Pet Boarding Playbook β€Ί Pricing & Booking

Pricing & Booking

Pricing is where home boarding operators most commonly leave money on the table β€” or price themselves out of the market by not understanding the local competitive landscape. This guide covers how to set rates, handle bookings professionally, and transition high-value clients to direct booking.

Disclaimer: Revenue figures and platform terms in this guide are illustrative and based on publicly available data. Actual earnings vary by market, dog count, and individual circumstances. Platform terms change frequently β€” verify current fees directly with each provider. Full terms of use.

Understanding the Market Rate in Your Area

Before setting rates, spend 20 minutes doing competitive research. Search Rover in your zip code and filter by β€œboarding.” Note the rates of the top-rated sitters (4.9+ stars, 50+ reviews) β€” these are your market-proven premium comparables. Then check:

The goal is not to undercut everyone β€” it's to understand what premium looks like in your specific market. A top-rated Rover sitter in a mid-sized market might charge $55–$75/night. A boutique direct-booking operator with a professional intake process, consistent photo updates, and strong referral reviews can justify $75–$120/night in the same market.

Pricing Structure: What to Charge For

Build your pricing around a base nightly rate with optional add-ons:

ServiceTypical RangeNotes
Boarding (per night)$45–$120Base rate for one dog; varies heavily by market
Additional dog (same household)$15–$35/nightDiscount from base rate; same family, lower overhead
Holiday surcharge$15–$30/nightThanksgiving, Christmas, July 4th, New Year's
Medication administration$5–$15/dayPer dog, for oral meds or insulin
Late pickup fee$20–$50After defined checkout time
Meet-and-greet fee$0–$25Some operators charge; others waive for first booking

Deposits and Cancellation Policy

A deposit policy protects you from last-minute cancellations during peak periods β€” holidays and summer weekends, when you've turned away other clients to hold space. A common structure:

State your deposit and cancellation policy clearly in your boarding agreement and booking confirmation. Verbal agreements about deposits almost always lead to disputes.

Booking Platforms: Rover, Wag, and Direct

The platform you use to accept bookings has a direct impact on your take-home revenue and your relationship with clients. Here's how the major options compare:

PlatformYour CutBest For
Rover~80% (20% platform fee)Building initial reviews and client pipeline
Wag~60–70% (variable fee)Walk-in demand in dense markets; lower margin
Direct booking~97% (card processing only)Established clients; highest revenue per booking

The optimal strategy for most operators is to start on Rover to build reviews and a client base, then migrate regular clients to direct booking once they have 10–20 five-star reviews. Rover's terms of service prohibit soliciting clients off-platform for 2 years after a Rover booking β€” but they cannot prevent a client from independently reaching out to you directly, and most loyal clients are happy to avoid the platform fee on both sides.

Accepting Direct Payments

For direct-booking clients, you need a simple way to accept payment. Common options:

When and How to Raise Your Rates

Two signals tell you it's time to raise rates: you're turning down bookings because you're full, and you're maintaining a 4.9+ average review score. Both indicate demand exceeds your supply and that clients perceive your value as high.

Raise rates gradually: a $10–$15/night increase announced 60 days in advance, with a grandfather period for existing regular clients, typically results in zero client loss. Frame the increase around specific service improvements β€” β€œWe're adding a mid-day group walk and additional photo updates starting [date], and adjusting our rate accordingly.”

New clients should always see your current rate β€” do not offer the legacy rate to first-time inquiries just because your regulars have it. Over-discounting new clients creates a two-tier rate structure that is difficult to correct without conflict.

Have more questions?

Check our FAQ for quick answers to the most common questions from home boarding operators.

View the FAQ β†’