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Adopting a pet is one of the most heartwarming decisions you can make. Whether you're looking for a playful pup or a calm feline companion, adoption changes lives — theirs and yours.
Why Adopt from DCAS?
A Commitment to Excellence in Animal Care
Health & Wellness:
All pets receive core vaccines, deworming, flea treatment, and a lifelong registered microchip.
Meet-and-Greet Opportunities:
- Dogs: outdoor courtyard or indoor meet-and-greet room. We recommend bringing your current pets and children to help ensure the best match.
- Cats: private, calm interview room
Community & Support:
We offer guidance and resources to support your adoption experience long after you leave the shelter.
Affordability:
Thanks to sponsorships and grants, we offer fee reductions and specials. Don’t let cost be a barrier — many of our long-stay animals are fully sponsored.
How to Adopt
Ready to Adopt? Here’s What to Expect
Step 1: Browse our adoptable pets on PetFinder
Step 2: Visit the shelter during business hours (Tues–Sun, 1 PM–5 PM)
Step 3: Meet your match and complete an on-site adoption with valid photo ID (must be 18+)
Lost Pets
Stray Animals at the Shelter
We update our stray hold listings every 30 minutes. View animals currently on hold at Douglas County Animal Services using the link below:
Alternatively, you can visit our Petfinder page for recently found pets. (Updates every 4 Hours)
➡️ Request a Stray Intake Appointment
How Long Are Animals Held?
Without ID: Pets are held for a minimum of 72 hours (3 full days).
With ID (microchip, tags, etc.): Held for a minimum of 5 full days while staff make every effort to contact the owner.
Livestock: Held offsite in foster care for 10 days, with an added transport fee.
To avoid additional fees, reclaim your pet as soon as possible. Once the stray hold period ends, animals become eligible for adoption, transfer to rescue, or humane euthanasia.
Reclaim Fees
Base Fee: $45
Daily Fee: +$10 per day
Additional Services (if provided): Medical treatment, grooming, spay/neuter, vaccinations, etc. may increase total.
Microchip Program: Waives the $45 base fee. Owners only pay $20 if they agree to microchip their pet at the time of pickup. Additionally, payment plans and fee waivers are available depending on the situation.
Report or Help a Lost/Found Pet
What to Do if You've Found a Pet
Is the pet actually lost?
Don’t assume. Many pets are taken from their own front yards. Please knock on doors — most strays are found within a ¼ mile of home.Check for a microchip
Most vets, shelters, PetSmart, and Petco can scan for free.Post on social media
Facebook groups like Women of Douglasville and platforms like Pawboost or Petco Love Lost are excellent tools.Consider fostering
We can supply food and a crate. If you’re interested in adopting, we can provide spay/neuter surgery, rabies vaccination, microchip, and heartworm test at a reduced cost — the same as our adoption fee.Need to bring in a stray?
If the animal is sick, injured, or aggressive:
Do not attempt to touch or catch it.Take a photo
Record the exact location
Call Animal Control immediately (770-942-5961)
⚠️ Bites and contact with ill strays pose risks to you and your pets. A bite incident, even accidental, may severely reduce an animal’s chance of adoption due to required quarantine or legal restrictions.
Field Services & Animal Control
Douglas County Animal Services provides animal control and field support to ensure public safety, promote animal welfare, and uphold local ordinances. Our Field Services Officers serve as first responders to animal-related concerns, with a focus on education, reunification, and responsible enforcement.
Our Philosophy: Education Over Enforcement
We believe most animal-related issues stem from a lack of information — not intent. Our officers prioritize educating pet owners and community members before issuing citations. We work to build trust, improve compliance, and promote responsible pet ownership through respectful, solution-based interactions.
Free Ride Home Project
Through our Free Ride Home initiative, we return lost pets with microchips or visible ID directly to their owners without a trip to the shelter. This reduces stress on animals, limits shelter overcrowding, and reunites families faster. Owners must have up-to-date contact information on file to qualify.
- Applies to pets with microchips, collars with ID tags, or rabies tags.
- Available during normal field service hours.
- First-time return is free. Repeat incidents may include citations or fees.
Report a Concern (Non-Emergency)
If you need to report a non-emergency animal concern, including strays, nuisance complaints, or welfare concerns, please provide location, animal description, and complaint information to animalcontrol@douglascoutyga.gov. Photo or video evidence is extremely helpful to officers.
Note: For emergencies involving aggressive animals, please call 770-942-5961 or 911 immediately.
Emergency Response & Animal Welfare
Our officers are trained to respond to urgent animal-related calls, including:
- Injured animals in public areas
- Aggressive or dangerous animals threatening public safety
- Sick or suffering stray animals
- Bite cases and quarantine follow-up
For safety, we ask residents not to approach or attempt to capture sick, injured, or aggressive animals. Report the situation and allow trained professionals to respond.
Wildlife & Rabies Information
Animal Services does not trap or relocate healthy wildlife. Most sightings of raccoons, opossums, foxes, and other wild animals are normal — especially in early morning or evening hours. These animals help control pests and play a vital role in the ecosystem.
When to report wildlife:
- Unusual behavior (e.g., aggressive, stumbling, disoriented)
- Wildlife that has had direct contact with a person or pet
All animal bites must be reported immediately to Animal Services for rabies protocol. Rabies is a serious but preventable disease — vaccinations for pets are required by law.
Community Cats & TNR: What You Need to Know
Many outdoor felines are community cats—born outside, unowned, and thriving in their environment. Douglas County Animal Services supports TNR (Trap–Neuter–Return) as the only humane, effective way to manage these populations.
What Community Cats Do Need
- Spay/Neuter
- Food + Water
- Shelter (Straw works best!)
What They Don’t Need
- To be brought to the shelter
- To be relocated
- To be separated from their colony
How We Can Help
DCAS TNR Surgery Days – Every Monday
We offer $20 spay/neuter for feral and community cats every Monday at the shelter.
- Drop-Off: 8:30 AM @ DCAS Garage
- Pick-Up: Same Day, 5:00 PM
- Cats must arrive in humane live traps
- Includes spay/neuter, rabies vaccine, and eartip
Metro Atlanta TNR Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
- I found kittens. Should I bring them in?
- How do I know if it’s a stray or a community cat?
- Will you remove the cats from my property?
- Tips on feeding, shelter, and long-term care
Support Our TNR Program
Donations help us provide traps, food, shelters, and veterinary care for outdoor cats in need.