The shelter decides what is shared.
If a shelter or rescue does not want a listing shown, we do not show it. If details change, the shelter page is the place people confirm it.
We help shelters and rescues show adoptable animals in more places, without taking over the adoption process. The shelter stays in charge; we just help more people find the right pet and the right next step.
How it should work
Pets should not get buried because a small team is busy. We keep the page plain: who the animal is, where they are, when the listing was checked, and where to apply or ask questions.
If a shelter or rescue does not want a listing shown, we do not show it. If details change, the shelter page is the place people confirm it.
Every card should name the shelter, show when it was checked, and link people back to the official adoption or foster page.
Senior pets, bonded pairs, special-care animals, and shy animals often need more chances to be noticed by the right person.
Search by animal type, city, or need. When someone finds a pet, the next step should lead back to the shelter or rescue handling the animal.
A simple page for adoptable pets that need more people to notice them.
Why it matters: A family can find a dog faster, see which shelter has the pet, and go to the shelter for the real application.
A place to lift up older cats who need foster homes or adopters.
Why it matters: Older cats are easy to scroll past. A plain, focused card gives them another chance to reach someone patient and kind.
A promise to make room for overlooked, senior, and special-care pets.
Why it matters: The goal is one useful next step: check the shelter page, ask questions, foster, adopt, or share the pet with someone who can help.