Often the Best Path Home

Rehome a Pet

Whether it's your own pet you can no longer care for, or a pet you've found and can't keep, rehoming directly is often the best outcome — for the animal and for you. Your pet skips the stress of a shelter, you get to vet the new family, and the transition can happen on your timeline.

Why Rehome Directly

Local shelters are at capacity and operate on long wait lists. Rehoming yourself is usually faster, less stressful for the pet, and gives you control over their next chapter.

  • Skip the shelter stress

    Pets stay in a home environment the whole time — far less stressful than weeks in a kennel.

  • You choose the new family

    Meet potential adopters, ask the questions that matter, and feel confident about where your pet is going.

  • Move on your timeline

    No wait list. Start listing today, and transition on a schedule that works for everyone.

  • Pass along their history

    Share their food preferences, quirks, medical history, and routines directly with the new family.

Where to List Your Pet

These trusted services help you list your pet, screen adopters, and complete a safe handoff. They're free and designed specifically for owner-to-owner rehoming.

Home2Home

Connects pets needing new homes with adopters in their community. Lets you keep the pet at home until the right family is found.

Visit Home2Home

Local Facebook Rehoming Groups

Search Facebook for "Corpus Christi rehoming" or your neighborhood pet groups. Local visibility, fast responses — just be extra careful screening interested parties (see the red flags below).

Search Facebook

How to Find the Right Family

A good rehoming starts with a great listing and ends with careful screening. Here's what we've learned helps the most.

Write an honest listing

Include their age, breed mix, energy level, what they love, and any quirks. Honest listings attract the right family the first time — surprises after adoption cause returns.

Use great photos and a short video

Natural light, eye-level shots, and one clip of them being themselves (playing, snuggling, ignoring you) does more than a paragraph of description.

Charge a small adoption fee

Even $25–$75 weeds out impulse takers and the rare bad-faith parties. It signals you take the rehome seriously, and the new family will too.

Ask the questions that matter

Have they had pets before? Who lives in the home? Where will the pet sleep? Are they renting? Do they have a vet? It's okay to be selective — this is your pet.

Do a meet-and-greet on neutral ground

A coffee shop patio, a park, or your front porch. Watch how they interact. Bring a friend if it feels right.

Send a care packet with them

Their current food, a favorite toy, vet records, microchip info, and a one-page sheet of what they love and how to win their trust. Update the microchip registry after the handoff.

Tried Rehoming and Still Need Help?

If you've made a genuine effort to rehome and it hasn't worked out, our owner-surrender process is the next step. We also offer case-by-case support for one-time issues — surgery costs, pet deposits, and other situations — that might let you keep your pet.