Section: Preventive Care

Boarding and Daycare Health Checklist for Dogs and Cats

Boarding and daycare can be safe when the facility has clear health rules, cleaning practices, supervision, and urgent contact plans. Ask what records are required before the stay. Do not board a coughing, vomiting, feverish, or highly stressed pet without veterinary guidance.

What symptoms or causes should I watch for?

  • Shared airspace: Close contact can expose pets to coughing or sneezing animals.
  • Outdoor yards: Grass runs and shared play spaces need cleaning and waste control.
  • Stress signs: Panting, hiding, diarrhea, appetite loss, or reactivity can worsen away from home.
  • Play matching: Group play should match pets by size, temperament, and comfort level.
  • Policy gaps: Facilities should explain cleaning, supervision, separation, and urgent transport rules.

What can I safely do at home right now?

  • Confirm requirements early: Ask which vaccines, tests, and parasite prevention are required before the stay.
  • Tour the facility: Look for ventilation, clean runs, secure fencing, and separated sick animals.
  • Pack records: Bring vaccine records, medications, diet, feeding instructions, and emergency contacts.
  • Ask about supervision: Clarify how play groups are matched and how injuries are handled.
  • Do a short trial: A brief daycare visit can reveal stress before a long boarding stay.

When is this an emergency?

Go to an emergency veterinary clinic now if you notice:

  • Coughing, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, or contagious disease signs before boarding.
  • A facility cannot explain vaccine, cleaning, or emergency policies.
  • Severe anxiety, aggression, collapse, heat stress, or injury during a visit.
  • Unvaccinated puppy or medically fragile senior exposed to group settings.
  • Poor appetite, bloody diarrhea, or respiratory signs after returning home.

What will my veterinarian check?

Your veterinarian may review records, current health, regular medications, stress risk, and whether boarding is appropriate for your pet's age and condition.

How can I reduce the risk next time?

Choose facilities with clear health policies, keep prevention current, and avoid group care during outbreaks or active illness.

Related veterinary guides

References

Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, does not establish a vet-client-patient relationship, and should not replace an in-person evaluation by a licensed veterinarian.