Guidance

Check import risk categories, inspection rates and related rules for animals and animal products imported from non-EU countries to Great Britain

Import risk categories under the Border Target Operating Model (BTOM) for animals or animal products you’re importing from a non-EU country to Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales), the import rules and inspection rates for each category, from 30 April 2024.

Applies to England, Scotland and Wales

Documents

Details

From 30 April 2024, to import live animals or animal products from non-EU countries into Great Britain, you’ll need to:

The BTOM categorises live animals, germinal products, products of animal origin (POAO) and animal by-products (ABPs) as high risk, medium risk or low risk. Each category has different requirements.

This guidance applies to imports from non-EU countries only.

There is separate guidance on BTOM risk categories for imports from the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Permitted countries

Exporting countries need approval to send animals and animal products to Great Britain. This is also referred to as having ‘market access’. See details of non-EU countries approved to export animals and animal products to Great Britain.

BTOM risk categories for non-EU countries only apply to countries that have been subject to a risk assessment. These are:

  • Argentina
  • Australia
  • Botswana
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • Chile
  • China
  • Ecuador
  • India
  • Israel
  • Japan
  • Namibia
  • New Zealand
  • Nicaragua
  • Singapore
  • South Africa
  • South Korea
  • Thailand
  • Turkey
  • Ukraine
  • United States
  • Uruguay
  • Vietnam

In the summary tables for animal and animal product imports from non-EU countries to Great Britain, the phrase ‘all permitted countries’ means all countries from this list that have been approved to export a particular animal or product to Great Britain.

Other countries that have market access but have not been subject to a BTOM risk assessment will continue to follow existing import processes.

How to find the risk category for animals and animal products

You can use the 2 documents on this page to find the risk category for a commodity you’re importing.

BTOM risk categories: summary tables for non-EU imports

Use the summary tables for animal and animal product imports from non-EU countries to Great Britain to find out about BTOM risk categories for live animals, POAO and ABPs.

The tables give a summary of how different types of animals and animal products will be categorised. They do not provide the risk categories for specific commodity codes.

BTOM risk categorisation spreadsheet for non-EU imports

Use the BTOM risk categorisation spreadsheet (‘BTOM risk categories for live animals and animal products imported from non-EU countries to Great Britain: searchable list with commodity codes’) to find the risk category for a specific commodity you’re importing.

You can search using a commodity code or browse the list of commodities.

Composite products

From 30 April 2024 all composite products from permitted non-EU countries will be categorised as one of the following:

  • in the medium risk category
  • in the low risk category, if shelf stable at ambient temperature and sterilised
  • not placed in a risk category because it is exempt from official import controls

Find out if your product is a composite, and if it is exempt from import controls.

Rules for each risk category

There are 3 BTOM risk categories:

  • low
  • medium
  • high

If your consignment is in the BTOM low risk category

Continue to use the import of products, animals, food and feed system (IPAFFS) to notify authorities before the goods arrive in Great Britain.

From 30 April 2024 you will not need a health certificate.

Your goods must continue to enter Great Britain through a point of entry with a border control post (BCP) that is designated to check your commodity.

From 30 April 2024 low risk consignments will not be subject to routine documentary, identity and physical checks. However, checks may still be undertaken where intelligence indicates a specific risk.

Low risk category consignments must come with a commercial document from the supplier.

If your consignment is in the BTOM medium risk category

Continue to use IPAFFS to notify authorities before the goods arrive in Great Britain.

From 30 April 2024 your consignment will continue to need a health certificate issued by the competent authority in the country where the goods originate.

From 30 April 2024 products in the medium risk category will continue to enter through a BCP and be subject to documentary, identity and physical import checks.

The rate at which identity and physical checks take place may change. New check rates will be confirmed as soon as they are available, but indicative rates are set out in the Border Target Operating Model (BTOM).

If your consignment is in the high risk category

Continue to use IPAFFS to notify authorities before the goods arrive in Great Britain.

From 30 April 2024 your consignment will continue to need a health certificate issued by the competent authority in the country where the goods originate.

Most consignments in the BTOM high risk category are already subject to documentary, identity and physical import checks. These checks will continue in the same way after 30 April 2024.

If your consignment is in the medium or high risk categories, but there is no health certificate for your goods

If a health certificate does not exist for the goods you want to import, you may need an import licence or authorisation.

Contact the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) Animal Imports team if:

  • there’s no licence or authorisation for your animal or germinal product
  • you’re not sure if you need a licence or authorisation

Inspection rates of imported goods

From 30 April 2024, imports are subject to identity (ID) checks and physical checks. The percentage of times identity and physical checks will happen (the inspection rate) depends on the risk category of the commodity being imported:

  • high risk commodities are inspected every time the commodity is imported (inspection rate 100%)
  • medium risk commodities are inspected 1% to 30% of the time the commodity is imported - the specific inspection rate (M1, M2 or M3) depends on the commodity and country
  • low risk commodities are not subject to routine inspection, but may be subject to non-routine or intelligence-led checks

These rules, as set out in the UK Official Controls Regulations (EU) 2017/625 and Regulation (EU) 2019/2129, are applicable to risk assessed countries under the BTOM.

Some imports will be subject to checks in accordance with arrangements under the Windsor Framework agreement and the relevant Free Trade Agreements. BTOM inspection rates will not apply to these products:

  • meat and edible offal of sheep (fresh, chilled or frozen) from New Zealand
  • pet food and dog chews from all non-EU/European Free Trade Association (EFTA) countries

Risk levels

Risk categorisation is a dynamic process drawing on the most current data and reflecting changes in:

  • disease status
  • animal and public health hazard analysis
  • compliance history
  • data associated with disease outbreak in the exporting country
  • transmission data
  • risk mitigation treatments and restrictions
  • compliance data

These factors underpin risk categorisation and inspection rates (the percentage of time identity checks and physical checks will take place).  Taking these factors into account, the following 3 risk levels have been introduced for medium risk commodities:

  • M1: consequence of non-compliance with import conditions is likely to be manageable or acceptable (baseline inspection rate 1%)
  • M2: consequences of non-compliance with import conditions, including any of the factors mentioned above, could pose a significant risk to public or animal health (baseline inspection rate between 10% and 15%)
  • M3: consequence of non-compliance with import conditions is likely to pose a significant risk to biosecurity or public health (baseline inspection rate 30%)

The frequency rates of identity checks and physical checks will be determined by ministers in Great Britain and agreed by the Animal Disease Policy Group (ADPG). The frequency rates will be determined taking into account a range of factors including:

  • risks to human, animal or plant health, animal welfare or the environment, associated with different types of animals and goods
  • information collected by the competent authorities
  • the controls already performed on the animals or goods
  • history of compliance (including of the operator and exporter)
  • data and information collected by computer management system
  • available scientific assessments
  • any other information regarding the risk associated to the categories of animals and goods

The frequency rates of identity checks and physical checks may change in response to local risk factors and factors specified in the Official Controls Regulation.

Updates to commodity risk categories

Risk factors will be reviewed regularly. Commodities may be moved into higher or lower risk categories in future to reflect changing levels of risk.

You’ll be notified in advance if there is a change to the risk category of a commodity you have imported.

Import risk categories for products from EU countries

Check the import risk categories for imports of animals and animal products from the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Import risk categories for plants and plant products

Check the BTOM risk categories for plants and plant products imported from non-EU countries.

Get help

If you have any questions about notifying imports of animal products or which BTOM risk category your product is in, email the APHA imports team at imports@apha.gov.uk.

Give feedback 

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Published 30 August 2023
Last updated 22 April 2024 + show all updates
  1. Risk categorisation spreadsheet (‘BTOM risk categories for live animals and animal products imported from non-EU countries to Great Britain: searchable list with commodity codes’) added to page as a document. This spreadsheet can be used to find the risk category for a specific commodity that is being imported from a non-EU country. Search the spreadsheet using a known commodity code, or by browsing the list of commodities.

  2. New column added to summary tables showing the inspection rate of commodities. From 30 April 2024, imports will be subject to identity checks and physical checks. The percentage of times identity and physical checks will happen (the inspection rate) depends on the risk category of the commodity: high risk (100%), medium risk (between 1% and 30%) and low risk (not subject to routine inspection, but may be subject to non-routine or intelligence-led checks). Descriptions for some commodities have been edited for clarification, but no risk categories have been changed.

  3. New ‘Miscellaneous’ section added to the summary tables. This will include any products that do not fit into the existing 3 category sections. ‘Hay and straw’ commodity moved out of ‘Animal by-products’ into ‘Miscellaneous’.

  4. We have added some new information for clarification. In the summary tables, in Table 3k, we have added a line to explain that apiculture products that are not for use in apiculture are categorised as low risk.

  5. Added links to new APHA import information notes (ABP/20 and ABP/46) in Table 3k of the summary tables.

  6. We have made some textual changes as part of our ongoing review of this information. In the risk category summary tables, we have provided clarification on fishery species that are associated with histamine, by amending the following phrase "histamine (for example, scombroids)" to "histamine (that is, species of the families Scombridae, Clupeidae, Engraulidae, Coryfenidae, Pomatomidae, or Scombresosidae)".

  7. First published.