Pet Care in Greece: A Local Guide for Dog & Cat Owners

Practical, plain-language pet care for dog and cat owners in Greece — tuned to the local climate, with how to find an emergency vet, what to do in a poisoning, and the essentials of keeping a pet healthy here.

Climate & seasonal pet care in Greece

Greece has a Mediterranean climate of hot summers and mild winters. Summers get hot, so from late spring to early autumn treat heat seriously: walk early or late, avoid hot pavement (use the walk-safety tool), carry water, and know the signs of heatstroke. Mild winters mean parasites stay active much of the year, so don’t drop tick and flea prevention in the cooler months. In many Mediterranean areas, watch for processionary caterpillars in late winter and spring, which are dangerous if a dog licks them. The warmest months are roughly June to August and the coldest December to February.

Emergency & poison help

Greece does not have a single nationwide pet poison hotline that we can verify, so if your pet eats something toxic, your fastest help is your own vet or the nearest 24-hour emergency clinic. Save those numbers in your phone today. A few international services (such as the US/Canada Pet Poison Helpline) also take calls from abroad for a fee in an emergency.

Whatever your pet has eaten, you can check it fast in our universal safety scanner and follow the step-by-step plan on our pet emergency page.

Find a vet in Greece

The fastest way to a vet is a live map of clinics around you right now.

Emergency vet near me Regular vet near me

If you keep a rabbit, bird or exotic pet, search for an exotic or avian vet in advance — they are rarer.

Travelling with a pet to or from Greece

Pet travel rules change often and are strict, so always confirm the current requirements with official government and airline sources before you book. As a general framework almost everywhere, expect to need: an up-to-date microchip, a valid rabies vaccination, an official health certificate from a vet close to travel, and sometimes a blood test or specific timing. Some destinations add tapeworm treatment, import permits or quarantine. Start well in advance — some steps take months.

Everyday essentials

Wherever you are, the basics are the same: a microchip and ID tag with current details (and a free lost pet poster if the worst happens), a complete diet in the right amount (use the food calculator), year-round parasite prevention suited to the local climate, neutering unless breeding responsibly, dental care, and regular vet checks. Build a schedule with our lifelong care plan, and keep unsafe foods and toxic plants out of reach.

General information for pet owners in Greece, not veterinary or legal advice. Confirm local regulations and travel rules with official sources. Full disclaimer.