by Adopt a Pet, | January 11, 2024
Nikola Stojadinovic / iStock
If you need to rehome your Rottweiler, you’ll find several methods you can use to find your dog a great new home. Below, you’ll learn ways that you can rehome your Rottweiler, so you can be sure they find a perfect new place to call home. Rehoming will take a bit of work on your part, but you’ll be happy with the results. It helps to ensure that your pet will have a safe and happy life, and that’s what every pet owner wants.
Naturally, one of the first thoughts that’s likely to spring to mind is letting someone you already know adopt your dog. It’s a good option since you already know whether they’ll be a good fit for your dog or not. You’ll know whether they can afford to take care of your dog properly and whether they’ll provide them with the exercise dogs need.
There are great adoption sites like Rehome by Adopt a Pet that will help you find a wonderful new home for your Rottweiler. This site lets you create a detailed profile for your dog, which will include all of the important information about them, and publish their bio directly onto Adopt a Pet for millions of potential adopters to see. The profile helps pet searchers find your dog and determine if they’re right for their family. You’ll also enjoy that the site is free for owners to use, and you can review the adoption applications to choose your dog’s new home.
While there are some good sites for pet adoption, there are also sites that you should avoid. Want ad sites like Craigslist, for example, may be easy to use, but you have no way of discerning who sees those posts and who is trying to get your dog. Sometimes, people don’t have any intention of adopting a dog until they see one on these sites, and they aren’t prepared to own a dog. You want someone who is actively looking to adopt a dog like yours.
Rehoming fees are used to help keep your dog safe. You’ll always want to charge a rehoming fee or go through a site like Rehome that charges the adopters. The fees for sites like Rehome will go back into helping get more animals adopted. Fees also mean that it’s less likely that someone with bad intentions will try to get your dog. There are terrible people out there who look for free dogs to sell to labs or to use as training animals for fighting dogs. Rehoming fees help to cut down on this risk.
While it’s possible to surrender your dog to a rescue or a shelter, it’s not truly the same as rehoming. When you surrender your dog, you give up your legal rights to them, and you’ll have no say over who adopts them, or if they gets adopted at all. While these facilities do their best to take care of dogs and find new homes for them, it’s not always possible.
Most owners will at least want to try rehoming first, as they’ll have more control over where their Rottweiler goes.
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