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To report a pet as lost, or if you have found an animal, please contact us.

We also suggest calling the following concerning lost or found pets:
  • Evergreen Animal Protective League: (303) 674-6442
  • Denver Dumb Friends League Lost & Found: (303) 751-9688
  • Park County Animal Control: (719) 836-4380
  • Table Mountain Animal Center: (303) 278-7575
  • Jefferson County Animal Control: (303) 271-5070
  • Local Veterinary Clinics
IMPORTANT. Local animal control agencies, shelters and rescue organizations are required to keep stray animals for 5 days. After that, they may go to new homes, transferred to another organization or even humanely destroyed, depending on the animal and the organization. It is critically important that you contact all organizations that have even the slightest chance of having your lost pet. We receive numerous reports of lost and found animals that we try to match and get the pet home. If you have lost or found a pet, be sure to call us and report missing or found pets!

Contact us to report a lost or found pet!

Pet ID Tips

Pets don't know how to tell someone their name, how to phone home and are in grave danger of never returning home if not identified. Some methods of pet identification include:
  • Rabies tags should be traceable through serial numbers on the tag. Animals with Mile-High rabies tags can be traced through metro shelters. Tags from individual veterinarians can be traced through that veterinary clinic.
  • Identification Tags are very helpful in helping pets find their homes again. Pet ID tags can be ordered through many mail order companies, on the Internet, or through instant tag making machines available at many pet stores. Other devices are made to hang on the collar like a tag, but contain information inside a little barrel or in a clear plastic heart.
  • Collars can be purchased with a phone number custom embroidered into the collar. Collars can be marked with a phone number using a permanent marker.
  • Permanent tattoos are available with an identifying number placed on the dog, usually on the inside of the thigh.
  • Microchips are the newest form of identification. Microchips are small passive devices that are implanted under the skin of a dog. When the area is scanned with a special reader, the chip "echos" back a serial number. Microchips have no internal power supply and are completely safe. Many (if not most) shelters now scan all incoming animals for microchips. Pets with chips can be traced through a registry and returned promptly to their owners. Microchips are available at a very reasonable rate through most veterinary clinics.