No Judgment — Just Options

Considering Surrendering Your Pet?

Life changes. Sometimes a beloved pet ends up in a situation their family can no longer handle, and that's not a moral failing — it's a hard, real moment. We want to help you think through the options. For most pets, there's a better path than surrender. For the ones that genuinely need our shelter, here's what to expect.
Step 1

Try Rehoming First

Most pets find better outcomes (and faster ones) through direct rehoming than through a shelter. You stay in control: you write the listing, you pick the family, and your pet skips the stress of a kennel entirely. We've put together a guide to the trusted services we recommend — start there.

Veterinary Social Work

Need Help With a Specific Problem?

Sometimes surrender comes down to one fixable thing — a surgery you can't afford, a pet deposit at a new apartment, a medical bill that piled up. We may be able to help on a case-by-case basis so you can keep your pet. Reach out and tell us what's going on. There's no application form — just a real conversation.
  • A surgery you can't cover all at once
  • A pet deposit for a new apartment
  • A short-term medical bill
  • A behavior issue that might be resolvable
  • Something else — just ask
Reach Out About a Special Case

If You Still Need to Surrender

We're a limited-intake shelter, which means we have a real wait list. Here's exactly how the process works — no surprises.

  1. 1

    Make a documented rehoming effort

    Post your pet on at least one rehoming service (Adopt-A-Pet Rehome, Home2Home, or a local Facebook group). This isn't busywork — it almost always finds a faster, lower-stress outcome for the pet.

  2. 2

    Submit a surrender request

    Fill out our intake form with details about your pet and the rehoming effort you've made. We'll review it and follow up to talk through next steps.

  3. 3

    Join the wait list

    Our current wait time is around 10 weeks. During that time, your pet stays with you and we keep in touch about openings. If your situation becomes urgent before then, let us know.

Wait times shift with the season. Spring and summer are tightest. We'll give you a realistic ETA when we follow up on your request.

Common Questions

How long is the wait list right now?

About 10 weeks on average. It shifts with the season — kitten season and post-holiday windows are usually tightest. We'll give you a more specific estimate when you submit your request.

Do I have to try rehoming first?

We strongly recommend it. Documented rehoming effort moves your request forward faster, and most of the time it ends up working — which is the best outcome for everyone. If there's an urgent safety issue that means rehoming isn't possible, tell us in your request.

What if my situation is urgent?

Reach out anyway. We can't always fast-track, but we can sometimes connect you with foster networks, partner shelters, or other resources that can help right now.

Is there a surrender fee?

We ask for a contribution to help cover vet care and supplies, but we'll never turn an animal away over inability to pay. The conversation comes first.

Will I know what happens to my pet?

Once a pet is officially surrendered, they become ours legally, and we make placement decisions in their best interest. We can give you a general update after adoption if you'd like — just ask at the time of surrender.