Jasper Smelik
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
1476 businesses listed. Council-licensed where required, with verified-booking reviews and transparent fees.
Filter by service (walking, daycare, boarding, training, grooming), city, dog size, and capability (insurance, DBS, secured garden, webcam). Every commercial daycare and boarder is checked against the local council animal-activity register.
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1476 businesses
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by North Norfolk District Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by Gloucester City Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Harlow Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by North Norfolk District Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by North Norfolk District Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by Gloucester City Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by Gloucester City Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by Babergh District Council
Dog Boarding (Kennels) licensed by Gloucester City Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by City of York Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
Dog Home Boarding licensed by Harlow Council
Council-licensed UK dog care, grouped by city.
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You can filter by service (walking, daycare, boarding, training, grooming), city, dog size, council licence status, and capability (insurance, DBS, secured garden, webcam). All filters stack, so you can narrow down to exactly what your dog needs.
Under the 2018 DEFRA Animal Welfare Regulations, any commercial dog daycare or boarding business in England must hold an animal-activity licence from its local council. The council inspects the premises, checks insurance and qualifications, and awards a star rating from 1 to 5. We surface that public data on every listing.
Use the Submit form to add your business. We verify the council licence (where applicable) and add you to the directory. Listing is free and we take no commission - enquiries go straight to you.
Yes. Only customers with a confirmed booking can leave a review. Every review shows the service used and the visit date. We don't allow anonymous reviews or reviews from accounts without a booking history.
A working reference covering the long-tail questions UK dog owners actually search for. Use as cross-publishable content across service hubs, city pages, and listing pages.
Most dog walkers price by walk length rather than the hour. A 30-minute solo walk is typically £8 to £15 across most of the UK, £15 to £20 in central London. A 60-minute walk is £12 to £20. Calculated hourly, that's roughly £15 to £25 per hour, with London at the upper end. Few walkers offer pure hourly rates because the practical unit is the walk itself.
Full-day daycare runs £20 to £45 in most of the UK. Central London is £40 to £65. Half days are £15 to £25. Home-based licensed daycare tends to be at the lower end because group sizes are smaller. Block packages of 10 or 20 days usually save 10 to 20 percent.
Home boarding is typically £25 to £50 per night, central London £40 to £80. Kennels are £20 to £40 per night. Holiday peaks (Christmas, Easter, summer school holidays) add 10 to 25 percent. Most boarders charge drop-off and pickup days as full days.
One-to-one training sessions run £30 to £80 per hour. Group puppy classes are £80 to £150 for a four to six-week course. Clinical animal behaviourist consultations start at £150 to £300 for the first assessment. London and behaviour specialists sit at the upper end.
Small breeds run £25 to £40 for a bath and tidy. Medium breeds (cockapoos, spaniels) are £45 to £75 for a full groom. Large breeds (doodles, retrievers) are £55 to £100. London adds 20 to 30 percent. Mobile grooming adds £10 to £20 over salon rates.
A licence issued by your local council under the Animal Welfare (Licensing of Activities Involving Animals) (England) Regulations 2018. It applies to anyone running a commercial dog boarding business (home boarding or kennels), dog daycare, breeding, selling pets, or walking four or more dogs at a time. The council inspects against welfare standards and rates the operator one to five stars, with the rating setting the renewal cycle. Scotland operates its equivalent under the 2021 Scottish regulations.
In England, anyone walking four or more dogs at one time as a commercial activity needs a council animal-activity licence under the 2018 regulations. Walkers with three or fewer dogs in a group don't legally need one, but many hold one for professional credibility. Scotland is similar under the 2021 regulations.
The Animal Welfare (Licensing of Activities Involving Animals) (England) Regulations 2018, brought into force on 1 October 2018, replaced earlier licensing schemes and tightened standards for boarding, daycare, breeding, and selling animals. The regulations introduced the star rating system and require council inspections. Scotland's equivalent came in 2021. Wales and Northern Ireland operate their own regimes.
Yes. Electric shock collars are banned in England (since February 2024), Scotland (since 2018), and Wales (since 2010). Northern Ireland never permitted them. Anyone using or recommending one is breaking the law.
Not legally, but it's strongly recommended. Walkers carry their own public liability insurance, but that doesn't cover every scenario - dog-on-dog incidents, your dog injuring someone, or your dog needing emergency vet care during the walk. Pet insurance provides the safety net.
Yes. Reputable daycares and boarders require DHPP and leptospirosis vaccinations as standard, and almost universally require kennel cough cover too. Many also ask for proof of regular flea and worming treatment. Your dog usually needs to be fully vaccinated for at least a week before starting daycare or staying at a boarder.
Kennel cough (canine infectious tracheobronchitis) is a highly contagious respiratory infection that spreads rapidly in environments where dogs share space. The vaccine is intranasal (squirted up the nose at the vet) and protection takes effect within about a week. Daycares and boarders require it because an outbreak can shut their facility for weeks.
Many daycares require dogs to be neutered or spayed from around six to nine months. Some accept entire dogs in smaller groups or on specific days. Policy varies, so ask before the assessment.
A licensed boarder has a written emergency protocol. They take your dog to their nominated vet or yours, contact you straight away, and bills go via you (or your insurance) unless covered by the boarder's policy. Confirm the protocol in writing before booking.
Most daycares accept puppies from 14 to 16 weeks, once they're fully vaccinated. Look for daycares with dedicated puppy days or smaller groups for the under-six-month bracket. Puppies need proper rest time built into the day - they tire fast.
The eight to 14-week period is the critical socialisation window for puppies. The right force-free group puppy class during this window is one of the best investments you can make. Most classes accept puppies from 10 to 12 weeks, after their second vaccinations, on cleaned floor surfaces. Talk to your vet about timing.
From around 12 to 16 weeks, once their second vaccinations are done. First visits should be short and gentle - a bath, brush, nail clip, ear clean - to introduce the table and equipment. Don't expect a full breed cut.
Use the five minutes per month of age rule as a rough guide. A four-month-old puppy can manage 20 minutes of structured walking once or twice a day, plus garden time and play. Overwalking young puppies can damage growing joints. Build up gradually.
Three to twelve months of consistent work for most cases, longer for severe ones. There's no quick fix. Anyone promising one is either inexperienced or using methods that suppress rather than change behaviour.
Trainers teach skills (sit, recall, leave it, loose-lead walking). Behaviourists treat behaviour problems with welfare or emotional causes (reactivity, anxiety, aggression, resource guarding). Serious behaviour cases need a clinical animal behaviourist, ideally working on referral from your vet.
A behaviourist with postgraduate qualifications who works on vet referral to treat behaviour problems with medical or emotional components. CCAB, ABTC-registered, or APBC member are the credentials to look for.
For basics, yes - books, videos, and online courses from credible sources will get most owners a long way. For behaviour problems or anything safety-related, get help. A few sessions with a qualified trainer saves months of going round in circles.
Check the public register on your local council's environmental health page. All licensed boarders, daycares, and large-group walkers in England are rated one to five stars under the 2018 regulations. Scotland operates an equivalent register under the 2021 regulations.
Home boarding is in someone's house, usually with one to three dogs, and feels like a holiday with another family. Kennels are dedicated facilities with individual runs - cleaner, more structured, often better for dogs who don't enjoy other dogs in their space.
Tipping isn't expected in the UK the way it is in the US. A Christmas card, small gift, or tip equal to one walk or one night at year-end is common if you want to say thanks for regular service.
For nervous dogs, yes - and good boarders will offer one. Even for confident dogs, a meet-and-greet half-day before a long booking is worth it.
Most walkers take one-off bookings, but regular clients on weekly contracts get priority and a small discount. If you need ad-hoc cover, ask early - good walkers fill up.
Insurance, licence (and council that issued it), star rating where applicable, what happens in an emergency, whether you can see a meet-and-greet before booking, and references. Reluctance to answer any of these is the red flag.