Bowling Green Animal Shelter & Control: Adoption Hours 2026

Bowling Green, Kentucky Shelter Guide

Bowling Green Animal Shelter & Control: Adoption Hours 2026

Use this guide before visiting Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society or calling Bowling Green Animal Protection in Kentucky. It covers adoption hours, address, fees, dogs and puppies, cats and kittens, small pets, lost and found pets, animal-control phone numbers, owner surrender, licensing, rabies, bite reporting, clinic services, map directions and official verification links.

Searchers often type “Bowling Green animal shelter dogs,” “BGWCHS adoption fees,” “Bowling Green KY animal control,” “lost pets near me,” or “surrender a pet.” Each of those searches has a different next step, so start with the section that matches your actual situation.

1924 Louisville Road Adoption: 270-783-9404 Humane Society: 270-842-8572 Wed closed Animal Protection: 270-393-4000
Fast answer: Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society’s Hildreth Adoption Center is listed at 1924 Louisville Road, Bowling Green, KY 42101. Adoption Center phone: 270-783-9404. Humane Society / intake phone: 270-842-8572. Clinic phone: 270-745-8646. Hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 10 AM–4:30 PM, Wednesday closed, Saturday 10 AM–4 PM and Sunday 12 PM–4 PM. For Bowling Green city animal-control concerns, the city lists Animal Protection at 270-393-4000.

Bowling Green Animal Shelter Quick Details

These details cover the main local search intents: Bowling Green animal shelter phone number, BGWCHS address, adoption hours, animal control phone, clinic services and lost-pet help.

MAP

Adoption Center

1924 Louisville Road, Bowling Green, KY 42101.

Use this for adoption center visits and pet adoption questions.

HS

Humane Society / Clinic

1925 River Street, Bowling Green, KY 42101.

Use the correct department based on intake, clinic, spay/neuter or vaccination needs.

CALL

Key phone numbers

Adoption Center: 270-783-9404.

Humane Society: 270-842-8572. Clinic: 270-745-8646.

CTRL

Animal control route

Bowling Green city animal concerns: 270-393-4000.

Warren County Animal Control: 270-842-1633.

Best first step: If you want to adopt, use the adoption route. If you found a loose dog, use Animal Protection or Warren County Animal Control based on location. If the animal is a cat or community cat, the Community Cat Hotline may be the better route.

What “Bowling Green Animal Shelter” Means in Bowling Green, KY

People use one phrase for several related services. The correct contact depends on whether you want adoption, animal control, surrender, lost/found help, city licensing or clinic services.

Adoption

Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society

Use BGWCHS for adoptable dogs, cats, kittens, small pets, adoption applications, fees, rescue, foster, volunteer, shelter store and many humane society services.

City control

Bowling Green Animal Protection

Use the city Animal Protection route for stray animals, leash-law concerns, barking dogs, dangerous/vicious dog concerns, animal bites, rabies control and cruelty/neglect reports inside city service areas.

County route

Warren County Animal Control

Use Warren County Animal Control for county-area dog-related animal-control issues where the city route does not apply.

Do not guess jurisdiction: “Bowling Green” can mean city limits, Warren County, or a nearby community. When calling, give the exact address or cross street so staff can route your animal issue correctly.

Bowling Green Animal Shelter Adoption Hours 2026

These are the published hours for BGWCHS public operations. Clinic services are not always available every day, so call ahead if your visit is not a normal adoption visit.

Day / Need Published Hours Practical Visitor Tip
Monday 10 AM–4:30 PM Good for adoption browsing, lost-pet checks, and application questions.
Tuesday 10 AM–4:30 PM Clinic veterinarian availability may vary; call if you need vet/clinic services.
Wednesday Closed Do not plan a normal walk-in adoption visit.
Thursday 10 AM–4:30 PM Good weekday option for adoption and humane society questions.
Friday 10 AM–4:30 PM Check pet availability before the weekend rush.
Saturday 10 AM–4 PM Shorter day. Arrive early if you want to meet pets and complete paperwork.
Sunday 12 PM–4 PM Short window. Do not arrive near closing if you expect detailed adoption help.
After-hours emergency Emergency line listed Use 270-202-9136 only for after-hours emergencies, not routine adoption questions.
Best adoption timing: Check adoptable pets online first, write down possible matches, then visit early enough to ask questions, meet animals and arrange safe transport before closing.

How to Adopt from Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society

A strong adoption visit starts before you walk in. BGWCHS lists adoptable pets online and provides adoption applications for dogs, cats, small and fuzzy pets, and working cats.

Check adoptable pets first

Search current dogs, cats and small pets before driving. Availability can change quickly if another adopter, foster, rescue or owner reclaim happens first.

Use the right application

Use the normal adoption application for dogs and cats, the small-pet application for small and fuzzy animals, and the working-cat application if you are looking for barn or working cats.

Call before driving for one specific animal

If your trip depends on one dog, puppy, cat or kitten, call the Adoption Center at 270-783-9404 and ask whether the animal is still available and physically onsite.

Ask fit questions, not only breed questions

Ask about energy level, medical notes, microchip, vaccines, spay/neuter status, house-training, litter habits, child fit, other pets and the first-week adjustment plan.

Prepare safe transport

Bring a cat carrier for cats and kittens. For dogs, prepare a leash, collar, harness, crate or safe vehicle setup before the adoption is finalized.

Good adopter question: “What does this pet need from me in the first 30 days?” This gives better guidance than only asking whether the pet is friendly.

Bowling Green Animal Shelter Adoption Fees

Use these published BGWCHS adoption fees for planning. Confirm the current fee before checkout because specials, events or policy updates can change the final price.

DOG

Adult dogs

$85 for dogs 6 months and over.

PUP

Puppies

$95 for puppies under 6 months.

CAT

Adult cats

$50 for cats 4 months and older.

KIT

Kittens

$75 for kittens under 4 months.

Animal / Deal Published Fee What the Fee Helps Cover
Adult dogs $85 Spay/neuter, first booster, rabies vaccine, worming, heartworm test, flea preventative and microchip are listed as included.
Puppies under 6 months $95 Ask about age-appropriate vaccines, spay/neuter status and follow-up care.
Adult cats 4+ months $50 Spay/neuter, first booster, rabies vaccine, worming, flea preventative and microchip are listed as included.
Kittens under 4 months $75 Ask about kitten vaccine schedule and first-week care.
Two kittens $100 Useful if adopting a bonded or social kitten pair.
Two adult cats $75 Can help if two compatible cats should stay together.
Senior cats 10+ years $25 Ask about medical notes, diet and senior-pet care.
Working cats Free to approved adopters Use the working-cat route for barn/shop-style placements, not normal indoor cat adoption.
Rabbits $35 Rabbit adoption fees list spay/neuter and flea preventative if needed.
Budget note: Adoption fee is not the full first-month cost. Plan for food, litter, crate or carrier, leash, collar, ID tag, preventives, vet follow-up, training, grooming and emergency savings.

Available Dogs, Cats and Small Pets

Searches like “Bowling Green animal shelter dogs,” “cats for adoption Bowling Green KY,” “puppies near me,” and “BGWCHS Petfinder” should lead to a real plan, not just a list of animals.

Dogs and puppies

Before adopting a dog

  • Ask about leash behavior, energy and anxiety.
  • Ask whether the dog has been around cats, kids or other dogs.
  • Prepare a crate, leash, collar, harness and slow introduction plan.
Cats and kittens

Before adopting a cat

  • Bring a secure carrier.
  • Ask about litter habits, shyness, play style and bonded-pair needs.
  • Prepare a starter room with food, water, litter and hiding space.
Small and fuzzy

Before adopting small pets

  • Ask about enclosure size, diet and handling.
  • Do not use a tiny starter cage as a permanent setup.
  • Confirm whether the pet needs special vet care or companionship.

Bowling Green Animal Control and Animal Protection

Bowling Green Animal Protection is different from the adoption center. Use animal control for public-safety, ordinance, bite, rabies, cruelty, leash-law and stray-dog concerns.

Situation Best First Contact Why This Route Matters
Loose dog inside Bowling Green city limits BG Animal Protection: 270-393-4000 The city handles stray animals, leash law, dangerous dogs and animal welfare enforcement.
Loose dog in Warren County outside city route Warren County Animal Control: 270-842-1633 County location affects who responds.
Found cat or community cat BGWCHS Community Cat Hotline: 270-715-0937 Community cats, ear-tipped cats and TNR-style questions need a different path.
After-hours emergency involving cats or dogs BGWCHS emergency line: 270-202-9136 Use for true after-hours emergencies, not ordinary adoption questions.
Active attack, serious injury or immediate danger Emergency services / local dispatch Immediate safety concerns should not wait on routine shelter or adoption lines.
Call script: “I am calling about an animal issue at [exact address/cross street]. It is [dog/cat/other], and the issue is [loose/injured/aggressive/bite/barking/cruelty/found]. Which department should handle this?”

Lost and Found Pets in Bowling Green and Warren County

Lost-pet searches need repeated action. BGWCHS recommends reporting online, checking shelters, checking microchip contact information, posting flyers and continuing to look.

If your pet is missing

  • Report the pet through lost-pet tools and local Bowling Green / Warren County lost-pet groups.
  • Call and visit local city or county shelters repeatedly.
  • Update your microchip provider contact information.
  • Search hiding places such as drainage pipes, under vehicles, vents, shrubs and sheds.
  • Make flyers with photo, breed/type, date, location, collar, microchip status, altered status, phone number and special markings.
  • Beware of scammers asking for codes or payment before returning your pet.

If you found a pet

  • Check for collar tags or visible ID.
  • Ask nearby neighbors because many lost pets are close to home.
  • Report the found pet with date, photo, address and nearest cross street.
  • Take the pet for a microchip scan at a shelter or vet if safe.
  • Call animal control if you cannot capture the pet or do not feel safe.
  • Talk to the shelter before keeping a found pet temporarily.
Lost-pet script: “Hi, my pet is missing near [location]. The pet is [species/color/size/sex] and may have [collar/microchip]. Has a similar animal come in, and should I visit with proof of ownership?”

Surrender a Pet to Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society

BGWCHS describes itself as an open intake facility for the public of Bowling Green and Warren County only, but it also says placement can never be guaranteed. Surrender should be prepared honestly and carefully.

Prepare before surrender

  • Call the Humane Society line at 270-842-8572 before bringing the pet.
  • Collect medical records, vaccine records and medication details.
  • Write behavior notes about cats, dogs, children, strangers, separation anxiety, escaping, house-training and litter habits.
  • List tricks or commands the pet knows.
  • Put belongings such as beds, toys, collars or clothes in a labeled plastic bag if sending items with the pet.

Be honest about risk

  • Do not hide bite history, aggression, medical issues or medication needs.
  • Ask whether you should redeem the pet if placement is not possible.
  • Ask about alternatives if the issue is food, temporary hardship, training or vet cost.
  • Do not abandon the animal outside the building or in the parking area.
Surrender script: “I live in Bowling Green/Warren County and need help with possible surrender. The pet is [age/species], the reason is [brief reason], and I have medical records and behavior notes. What should I do next?”

Dog/Cat Licensing, Rabies and Bite Reporting

Animal control searches often involve licensing, rabies, bites, leash law or cruelty questions. These are public-safety issues, not ordinary adoption questions.

TAG

Dog and cat licensing

The City of Bowling Green requires annual licensing of dogs and cats three months of age or older. The city page says the license may be purchased at Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society.

RAB

Rabies vaccination

Dogs, cats and ferrets three months of age or older are required to be vaccinated. Keep the rabies certificate as proof for licensing and ownership questions.

BITE

Bite reporting

Animal bites that break the skin must be reported to Bowling Green Police Department, Bowling Green Animal Protection, a doctor/physician or the local Health Department.

Leash-law reminder: The city says dogs must be on leash or confined on the owner’s premises. Roaming dogs can be detained and impounded, and owners may face citations or fines.

Clinic, Spay/Neuter, Vaccines and Pet Services

BGWCHS also lists clinic and service pages for spay/neuter, walk-in vaccines, flea/tick/heartworm prevention, microchipping, pet licensing, puppy/kitten plans and medical resources.

CLIN

Clinic phone

Clinic phone: 270-745-8646.

Veterinary services are not available every day, so call ahead.

SN

Spay/neuter

Use the clinic service pages for spay/neuter information, application, drop-off instructions and what to expect after surgery.

CHIP

Microchipping

Microchips help lost pets return home. Keep your microchip registration phone number and address updated.

Video Resource Note

I did not include a random YouTube embed because a current official embeddable Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society or City Animal Protection video was not confirmed. For trust and page quality, this guide uses official pages and practical visitor instructions instead of forcing an unrelated video.

Recommended future video type: an official BGWCHS shelter tour, adoption process, lost/found pet explainer, clinic service walkthrough or Bowling Green Animal Protection public-safety video.

What to Bring Before Visiting Bowling Green Animal Shelter

Bring the right items based on whether you are adopting, reclaiming, surrendering, reporting a found pet or using clinic services.

ID

Photo ID

Bring valid ID for adoption, reclaim, licensing, clinic or surrender conversations.

LEASE

Housing approval

If you rent, confirm landlord approval, breed rules, pet deposits and pet limits before adopting.

PAY

Payment method

Bring payment for adoption fees, license fees, clinic services or other charges that may apply.

CAT

Cat carrier

Use a secure carrier for cats and kittens. Loose cats in cars are unsafe.

DOG

Dog transport

Bring a leash, collar, harness, crate or safe vehicle plan for dogs and puppies.

RECS

Records

Bring photos, rabies records, microchip info, vet records and medication details if reclaiming or surrendering.

After Adoption: First 7 Days at Home

A helpful adoption guide should not stop at “pay the fee.” The first week determines whether the pet settles calmly or becomes overwhelmed.

First 24 hours

  • Keep the new pet in a quiet starter space.
  • Do not introduce every person and pet immediately.
  • Keep dogs leashed outside, even in fenced areas at first.
  • Use a cat starter room with litter, food, water and hiding space.

Days 2–7

  • Start a predictable feeding, potty, walk and rest routine.
  • Watch for coughing, vomiting, diarrhea, limping or refusal to eat.
  • Introduce resident pets slowly and safely.
  • Ask for training or vet help early if problems appear.

Bowling Green Animal Shelter Map, Directions & Arrival Tips

Use this map for directions to the BGWCHS Hildreth Adoption Center at 1924 Louisville Road. Confirm whether your visit is for adoption, lost-pet search, surrender, clinic, licensing or animal-control help before driving.

Map is for visit planning only. Use your navigation app for live traffic, road closures and route changes.
EARLY

Arrive early

Do not arrive near closing if you want to meet pets, ask questions and complete paperwork.

ROUTE

Use correct route

Adoption, animal control, lost pets, community cats and clinic services use different phone paths.

SAFE

Transport safely

Use carriers, leashes, crates and secure vehicle setups to prevent escapes.

Common Mistakes to Avoid at Bowling Green Animal Shelter

These mistakes can waste a trip or delay help for a lost, found, adoptable or surrendered animal.

Before visiting

  • Do not visit Wednesday expecting normal public hours.
  • Do not rely on old third-party pet listings.
  • Do not call the adoption line for a dangerous-animal emergency.
  • Do not forget that city and county animal control routes can differ.
  • Do not arrive near closing for a full adoption process.

Before adopting or surrendering

  • Do not adopt without checking landlord rules.
  • Do not hide medical, behavior or bite history during surrender.
  • Do not bring a pet without records if records are available.
  • Do not forget safe transport supplies.
  • Do not skip first-week decompression planning.

Bowling Green Animal Shelter FAQ

Where is Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society located?

The Hildreth Adoption Center is listed at 1924 Louisville Road, Bowling Green, KY 42101. The Humane Society and Hotaling Clinic are listed at 1925 River Street, Bowling Green, KY 42101.

What is the Bowling Green animal shelter phone number?

The Adoption Center phone number is 270-783-9404. The Humane Society phone number is 270-842-8572. The Clinic phone number is 270-745-8646.

What are Bowling Green animal shelter adoption hours?

Published hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 10 AM–4:30 PM, Wednesday closed, Saturday 10 AM–4 PM and Sunday 12 PM–4 PM.

Is Bowling Green animal shelter open on Wednesday?

No. BGWCHS lists Wednesday as closed.

How much does it cost to adopt a dog in Bowling Green, KY?

BGWCHS lists adult dogs 6 months and over at $85 and puppies under 6 months at $95. Confirm the current fee before adopting.

How much does it cost to adopt a cat in Bowling Green, KY?

BGWCHS lists adult cats 4 months and older at $50, kittens under 4 months at $75, two kittens at $100, two adult cats at $75 and senior cats 10 years or older at $25.

What is included with BGWCHS adoption fees?

BGWCHS lists items such as spay/neuter, first booster vaccine, rabies vaccine, worming, flea preventative and microchip. Dog adoption also lists heartworm test.

Who should I call for Bowling Green animal control?

For Bowling Green city animal-control concerns, call BG Animal Protection at 270-393-4000. For Warren County animal-control dog issues, the lost/found page lists Warren County Animal Control at 270-842-1633.

What should I do if I found a dog in Bowling Green?

Check for ID, ask nearby neighbors, report the found pet, arrange a microchip scan and call BG Animal Protection or Warren County Animal Control depending on where the dog was found.

What should I do if I found a cat in Bowling Green?

Check for ID, report the found cat, arrange a microchip scan if safe, and call BGWCHS Community Cat Program at 270-715-0937 if the cat may be a community cat or TNR case.

Can I surrender a pet to BGWCHS?

BGWCHS says it is an open intake facility to the public of Bowling Green and Warren County only, but placement is not guaranteed. Call first and prepare medical records, medication details and behavior notes.

Does Bowling Green require dog and cat licensing?

The City of Bowling Green says dogs and cats three months of age or older require annual licensing, and the license may be purchased at Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society.

Are rabies vaccines required in Bowling Green?

The city states that dogs, cats and ferrets three months of age or older are required to be vaccinated against rabies. Keep the rabies certificate for licensing and proof-of-ownership purposes.

Where should I report an animal bite in Bowling Green?

The city says animal bites that break the skin must be reported to the Bowling Green Police Department, Bowling Green Animal Protection, a doctor/physician or the local Health Department.

Final Take: Use Bowling Green Animal Shelter & Control the Right Way

Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society is the main local adoption and humane society resource for dogs, puppies, cats, kittens, small pets, working cats, lost/found support, surrender preparation and clinic services. Bowling Green Animal Protection is the correct city route for animal-control issues such as stray animals, leash-law enforcement, barking dogs, dangerous/vicious dog concerns, rabies control, bite quarantines and cruelty/neglect reports.

The best visitor plan is simple: check adoptable pets first, confirm hours, call the right phone number for your situation, bring ID and safe transport, prepare household and landlord details, use animal control for unsafe or stray situations, and verify final details through official pages before visiting.

Animal-Shelter.org is an independent informational guide and is not affiliated with Bowling Green/Warren County Humane Society, Bowling Green Animal Protection, the City of Bowling Green, Warren County, Petfinder, Petco Love Lost, 24PetWatch or any official shelter portal. Always verify current details with official sources before visiting, adopting, surrendering, reclaiming, licensing or reporting an animal concern.

USA-wide shelter helper • adoption, lost pets, found pets, surrender and animal control

Animal Shelter Action Planner: Lost Pet, Found Pet, Adoption, Reclaim & Surrender Helper

Use this free tool to create a practical next-step plan before visiting or contacting an animal shelter, humane society, rescue, or animal control agency. It does not search a live shelter database, but it helps you prepare the right documents, questions, safety steps, and official-source searches.

Lost Pet PlanSearch, microchip, shelter checks, flyers
Found Pet HelpSafety, scanning, reporting, holding
Adoption PlannerReadiness, questions, supplies, budget
Visit ChecklistDocuments, call script, official links

Build a USA-wide shelter action plan

Select your situation and location. The tool will create a general action plan, search links, call questions, and a copyable checklist.

Important: Shelter rules vary by city, county, agency, and animal type. Always confirm hours, intake rules, fees, appointment requirements, and proof-of-ownership rules with the official shelter or animal control agency before visiting.

Lost pet recovery checklist

Check the steps you have completed. This helps you stay organized during the first urgent hours and days.

0% completed

Found pet safety decision helper

Use this when you find a stray or loose pet and need a safe next step.

Safety first: Do not approach an aggressive, injured, trapped, or traffic-endangered animal if doing so could put you or others at risk. Contact animal control, emergency services, or a qualified professional when needed.

Adoption readiness checker

This helps adopters prepare before visiting a shelter or rescue. It is not a guarantee of approval.

0% readiness signals checked

Pet reclaim document checklist

If your pet may be at a shelter, prepare proof before visiting. Exact requirements and fees vary by agency.

Owner surrender preparation helper

Surrender rules vary. Many shelters require appointments, proof of residence, behavior/medical information, and may offer alternatives.

Helpful reminder: Ask the shelter about pet food pantries, low-cost vet care, behavior support, temporary foster options, and safe rehoming resources before making a final decision.

Animal control contact decision helper

Choose the situation and get a general USA-wide contact path. Local rules may differ.

Emergency warning: If there is immediate danger to a person, a serious bite, traffic hazard, or active attack, contact local emergency services or animal control according to local rules.

Adoption and first-month budget planner

This is a planning guide, not a shelter fee database. Always confirm adoption fees and included services with the shelter.

Your generated shelter plan

Your action plan, search links, call script, checklist, or budget guide will appear here.

Start with the Planner tab

Select your state, city/county/ZIP, pet type, and goal. The tool will create a practical USA-wide shelter action plan.

USA-wide Shelter user intent Official-source focused

Privacy note: this tool runs in your browser. It does not send your entries to animal-shelter.org.