of Agriculture, both for an assembly centre and for assembly en route. At present, there is no approved assembly centre for pigs in Sweden.
There may be areas with restrictions on the transport of pigs, due to infectious animal diseases. There may be special rules for the transport of pigs in such areas. You must ensure that you know in advance about these areas, so that the animals are not stopped somewhere along the way.
If you are transporting animals to or from Sweden, you must be registered as a transporter. You register as a transporter using our e-service. Please note that a registration as a transporter is not the same as the transporter’s permit required to transport animals as part of your business activities.
This section describes what rules apply when you are exporting pigs to a country outside the EU.
If the animals are going to Switzerland, Norway, Andorra or the Faroe Islands, the same rules apply as when exporting animals to another EU Member State. You can read more under the heading Pigs to EU Member States, Switzerland, Norway, Andorra or the Faroe Islands.
In order to export or bring animals to a country outside the EU (other than Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Monaco or San Marino), you need to find out which requirements apply in the destination country. Contact the embassy or the veterinary authorities of the destination country well in advance in order to find out:
Contact an official veterinarian well in advance to ascertain whether there is any negotiated health certificate which is valid in the country to which you are travelling or selling your animals. If there is a negotiated certificate it should be used.
If there is no negotiated certificate, you should contact the authorities in the destination country and find out which certificates they accept or what requirements must be met. If they only accept their own country's certificate, make sure your official veterinarian gets it well in advance. Never use a previously saved certificate without checking with the receiving country that the certificate is still valid and it is the latest version.
If you have only been informed about the requirements that must be met in order to be allowed to export to the country, it is you as the exporter who must write the certificate and insert the current requirements, as well as verify in writing with the recipient country that the final version is approved.
You must then give the information and the certificate to your official veterinarian in writing well in advance of the planned export.
The Swedish Board of Agriculture’s logo must not be used for a non-negotiated certificate.
The official veterinarian can always refuse to sign a health certificate if the requirements of the certificate are not met or if it is written in a language that the official veterinarian does not understand.
Please note that when a non-negotiated or general certificate is used, the export takes place at the exporter's own risk. Neither the Swedish Board of Agriculture nor the official veterinarian can provide any guarantees that the certificate will be accepted.
If your export of animals must be negotiated with the authorities in the destination countries, you should submit an export application using our e-service. Once the export application has been received, negotiations with the destination country will be managed by the Swedish Board of Agriculture. Keep in mind that negotiations may take a long time (usually several years) to complete. It is not a solution for a one-time export.
The export application is primarily aimed at those who intend to export large quantities and frequently. Note that received export applications are prioritized by the Swedish Board of Agriculture.
Before you travel with animals or export them to countries outside the EU, you need to find out if any export restrictions apply due to contagious animal diseases.
It is also important that you find out what rules and requirements apply to the transport.
If you sell animals to a country outside the EU, you must submit an electronic customs declaration to the Swedish Customs.
If you are bringing back animals that you have previously travelled with or exported to a country outside the EU, you need to find out what rules apply.
You are welcome to send us an e-mail if you have any questions.
Here, you can find out what rules apply when you are bringing animals or animal products to the United Kingdom, but you must also read the general rules that apply when exporting to countries outside the EU.
As of 1 January 2021, new rules apply to trade with the United Kingdom. The ministry responsible for these rules is the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA). If you have any questions, please contact them.
The rules are described in the guide Border Operating Model.
The UK is implementing the new rules in several phases throughout 2021 and 2022. The conditions for exports to the United Kingdom may change, and it is therefore important that anyone carrying out exports stays up-to-date via the DEFRA’s website.
Companies that are exporting to the UK need to, among other things:
The importer to the UK should pre-register live animals, breeding materials and products from animals from the EU with the UK system Import of Products, Animals, Feed and Food Systems (IPAFFS). This must be done at the latest one business day prior to the expected arrival. A health certificate must always accompany the consignment. Physical controls may be carried out.
The health certificate has been developed by UK authorities and is available in the EU computer system Traces or on DEFRA’s website. It is your responsibility as an exporter to find out which certificate must be used, and for that reason it is important that you, potentially with the help of the importer, find out what is required by checking DEFRA’s website. You can also read more on their website about how the various parts of the certificate are filled in and which information is mandatory, and which is optional.
This applies to exports to the United Kingdom:
You may buy semen, ova and embryos from pigs from countries within the EU, Norway, Iceland, Northern Ireland, Switzerland, Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Gibraltar, Greenland, Liechtenstein, Monaco or San Marino.
Your establishment must be approved for intra-EU trade with semen, ova and embryos.
In order to trade with semen, ova and embryos, you must have a permit for activities involving insemination and embryos.
The semen and embryos must have been stored in an approved semen collection centre or embryo collection and production team before being imported into Sweden.
The consignment has to be accompanied by an official health certificate in the original. The health certificate must be issued by an official veterinarian in the country from which the animal is coming no earlier than 24 hours before loading.
If you import semen, a zootechnical certificate must also accompany the semen.
You may only import semen, ova and embryos from countries or establishments outside the EU if they are approved for import. A list of establishments in countries that are approved for import to the EU is provided on the EU’s website.
When you are importing to Sweden from countries outside the EU, other than Norway, the Faroe Islands, Andorra and Switzerland, the import must pass through an approved border control post. You must notify the veterinarian at the border control post at the latest one business day in advance.
If the import to Sweden takes place from a country outside the EU via another EU Member State, a notification for border control must be made to the border control post where the animals will enter the EU.
Your establishment must be approved for intra-EU trade with semen, ova and embryos.
In order to trade with semen, ova and embryos, you must have a permit for activities involving insemination and embryos.
In order to export semen, ova and embryos to countries outside the EU, it is required that collection and storage was carried out at an establishment approved for these activities. Your establishment must be approved for intra-EU trade with semen, ova and embryos. You must also have a permit for activities involving insemination or embryos. The semen must come from semen collection centres which have been granted an EU approval by the Swedish Board of Agriculture.
Please note that the export of animals requires careful preparation. Contact the embassy or the veterinary authorities of the destination country in good time in order to find out:
Ytterligare två gemensamma texter ska in här
Contact an official veterinarian well in advance to ascertain whether there is any negotiated health certificate which is valid in the country to which you are travelling or selling your animals. If there is a negotiated certificate it should be used.
If there is no negotiated certificate, you should contact the authorities in the destination country and find out which certificates they accept or what requirements must be met. If they only accept their own country's certificate, make sure your official veterinarian gets it well in advance. Never use a previously saved certificate without checking with the receiving country that the certificate is still valid and it is the latest version.
If you have only been informed about the requirements that must be met in order to be allowed to export to the country, it is you as the exporter who must write the certificate and insert the current requirements, as well as verify in writing with the recipient country that the final version is approved.
You must then give the information and the certificate to your official veterinarian in writing well in advance of the planned export.
The Swedish Board of Agriculture’s logo must not be used for a non-negotiated certificate.
The official veterinarian can always refuse to sign a health certificate if the requirements of the certificate are not met or if it is written in a language that the official veterinarian does not understand.
Please note that when a non-negotiated or general certificate is used, the export takes place at the exporter's own risk. Neither the Swedish Board of Agriculture nor the official veterinarian can provide any guarantees that the certificate will be accepted.
If your export of animals must be negotiated with the authorities in the destination countries, you should submit an export application using our e-service. Once the export application has been received, negotiations with the destination country will be managed by the Swedish Board of Agriculture. Keep in mind that negotiations may take a long time (usually several years) to complete. It is not a solution for a one-time export.
The export application is primarily aimed at those who intend to export large quantities and frequently. Note that received export applications are prioritized by the Swedish Board of Agriculture.
Before you travel with animals or export them to countries outside the EU, you need to find out if any export restrictions apply due to contagious animal diseases.
It is also important that you find out what rules and requirements apply to the transport.
If you sell semen, ova or embryos to a country outside the EU, you must submit an electronic customs declaration to the Swedish Customs.
If you are bringing back semen, ova or embryos that you have previously travelled with or exported to a country outside the EU, you need to find out what rules apply.
You are welcome to send us an e-mail if you have any questions.
Here, you can find out what rules apply when you are bringing animals or animal products to the United Kingdom, but you must also read the general rules that apply when exporting to countries outside the EU.
As of 1 January 2021, new rules apply to trade with the United Kingdom. The ministry responsible for these rules is the Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA). If you have any questions, please contact them.
The rules are described in the guide Border Operating Model.
The UK is implementing the new rules in several phases throughout 2021 and 2022. The conditions for exports to the United Kingdom may change, and it is therefore important that anyone carrying out exports stays up-to-date via the DEFRA’s website.
Companies that are exporting to the UK need to, among other things:
The importer to the UK should pre-register live animals, breeding materials and products from animals from the EU with the UK system Import of Products, Animals, Feed and Food Systems (IPAFFS). This must be done at the latest one business day prior to the expected arrival. A health certificate must always accompany the consignment. Physical controls may be carried out.
The health certificate has been developed by UK authorities and is available in the EU computer system Traces or on DEFRA’s website. It is your responsibility as an exporter to find out which certificate must be used, and for that reason it is important that you, potentially with the help of the importer, find out what is required by checking DEFRA’s website. You can also read more on their website about how the various parts of the certificate are filled in and which information is mandatory, and which is optional.
This applies to exports to the United Kingdom: