Continental permits small pets to travel with you in the cabin in lieu of a carry-on bag. Your pet's carrier must be able to fit completely underneath your seat, and an additional service charge applies. Service animals are welcome within the cabin or as checked baggage. Continental customers transporting their pet but not traveling with it can track the flight's progress on Continental's website, and OnePass members earn one mile for every dollar they spend transporting their pet.
Delta requires pet owners to present their pet's Veterinary Certificate for travel to EU countries before the pet may board. Parts one through four of the certificate must be completed before the flight, and the process takes about 30 days to complete. Delta permits passengers on EU flights to bring small pets on board as carry-on luggage, but pets traveling to South Africa or Australia must travel in the hold. Delta charges pet owners any additional fees assessed for clearance of customs, handling the animal or for temporary kennel boarding.
El Al permits small pets weighing less than eight kg. to travel in the cabin as carry-on luggage for most flights. The pet's carrier must fit under the seat, and passengers may not hold the carrier on their lap during takeoff and landing. El Al requires that pets travel in the cargo hold on flights to London, Hong Kong, Australia and South Africa. All pets must have valid health and vaccination documentation and an entry permit from the destination country.
Pets on all Virgin flights must travel in the cargo hold, which flight personnel maintain to keep the temperature and pressurization as comfortable as possible for their animal travelers. Virgin doesn't allow sedated pets on flights due to the health risk posed to the animal. Pets must be checked in four hours before departure for document processing and approval, and their owners are responsible for fees incurred from transport to the destination airport's Animal Reception Center, customs clearance and ground handling.