Animal Welfare Professionals

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  • 1.  Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-23-2025 11:53 AM

    Hello!

    I wanted to hear from other rescues that do any type of reduced adoption fee for their longer stay dogs. We have had some situations where donors would like to make a donation to reduce a dog's adoption fee. Do you accept this as a donation, or do you have them pay for part of the fee under a different your adoption side of accounting? Do you advertise the reduction in fees on your website or do you wait until someone inquires about the dog? Do you give any credit to the donor on your website that the dog was sponsored?

    Thanks for your input!

    Alicia


    #FundraisingandDevelopment

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    Alicia Figueiredo
    Development Manager
    Hearts and Bones Animal Rescue
    TX
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  • 2.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-23-2025 02:39 PM

    We occasionally have people want to pay for an adoption fee. We are happy to do so and usually post that the adoption fee has been sponsored. Most of our donors want to stay anonymous. We have talked about having businesses and other donors help fund adoption fees and/or days but haven't got it off the ground yet. 



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    Beck Bennett
    Shelter Manager
    Bryant Animal Shelter
    Bryant Arkansas
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  • 3.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-26-2025 04:00 PM

    Thank you!!



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    Alicia Figueiredo
    Development Manager
    Hearts and Bones Animal Rescue
    TX
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  • 4.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-30-2025 10:00 AM

    This is long, but I think it's worth it.  Stick with me.  :)

    I volunteer for a municipal high-intake open admission shelter.  On the website, people can choose to direct their donations to adoptions, Angel Fund, community outreach, pet retention, critter care, or a trust.  Donors can contribute to a fund generally or, in the case of adoptions, may choose to cover the adoption fee for a specific animal.  While a donor can put in comments selecting an animal to sponsor, generally a donor wishing to sponsor a specific animal will speak with a staff member in addition to just donating online.  

    The shelter ALWAYS asks if a donor wants to be recognized, whether the donor is a business or an individual.  It's an important part of relationship-building with the community.  For example, there is a car dealership who sponsors a dog adoption nearly every month.  The shelter gives them the opportunity to do a brief Facebook video with the dog where they are introduced as friends from ___ Automotive, and one of their staff members takes a few minutes to talk about the dog that they are sponsoring.  For individual sponsors, the shelter offers to let the sponsor meet the animal and take a photo to advertise the waived fee or offer to list the adoption as being sponsored by so-and-so on social media.  Some donors prefer to remain anonymous and in those cases, the animal is featured in a social media post that says they have had their adoption fee paid for by a generous donor.  Generally, the animal's bio online will have a note about being fee waived.

    I can tell you from personal experience that it makes a difference to thank donors and to make the offer to recognize them, whether they choose recognition or anonymity.  

    About a year ago around Christmas, I decided to sponsor the adoption fee for a cat who had been in the municipal open-admission shelter in my community for a couple of months.  Since it was Christmas time, I had a lot of fun with the idea--I put together a gift bag to go home with the cat, containing new items like a bed, cardboard scratcher, toys and treats, etc.  I also wrote a thank-you card for the adopter.  I asked to sponsor anonymously, and the shelter invited me to meet the cat when I dropped off her gift bag.  A staff member took the time to do this.  It wasn't anything elaborate.  But although it seems like very little, it actually meant a lot that they made an effort to have someone come out for a couple of minutes to say thanks in person, let me meet my sponsor animal, etc.  It personalized the experience.

    I decided that since we also have a large limited admission shelter in my community, I would do the same for a cat at that shelter.  The experience couldn't have been more different.  I came in to pay the sponsor fee and to drop off my gift for the adoptive family.  They gave me a receipt.  No thanks.  No conversation.  Nothing personal.  It was just a business transaction.  I'm not even confident that my donor gift went home with the cat I sponsored because they were so disorganized that they could not tell me which cat's fee I paid for.  This is a large, very beloved and VERY well-supported shelter that regularly brings in $250k/fundraiser, and they do wonderful work--but they didn't even try.  

    Guess which shelter I sponsored for again and which one I volunteer for?

    Small gestures make a big impact.

    I went on to sponsor three more cats at the municipal shelter by February, became a volunteer by June, and joined a fundraising committee and personally secured 21 gift donations, a community grant for $1250, and helped negotiate $5000 in donation-matching.  I also sponsored a total of 72 cat adoptions that year, every one anonymously.

    Obviously, results may vary.  Not everyone will make the same commitment.  But what an opportunity.  I'm not a wealthy person.  I'm just an average member of the community.  So--what opportunities are you missing if you don't take that moment to make a connection to your donors?  Who could you reach?

    In my experience--and I know because I read the shelter reports and ask a LOT of questions and talk to shelter staff--waiving and adoption fees doesn't correlate to animals going to an irresponsible home or experiencing a higher risk of return to the shelter.  The adopters go through the same process, the same background check, the same interaction with adoptions staff.  Some will take advantage of the fee waive, while others will still choose to donate.  So who does it benefit?  The animal that is highlighted.  The animal who takes their place.  The animals who have a chance and a space because adoptions are moving through the shelter because remember the objective?  Successful adoptions.  And in an open admission shelter, we need them to move into safe homes as quickly as possible.



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    Erin Linsky
    Volunteer, Kitten Foster
    Fort Wayne IN
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  • 5.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-23-2025 07:37 PM

    We typically enter the donation into the system as a general donation and then apply it to a random animal if the donor didn't specifically choose one. We notate it in the system but do not typically advertise that the animal had a reduced or free adoption fee. We do not give credit on our website, but all donors get a tax-exempt form. 



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    Aly Martinez
    Panhandle Animal Welfare Society
    NWFL
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  • 6.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-24-2025 04:04 AM

    We frequently have people sponsor an animal. We apply it as a "sponsor" donation and then waive the adoption fee. Yes, we always post the animals that are sponsored. We generically thank the sponsor in the post. Something like "due to a generous sponsor, Allie's fee is waived."



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    Renee Milner
    Nonprofit Board Member
    Animal Shelter Alliance of Rhea
    TN
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  • 7.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-24-2025 04:39 AM

    Whenever someone sponsors or pays an adoption fee, we do apply it to the dog or cat they want to adopt.   We do not post it in their biography.   If someone applies to adopt that particular animal and is approved, we "surprise" them and let them know the adoption fee has already been paid.   We then let the sponsor know that their sponsored animal has been adopted.



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    Cindy Womack
    Paws for Life NC
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  • 8.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-27-2025 09:04 AM

    If an animal has been available for adoption for longer than two weeks adopters can name their own adoption fee. We do advertise this in their online profiles. We put it right in the name field so that on the listings it reads "Fluffy - Name Your Own Adoption Fee!" By putting it in the name field it grabs people's attention and more people will click through to learn more about the pet, and more interest means a higher chance of the right person seeing the listing and adopting.

    We do allow people to sponsor part or all of a pet's adoption fee, and we also put that in the name field, so either "Fluffy - Adoption Fee Paid!" or "Fluffy - Reduced Adoption Fee!" Currently, we don't put credit in the animal's listing, but we've discussed it and would like to implement it, it will just take some reworking of our donation form. Right now the donor just gets a thank you email/card like other donors.

    Because it's often a concern, I do want to mention that we don't see any increase in returns for animals with no fees/reduced fees.



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    Sam Maurice
    Humane Society of Jefferson County
    Jefferson WI
    https://hsjc-wis.com
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  • 9.  RE: Reduced Adoption Fees

    Posted 01-27-2025 09:43 AM
    We don't lower adoption fees based on time at the shelter, but we do allow people to sponsor part/all of the fee. We put the current fee/waived fee on our website and credit the person if they want it on there. Often times adopters have no idea that it's been sponsored, so they are surprised by it and still want to donate or sponsor another animal.