Ask any animal shelter or rescue group, and they will tell you that people surrender their dogs for a myriad of reasons. More common ones include: Moving, can’t keep; landlord won’t allow; not enough time; and can’t afford.
Although those are the reasons commonly given, the underlying cause far more often in those cases is that something interfered with the development of the all-important bond between dog and human that ensures the dog a lifelong, loving home. Every day, thousands of dog lovers move and take their dogs with them, find a new place to live where dogs are allowed, rearrange busy schedules to make time for their dogs, and reprioritize budgets to cover their dog-care expenses.
Animal protection and rescue workers often become cynical about and unsympathetic toward those who give up their dogs. Many of us who love our dogs find it difficult to imagine any legitimate reason for rehoming a dog. While it’s true that many dogs are given up for seemingly frivolous reasons, there are times when it is the right thing to do, including the following.
What are valid reasons for rehoming a dog?
1. Two (or more) dogs in the family are seriously fighting.
Although it’s not uncommon for two dogs in a family to have occasional squabbles, there are also times when knock-down-drag-out battles – or even rough play – can put one or more canine family members at risk of serious injury or even death (not to mention the risk of injury to the humans who have to intervene in the dog fights). This can be especially life-threatening when a size differential almost guarantees that a smaller dog will be injured – or killed – by a larger dog who plays too roughly or has mayhem in mind. Plus there is the risk of predatory drift, where the larger dog sees a significantly smaller playmate dash across the yard and his brain kicks into “Squirrel!” mode. He perceives his smaller canine companion as “prey” instead of “playmate,” and tragedy strikes.

Whether due to size difference or not, conflict and potential injury between canine family members calls for careful management protocols, implementation of a behavior modification program to reduce or remove tension when possible, and if necessary, rehoming of one dog to prevent tragedy. If modification isn’t successful and management isn’t realistic, it is only fair to give both dogs a chance at long and happy lives by rehoming one. (I usually recommend rehoming the easier of the two dogs rather than the more problematic one, because it’s much more difficult to rehome a dog with problematic behavior; you are probably that dog’s best option.)
2. The dog is a danger to someone in the household, or to the community.
This often entails aggressive behavior, but not always. Sometimes an aging dog-lover makes the mistake of replacing her beloved senior dog who recently passed away with a puppy of the same breed, forgetting that she was 15 years younger the last time she had a bouncing adolescent canine underfoot. If the human’s dexterity and balance is beginning to fail her, and/or if she is physically unable to meet the dog’s activity needs, rehoming may be the best option.
While daycare, pet walkers, and sympathetic family members and friends may be able to help with some of the exercise, the dog might still present too great a threat to the owner’s safety. If that’s the case, rehoming is the right choice.
A rowdy dog may also present some physical risk to small children in the home. Good management can often minimize the danger while the child grows and the dog matures and learns his good manners behaviors. Aggression, however, is another matter.
Aggression alone is not necessarily a reason to give up your dog. It is irresponsible parenting and dog-caretaking, however, to keep a dog who shows a willingness to bite kids in a home with children. Dogs who live in homes with small children must adore them, or the child’s safety is at significant risk. Anything less than “adore” means the dog should be rehomed, or at least sent off to stay with relatives until the child is old enough to no longer be at risk, and/or the dog has learned to love children. It’s a lot easier to rehome a dog before he bites a child.

A dog with aggressive behaviors presents a risk to the community if the human is unwilling or unable to take necessary management steps to keep the community (and the dog) safe. While this can be due to a lack of concern on the human’s part, it can also be a result of denial and/or lack of education. When aggressive behaviors have been identified in a dog, it is critically important that the caretakers prevent the dog from having any opportunity to bite, and seek assistance from a qualified positive behavior professional for help in managing and modifying the behavior.
3. An unavoidable change in life circumstances precludes keeping the dog.
Stuff happens. You may have the strongest commitment in the world to your dog, and if life circumstances change and you can truly no longer care for him, then rehoming is the responsible decision. I’m not talking about simple priority choices (“We can’t afford the dog’s ACL surgery because we want to go to Europe this summer”); I’m talking about unavoidable life events such as heart attacks, strokes, foreclosure, moving to a long-term care facility, and other life-shattering occurrences. Sometimes, tragically, you really can’t care for your beloved canine any longer.
4. The dog has a health or behavior problem that is beyond the means of the owner to resolve.
Quality of life is an important consideration for dog and humans. If you really can’t afford the care your dog needs, you either provide it anyway, perhaps at the cost of your own health or diet, or you don’t provide it and your dog suffers. You can choose to make sacrifices in order to provide for your beloved dog, but there may come a legitimate time when the sacrifice is too great, or the challenge too difficult. Some medical procedures now available for dogs cost tens of thousands of dollars. Just because we can try to fix something and prolong life, doesn’t always mean we should. A loving caretaker may be completely willing to work with her difficult dog’s behaviors, but physically unable to do so. In those cases, rehoming a dog or even euthanasia may well be the best choice.
Aggression, severe separation anxiety, and a variety of canine obsessive-compulsive disorders can be extremely difficult behavior challenges. While these sometimes respond to treatment, often with the help of behavior modification drugs, they don’t always, and quality of life can be greatly damaged for both dog and human.
For more information on how to treat separation anxiety, see “Surviving Severe Separation Anxiety.”
5. Wrong dog for the situation.
Sometimes, humans acquire a dog for a specific purpose – to be a service dog, do narcotics detection, or to fulfill some other working or competition goals. Sometimes the chosen dog turns out to be totally unsuited for the desired purpose, and the human doesn’t have the luxury of keeping the newly acquired dog while seeking another one who is more suited for the training goal. In such cases, it may be absolutely necessary, or at least fully justifiable, to return or rehome a dog in order to allow the person to seek and select a more appropriate candidate.

Options for rehoming a dog
- Return her to the breeder, shelter, or rescue group you acquired her from. Responsible breeders and adoption organizations contractually require this, although some may allow you to rehome to someone you know that they pre-approve.
Caveats: If the place where you got your dog was less than reputable (for example, with overcrowded, poor conditions) you won’t want to return the dog there. If you got her from a pet store or puppy mill (oh dear), returning is not an option.
2. Place her with a trusted friend or family member. Well-loved, well-behaved, healthy dogs usually have a circle of admirers who would jump at the chance to adopt.
Caveats:Â Even your best friend or favorite relative may decline to take on a dog with major health or behavior challenges. You must be honest about these challenges.
- Advertise for someone to adopt her. People sometimes have success with rehoming dogs by advertising on Craigslist or with fliers posted on the bulletin board at local pet supply stores or veterinary offices. Social media can be a huge help, too; put together some good pictures and complete description of your dog (and the reasons you have to rehome her) and ask your friends to share. You never know, a friend of a friend may have a perfect spot for the dog.
Caveats: Try to allow for plenty of time (weeks or even months) to network in search of a perfect new owner for your dog. It’s not easy to screen potential adopters – you risk placing your dog with someone who won’t provide the kind of loving care you want for her, despite their assurances (this goes triple if she has health or behavior issues). There have been recent Use Caution: There are numerous news stories about dogs placed in new homes free of charge by owners, shelters, and rescue groups, only to have to purported adopters “flip” (sell) the free dogs, or worse
- Take her to a good shelter or rescue. There are thousands of excellent dog adoption services around the country. Many provide medical treatment for at least some of the dogs in their care that the person surrendering the dog couldn’t afford. The best have behavior departments or working relationships with qualified professionals to modify difficult behaviors in order to make dogs more likely to succeed in their next, hopefully final, homes. Not everything is fixable, and responsible groups still have to make difficult euthanasia decisions, but your dog might be one they can help.
Caveats: Be sure you research these groups diligently. Visit the facility to see that it’s clean and well run. If you can’t visit, don’t leave your dog there. If they won’t give you straight answers about their willingness to treat medical issues or modify difficult behaviors, don’t leave your dog there. If your dog isn’t adopted, she may suffer in a cage at a “no-kill” shelter for the rest of her life, or worse, in the hands of a hoarder posing as a shelter or rescue. Again, you must be brutally honest about your dog’s health or behavior problems.
- Have her euthanized. As painful as this, it may be the kindest thing you can do if your dog has significant health and/or behavior issues. It may not be realistic to ask someone else to care for such a dog, and she could be abused or neglected in the process. Dying peacefully in the arms of someone who loves her is better than dying neglected in someone’s backyard, or after spending weeks, months, or years in the stressful environment of a shelter.
When I have a client considering this option because of difficult canine behaviors, I gently suggest that euthanasia is not an inappropriate choice for a loved dog if the client is unable to do the things necessary to restore her dog to physical health, or to manage and/or modify behaviors. I don’t tell her she should make that choice, but I let her know I’ll support her if she does.
Examples of responsible dog rehomes
Here are some examples from my world, of times when rehoming was necessary, responsible and appropriate. Names are changed to protect the privacy of my clients in all except the first example:
Caretaker health issues
More than a decade ago, my then-45-year-old brother had a series of major strokes from which he would never fully recover. He was placed in a long-term care facility where pets were allowed, but only if the resident could care for them, which my brother was unable to do. When my sisters and I visited Bill, he kept asking for his two well-loved Pomeranians. It broke my heart.

I tracked them down – they had been sent to a Pomeranian rescue group – and convinced the rescue (via a significant donation) to let me rehome the dogs with one of the staff at the facility. For many years she brought the dogs with her to work and Bill was able to keep them in his life. Although his dogs are gone now, other staff members continue to visit him with their dogs, knowing how much it means to him.
Wrong dog for the job
A good friend recently purchased an Australian Shepherd puppy from a breeder she thought she had carefully researched. Julie already had two adult dogs with behavioral issues that she had worked long and hard with, one adopted from a “no-kill” facility to save him from spending the rest of his life there. Although she’s been successful enough with her behavior modification work that she is able to compete with her two dogs in agility and rally obedience, she had her heart set on starting with a properly raised and socialized puppy who could grow up to be a really solid dog.
Imagine her dismay when the 10-week-old pup turned out to have significant fear behaviors – far greater than one should expect if he was simply going through a developmental fear period. After much soul-searching, she returned the pup to the breeder. Her decision to do so was sealed when, upon contacting the breeder to let her know of the pup’s behavior, the breeder advised her that she was trying to socialize him “too early.” This is a nonsensical excuse; it’s never too early for appropriate, carefully managed socializing (the critical socialization period is from 3 weeks to 14 weeks), and truly good breeders go to great lengths to provide this early socialization foundation.
Putting others at risk in the home
A client brought her just-adopted adolescent Border Collie-mix to see me because the young dog was acting very fearful of men. Linda had adopted Freddie (names changed) less than a month prior, and he already had seven biting incidents, including one bite that had broken skin. She has two small children in her home, but so far the dog had been relaxed and appropriate with kids. Freddie was a delightful dog with many good attributes, and Linda was committed to keeping him, if at all possible. We worked out a behavior modification program, and this exceptionally knowledgeable client went home, fully committed to working through her dog’s behavioral issues.
A week later during a stressful day in the home, Freddie bit one of the kids – twice. Although neither bite required medical attention, it was clear that he wasn’t safe in a home with children. Despite his bite history, the client was, fortunately, able to place Freddie in a dog-savvy home with no children.
Putting others at risk in society
A young couple adopted a dog a year ago from a “no-kill” group – a dog who, in my opinion, should not have been made available for adoption without first undergoing significant behavior modification. The couple, who were my clients, simply wanted a canine companion they could enjoy and share with friends and family. The Lab/Pit-mix they adopted was so defensively aggressive they were unable to have visitors at their home. If they tried to put him away in a “safe room” so they could enjoy their friends and family, the dog shrieked and became destructive – to his environment if he was left free in the room, and to himself if he was crated. After 10 months of dedicated behavior modification work, including medication for the dog, they sadly decided that neither they nor their dog was enjoying an acceptable quality of life, and chose to have him euthanized.
These rehomers are exceptional
Let me assure you that in my behavior practice these cases are the exception, not the rule. I am fortunate to be blessed with clients who are far above average in the commitment they make to their dogs. Their decisions to rehome are difficult, and invariably made only after much thought, discussion and angst. They are never made lightly by my clients, and never without considerable pain.
Rehoming a dog is a difficult decision
A client sent me an e-mail recently to tell me that she has been unable to implement our agreed-upon behavior modification program due to the full-time responsibility of caring for an elderly parent. Barb* said she is looking to rehome her dog. Bailey*, an otherwise delightful one-year-old Labrador Retriever, has mild-to-moderate dog-reactive behavior and separation distress, as well as the high energy level typical of an adolescent Lab. Barb has been bringing him to Peaceable Paws since puppy class. I was saddened to hear she was giving him up. It’s always sad for a dog, and the humans who know him, when the promise of a lifelong loving home falls through. (*Their names have been changed.)
Any one of these decisions can be irrevocable. Before giving  your dog up, be sure you’ve thought it through carefully and truly exhausted all your options for fulfilling the commitment you made to your dog when you adopted her. You don’t want this to be a decision you regret for the rest of your life – and hers.
I received another e-mail from Barb this morning. A family decision to place the parent in a long-term care facility has given Barb new resources, new energy, and a renewed commitment to work with Bailey. For now, he’s staying in his home. Cross your fingers.
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To Lisa, very good advise. During this holiday season many people will get/ give pets but many will not work out. I am broken hearted as I made the choice to rehome my beloved dogs as I was in the hospital with a broken ankle and wouldn’t be able to care for them. I begged the EMT/Fire Dept. to look after them so they sent Animal Control to my hospital room and they did. They could feed them for 7 days but then they have to go to the shelter, where I’d gotten them, for 10 days. Then go up for adoption. Just then my hospital case worker came in and stopped me from signing them over. She has dogs and said she’d find homes for them for me as we didn’t want them going back to doggie jail. She fed them and looked out after them until she found them homes. She even brought them to the hospital so I could say goodbye to them as they didn’t know what happened to their Mommie. I’ll always be grateful to her for going out of her way to help me and my little guys but miss them so much, especially this time of year. To anyone going through a situation like mine, our pets safety has to come first no matter how much we love them. I just recently heard from the microchip company and know one of them now has a loving home. My other guy has to be rehomed again as he kept digging under the fence and getting out. He always was my explorer and trying to get out the door. I thank everyone who helped keep my little guys safe and sound while I was recovering. God bless you all.
That last example.. they rehomed the elderly parent instead of the dog.
I found this because I’m concerned about the border collie lab mix (according to the rescue org) we’ve had for seven weeks now. We got him, after I felt pressured and then talked myself into it, to specifically help my teen daughter who has depression/anxiety & ptsd. He,The dog, was known to be gentle but quite nervous (of dogs and new places) himself and I hoped they could help each other. He’s pretty much blossomed. He does seem happy and pretty well adjusted – he now loves doggie day care and the dog park – but usually whines when I’m not home, even if everyone else is. We’ve started training and need to work up to better leash behavior (he pulls and sniffs or marks every other plant) but he’s also gotten territorial when used to a place. He often barks a lot or growls when people come over, or barks we come in the door and he’s loose. He’s come with us to tutoring a few weeks and today he barked when the owner came in. This barking is causing my teen more anxiety and increasing her hyper-vigilance, the opposite desired result. Can we work on this? Or does this qualify as the “wrong dog for the situation”?
I really need some emotional encouragement or something. We adopted this dog almost a year ago from the pound. We know she came from Los Angeles from the aspca but that’s all we really know. She is a beautiful girl but she is so aggressive towards males. She’s bit my husband a few times and will growl at him non stop. We’ve met with the behaviorist at the humane society and have reached out to an independent one near us but they charge thousands of dollars which we can’t afford. She recently tried to bite my daughter(7) over absolutely nothing. My daughter was sitting on the couch watching tv the dog jumped on the couch and snapped at her. I work from home and take her out every two hours in the day and at night she goes out at 9:30 and then 6am and she’s constantly peeing in the house. When I take her out I stay with her until she relieves herself every time, I’m unsure why she isn’t getting it. She has never waited at the door or scratched to go out. She’s never left alone and goes for daily walks/ dog park trips until recently she began acting out towards men at the dog park so she no longer goes. She’s been to the vet and is spayed/up to date on all vaccines with a clean bill of health from a female vet only. She tried to attack the male vet. We are basically living In fear and guilt at this point because we resent her. Any thoughts appreciated, we really are trying everything we can, just feeling very beat.
I have a 5 month old westie puppy with a severe submissive urination issue. I’ve been trying to work with her for the 3 mo that I’ve had her. I’ve gotten her a dog walker and training. She’s got diapers to help me manage it but it just isn’t working out. My other Westie is perfect. I raised him. I am calling her Breeder today to research options and I am so broken-hearted about it. I don’t know what else to do. I look at her and she goes.
I have a seven month old chihuahua/terrier mix that I need to find a loving home for. My husband has turned on the dog and I can’t stay with him all day and watch him. I plan on leaving the husband over this too because of how mean he’s being. But won’t have time to take care of Roscoe on my own because of my work schedule. He’s a very active dog and only partially house trained. I am in Tennessee.
I can’t find a home for my dog. What should I do? She is a 4 yr old boxer and is becoming quite aggressive with other dogs. She attacked my chihuahua and almost killed her and started to attack my other dog and now we can’t trust her and we are not fine with her at home, but she does have her good side and loves to be around people. But we can’t keep her anymore, anyplace I can take her that won’t hurt her?
Hello my family recently adopted a dog, almost 3 months ago. She is very sweet and trusting of me and my daughter she is hesitant of my husband but is slowly warming up. She is not a super social dog she takes awhile to warm up to people but all adults we have had to the house she has warmed up to just fine. About a month ago she started lung nipping at my childs friends who came over, twice this occured. We now no longer let the dog out when children are over. She has been nothing but kind to my daughter. I have started work with a positive based behaviorist. Who is hoping that once she is more relaxed around the house ie my husband her bottled up stress won’t come out towards children in the home. We also plan on working on counter conditioning the dog with space and a muzzle with children in the house. All this said I just wonder if I would be smarter to sooner than later rehome her to a home without children coming and going. We in the family have become very attached to her but I want the best forever one. Your opinion?
Im looking for a good home for my Logan he is 1 years old and he’s a pit. He’s white with a little brown spot he has gray eyes. He’s well-trained house dog love kids and outside. The reason why I have to give him away is because I had a stroke and I cannot take care of him no more if you like to see pictures please call me at718 7875648
5. Have her euthanized. – PLEASE READ THIS PEOPLE! There are too many neglected, unloved animals sitting in shelters and rescue institutions (not to mention abused in dog pits). IF you truly loved your animals, and you KNOW your animal has issues others will also have a difficult time caring for or addressing, TAKE RESPONSIBILITY and provide your pet with a peaceful, loving end to his/her life. YES…it will HURT LIKE CRAZY…and you will wonder if you could have done more. You will cry and wish it didn’t come to that. You will wish your life circumstances could have provided what your beloved pet needed. BUT in time, you will also KNOW, that your stepping up, and taking responsibility for your pet’s quality of life, was the right thing. Quality of Life – fed enough, exercised daily, played with, cuddled, regular doctor visits, dental visits, AND a peaceful, loved filled end to life.
When you love yourself MORE than you love your pet, you’ll take the easy way out and dump them at a shelter. BUT if you truly, truly, love your dog more than yourself, you will spare them situations they would not understand, and could potentially lead to Psychological and Personality problems down the road.
Try to find them loving homes…but if you can’t, please be honest and responsible, and provide your pet the BEST next step for the PET.
I’ve owned lots of dogs…raised litters of puppies, had dogs die naturally of old age, had to put a couple to sleep, and have had to find homes for dogs with issues that could be better addressed with more capable owners. So I say this with a clear understanding at what it will cost you all, emotionally and financially, when you have to weigh your options.
Home Euthanasia ($300+ depending on city)- most expensive, easiest transition on the dog – super painful on the owners. You will come home and remember the painful experience everyday for a long time.
Doctor’s Office Euthanasia – ($150 depending on city) – more stressful on owners and dogs – it’s a sad time, if you end up where the doctors are judgemental, the lack of peace will be sensed by your pet, robbing them of their peaceful ending. However, if you have a good doctor, who provides a room for quality time, it can be a peaceful, loving transition for both pet and owners.
There is no easy solution when you have to part with a beloved pet. Please… don’t be tempted to “dissengage or numb” yourself to the responsibilty by dropping them off somewhere and making it someone else’s problem. We should all take resposibility for our choices and own the entire story…including the ending.
I have a 14.5 mini aussie that I adopted last April. I just recently heard the terms fear or pain biter in regards to dogs and I believe my mini has such a thing. When I first got her I could not get too close to her to be affectionate as she would try and nip at me. She was ok if it was on her terms, limited time and no confining her with a hug. I learned to keep my distant and hoped for her to eventually soften to me. Things went ok. I’d had her three months and she was licking herself in a few spots which were getting red and irritated but as soon as I wanted to look at them closely she gave me that warning growl and teeth. She’s not a relaxed sort of dog, I’d say she’s more anxious and nervous. To this day I cannot get close to any part of her body if it is sore. She’s a ball obsessed dog and I found that that is what she lives for, she is happiest when fetching or finding her balls. She recently is showing cognitive decline or that is was what I thought was going on. Her sight is poor her hearing not as sharp and even her smell isn’t what it was. But she was just diagnosed with glaucoma in her left eye and she wouldn’t let me put drops in her eye, I even tried a muzzle but she wriggled and growled so much it was a mute point, I still couldn’t get the drops in. I’m trying food treats but she’s too smart as once she knows I’m tricking her she doesn’t even want the treat. So now the vet is recommending removal of her eye. I’m wondering if both will need to be removed as she doesn’t see much out of her right eye either and I don’t want her to have to go through yet another surgery again later as she is an old dog. I’m concerned about a couple of things. Will the surgery enhance her quality of life? No more chasing balls. More anxious and nervous as she has no sight. Right now she tends to sleep most of the day and when she’s awake she almost always seems confused as she walks around the house. She gets up at least three to four times a night with a sudden jump up and walks out of the bedroom stops then walks back to bed. Sometimes it seems she’s better than other times. Will I be able to care for her after surgery if medication has to be administered? Will she truly be happy to lay around and sleep all day after surgery. Some friends are suggesting I have her euthanized, and I’m torn in both directions. If I knew she’d enjoy life after surgery I’d be all in, but it’s the doubts that keep me on the fence. She truly lived for her balls and throwing, and wasn’t or isn’t too much on dog walks, mainly too because she suffer from arthritis from all that ball fetching I’m sure. I’ve been crying so much this last week feeling sad for her and not knowing what to do and what she’d prefer, though I know if she could go chase that ball right now she would. Any thoughts to try and get me out of this sadness? Her surgery is scheduled for the first week of October and I just don’t know how I can even make it that long!
U know ur dog u just have to take a step back and look at it more calmly once you do that it will hit you what is best for her
Our 7 year old border collie doesn’t like other dogs, or our daughter who is four. She growls at my daughter and moves away if my daughter gets too close. Because my daughter has only had this experience, she is not a big animal lover. We thought we would get her a puppy so she would have an animal that really loved her. We brought the puppy home six days ago and they fell in love. Our older dog was grumpy with the puppy but eventually came around and after a few days (yesterday morning) wanted to play with the puppy a little bit. We were sitting on the couch and they were no more than a foot away from us. Suddenly the puppy moved quickly and our older border collie grabbed her by the head and shook her violently, breaking her neck. I have never been so upset in my life. We are absolutely devastated and cannot calm down or find any solace. We only had our beautiful little puppy for five days. I’m utterly heartbroken.
Now we are wondering if she can be trusted around our daughter. Any help or advice would be appreciated. Thank you.
I am so so sorry for your loss and for the anxiety witnessing this must have caused you. I have, unfortunately experienced this years ago, when my husband was in the military and we were stationed overseas. We kept our dog because he was our guard dog AND he instinctively protected our baby (he would sleep by his swing, and when people would try to come near the baby, without getting up, he’d growl…when the people would back away, he’d go back to sleep). But HAD he ever growled AT our baby, I would have put my dog to sleep. Dogs are pack animals…they vie for ranking within the pack. I would never allow any dog, that felt it could outrank and/or growl at a child, access to my children. I know dog lovers out there will argue that I should have found it a home, or parents that could train that out of him…but the bottom line is, if I can’t trust my dog with my loved ones, I surely won’t dump him on an unknowing family. I would bring him to a vet, and while telling him I love him and thank him for the wonderful memories, have him peacefully put to sleep.