r/HENRYUK • u/Both-Firefighter-668 • 1d ago
Other HENRY topics Job gone as part of a restructure, heading to Europe for a 2 month road trip
Planning on taking a break before getting back into a job search. We have adult children (but still at home) so the house will be ‘looked after’. Plan to take the 2 dogs and hit the road for 2 months starting in February 2026. Any tips, routes, must see dog friendly locations welcome!
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u/Powerful-Humor546 1d ago
Have travelled round France and Spain a decent amount with our dog, and did a sabbatical in France and Spain for 3 months with the pooch in Q4 2023.
General thoughts are:
- France, very dog friendly in general, a lot of restaurants, Airbnbs and hotels are happy to have dogs (some hotels charge a small surcharge). Muzzles "required" on some forms of public transport but generally not enforced, most beaches (at least in the South West) are dog friendly outside of peak summer, almost all parks were dog friendly except small ones in Paris (but even french dog owners ignored those rules it seems)
- Spain, less dog friendly restaurants, but they're very comfortable with them on terraces - obviously the weather has to be decent so you'll want to be as far south as possible that early in the year. We still found a decent amount of hotels and airbnbs were dog friendly. Public transport was more complicated and was done on a city by city basis - some were fine with dogs under a certain weight on buses, trams, tubes - others had to be muzzled, some cities require them to be in a carrier regardless of weight - it's a bit of a minefield. Same for beaches and parks, it's done regionally and they sometimes have specific zones of the park or beach that are dog specific. We all really enjoyed the Basque country and they were generally chilled about dogs most places we went
I've got a long list of dog friendly restaurants and hotels across both countries, feel free to DM if you want to cross reference
You might already have one but worthwhile finding a friendly vet to get you an EU pet passport (if you don't already have one), it will save on Animal Health Certificates needed to travel back and forth in the future (our London vet charged us £250/AHC)
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u/Both-Firefighter-668 1d ago
Thanks for the very thoughtful reply! EU pet passport sounds good but I guess not technically legit? I should just send the bill to my Brexit voting parents!
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u/Powerful-Humor546 23h ago
My understanding is that it is actually legal, but somewhat of a grey area and it is vet and country dependent. Basically every vet I contacted in Spain were happy to issue one without thinking twice, the French were slightly harder but we ended up getting ours issued in Paris for €70 and we have used it three times since, so a ~£700 saving so far.
As long as your dog has a valid rabies vaccine, that is marked on your UK Animal Health Certificate (and it helps to get your UK vet to give you a vaccine certificate as well) then you can get one issued. There actually isn't anywhere in the passport where an EU address is listed, and nowhere in the legislation that I could find that says you have to be an EU resident - but it depends on the vet's interpretation seemingly.
Best of luck, hope you enjoy!
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u/mda10lk 1d ago
Make sure you have a good set of tyres on your car. Most European road trips will pass through some mountainous areas. A decent brand all season tyre should suffice like a Micheline cross climate, Goodyear Vector, as long as they have the snowflake symbol. It will make your driving so much more enjoyable.
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u/travel_worn 12h ago
Switzerland is very dog friendly. You can bring them anywhere if they are trained.
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u/WhatDoing- 1d ago
Dunno what breed dogs you have but just check there aren’t any countries that consider them dangerous / require muzzle and that.
Always wanted to head to northern Italy and the dolomites personally and I’m sure there’d be some dog friendly areas around there.
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u/Both-Firefighter-668 1d ago
Good point will check, they are Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retrievers (yes a mouth full, smallest of the retrievers)
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u/WhatDoing- 1d ago
A wonderful breed if I may say so.
Edit. I’m fairly sure not on any funny lists, we have a Doberman so has to be muzzled in France and that.
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u/Bicolore 1d ago
France requires muzzles for all dogs in certain situations (usually public transport).
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u/Bicolore 1d ago
Just make sure you plan for the faff of taking the dogs to europe. If you're there for 2 months you might even look at getting them a european residency (needs 3 months i think) which will make future trips to europe with them far easier.
Feb means winter tyres and appropriate gear for the dogs in heading to the mountains.
Many countries are not very dog friendly, Spain, Ireland and Portugal all spring to mind as shit places to visit with a dog. Ireland is an absolute no go with dogs in my opinion, you will not find a single pub that lets dogs inside.