Lincoln County Animal Shelter, Adoption & Pets 2026

Lincoln County, Oregon Shelter Guide

Lincoln County Animal Shelter Adoption & Pets 2026

Use this guide before contacting Lincoln County Animal Shelter in Oregon. It explains the new Waldport facility, adoption hours, dog and cat adoption fees, what adoption includes, lost and found pet steps, reclaim fees, dog licensing, surrender options, animal-control dispatch, volunteer help, map directions and official verification links.

Important location note: Lincoln County announced a new shelter facility in Waldport in April 2026, while some older official pages may still show appointment-only or Newport text in certain views. Always verify current visit rules before driving.

Waldport, Oregon Shelter: 541-265-0720 Dispatch: 541-265-0777 Tue–Sat 9–4 per 2026 notice Verify before visiting
Fast answer: Lincoln County, Oregon announced that the new Lincoln County Animal Shelter facility opened at 220 SW Dahl Ave., Waldport, OR 97394, with public hours Tuesday through Saturday from 9 AM to 4 PM. The shelter phone commonly listed is 541-265-0720. To report found dogs, injured or abandoned animals, nuisance animals, abuse or neglect, the county directs users to non-emergency dispatch at 541-265-0777 to reach an Animal Services Deputy. Because older official pages may still show Newport or appointment-only text, verify current visit rules before driving.

Lincoln County Animal Shelter Quick Details

These details cover common searches like Lincoln County Animal Shelter hours, Lincoln County Oregon animal shelter, Waldport animal shelter, Lincoln County adoptable pets, dog licensing, lost pets, animal control, surrender and volunteer help.

MAP

New facility address

220 SW Dahl Ave., Waldport, OR 97394 is the address listed in the county’s April 2026 new-facility notice.

Verify before visiting because some older county page views still display Newport/appointment-only information.

CALL

Shelter phone

541-265-0720 is the main shelter contact shown across Lincoln County shelter pages and the new-facility notice.

Use it for adoption, lost pets, licensing, surrender guidance, tours, volunteering and donations.

CTRL

Animal control dispatch

541-265-0777 is the non-emergency dispatch number the county lists for Animal Services Deputy reports.

Use this for found dogs, nuisance animals, injured or abandoned animals, abuse or neglect reports.

HRS

Public hours

The 2026 new-facility notice lists Tuesday–Saturday, 9 AM–4 PM.

Closed holidays are noted on county pages.

Accuracy warning: This article uses the newer April 2026 Waldport facility announcement as the current visit baseline, but it still tells readers to call first because the official main shelter page may show older transitional details in some versions.

Which Lincoln County Animal Shelter Is This?

There are multiple Lincoln County shelters in the United States. This page is for Lincoln County, Oregon, not Lincoln County, North Carolina, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, or another county with the same name.

This guide

Lincoln County, Oregon

Use this guide for the Oregon Coast shelter serving communities such as Waldport, Newport, Toledo, Lincoln City, Depoe Bay, Yachats, Siletz and nearby Lincoln County areas.

Different result

Lincoln County, North Carolina

Lincoln County NC Animal Services is a different municipal shelter in Lincolnton, NC, with different address, hours, fees, animal-control rules and adoption process.

Search intent

Near me searches

If you searched “Lincoln County Animal Shelter near me,” confirm the state before calling, especially if your browser shows results based on location or past searches.

Lincoln County Animal Shelter Hours and Address 2026

The most practical issue for 2026 is the facility transition. The county’s new-facility notice says public services opened at the new Waldport building on April 14, 2026. The article below helps users avoid going to an older address or assuming walk-in rules without checking.

Item Best Current Guidance What Visitors Should Do
New facility 220 SW Dahl Ave., Waldport, OR 97394 Use this address from the April 2026 county new-facility notice, but call before visiting.
Public hours Tuesday–Saturday, 9 AM–4 PM Arrive early enough for animal viewing, questions, licensing or adoption paperwork.
Holidays Closed on holidays Check county announcements before holiday-week visits.
Older official page text May still show appointment-only or Newport details in some versions Do not rely on one old page view. Call 541-265-0720 before a long drive.
Found dog or nuisance/abuse report Dispatch route at 541-265-0777 Use dispatch when the issue needs an Animal Services Deputy, not a normal adoption visit.
Best visit timing: For adoption, licensing or reclaim questions, do not arrive in the final hour. Shelter staff may need time to review pet records, paperwork, vaccination proof, and adoption fit.

How to Adopt from Lincoln County Animal Shelter

LCAS directs users to view adoptable animals through its Adopt-a-Pet listing and states that adoptions include important starter care. The process is easier when you confirm the animal is still available, understand the fee, and ask first-week questions before taking the pet home.

Check current adoptable pets first

Start with the official adoption information page and Adopt-a-Pet listing. Write down the animal’s name, species, age, sex, notes and any behavior or medical comments.

Call before driving for one pet

Because shelter availability changes quickly, call 541-265-0720 if your visit depends on one specific animal.

Ask what is included

LCAS says adoptions include initial vaccinations, spay/neuter, microchip, and a certificate for a free examination with a local veterinarian. Dog adoptions also include a one-year license, leash and collar.

Use the return/refund policy responsibly

LCAS states it offers full refunds for animals returned within one week of adoption and also if the free veterinary visit reveals medical issues you are not able or willing to take on.

Ask first-week fit questions

Ask about energy level, fear, other pets, children, litter habits, leash behavior, medical notes, decompression, escape risk and what the first week should look like.

Practical adopter question: “What would make this pet hard for a new home if I am not prepared?” This gives staff a chance to explain real-life needs beyond the pet photo.

Lincoln County Animal Shelter Adoption Fees

The official adoption page lists fees effective January 1, 2022. Confirm current 2026 pricing before checkout, but use this table for planning.

Animal Type Listed Fee Practical Planning Note
Puppy up to 1 year $250 Budget for training, socialization, boosters, chewing, potty accidents and time.
Dog age 1 to 7 $175 Ask about energy, leash behavior, other dogs, cats, kids and decompression needs.
Senior dog age 8+ $125 Ask about arthritis, dental needs, medication, mobility and vet follow-up.
Kitten up to 1 year $100 Prepare a safe kitten room, litter setup, scratching options and follow-up vet plan.
Cat age 1 to 7 $75 Ask about confidence, litter habits, other cats, dogs and indoor/outdoor history.
Senior cat age 8+ $50 Ask about dental, thyroid, kidney, arthritis or long-term medical monitoring.
Barn/shop cat program No fee listed Ask about acclimation, shelter, feeding, safety and ongoing care expectations.
Value note: The listed adoption fee can include major starter services, but you should still budget for food, litter, preventives, enrichment, veterinary follow-up, grooming, training and emergency care.

Lost and Found Pets at Lincoln County Animal Shelter

The lost/found process is detailed because dogs, cats and other domestic animals are handled differently. The fastest reunions happen when owners call quickly, update microchip information and search repeatedly.

If your pet is missing

  • Call Lincoln County Animal Shelter at 541-265-0720.
  • Physically search your home, property and neighborhood immediately.
  • Post clear photos, last-seen area and contact details on local lost/found channels.
  • Report the pet lost to your microchip company and update your phone/address.
  • Add the pet to services such as Petco Love Lost and local lost pet networks.
  • Put signs near the last-seen area, veterinary offices and pet supply stores.

If you found a pet

  • For found dogs, call the shelter and/or dispatch for an Animal Services Deputy.
  • Have the animal scanned for a microchip at a vet office, shelter or by an Animal Services Deputy.
  • Post found reports and signs near the exact found location.
  • For seriously sick or injured cats, call the shelter or Animal Services Deputy.
  • For healthy friendly cats, call for guidance because many outdoor cats are near home.
  • Do not permanently rehome a found pet without following proper lost/found steps.
Lost/Found Issue Official Guidance Summary Visitor Action
Stray hold without identification Held as stray for 72 hours. Search fast. Do not wait several days before calling or visiting.
Stray hold with identification Held as stray for 120 hours. Keep tags and microchip details current so the shelter can contact you.
Dog reclaim fee $30 altered, $50 unaltered, plus $25 per night boarding fee. Bring proof of ownership, rabies proof and payment plan questions if needed.
Cat reclaim fee $15 reclaim fee plus $10 per night boarding fee. Bring photos, microchip info, vet records and carrier.
Unlicensed dog at redemption License proof/rabies proof may be required; late fee can apply if not vaccinated. Bring rabies certificate and spay/neuter proof if available.
Lost-pet call script: “Hi, my dog/cat is missing near [exact location]. The pet is [color, sex, size, collar, microchip if known]. Has a similar animal been brought in, and should I come in today?”

Lincoln County Animal Control, Reports and Dispatch Routing

The shelter and Animal Services Deputy route are connected, but they are not the same user task. Adoption questions can go through the shelter. Found dogs, nuisance animals, injured or abandoned animals, and suspected abuse or neglect should use the dispatch route listed by the county.

Shelter contact

Use for shelter services

Call the shelter for adoption, lost-pet checks, pet licensing, surrender guidance, donations, volunteer questions and pet resources.

Dispatch

Use for Animal Services Deputy

Call 541-265-0777 for found dogs, nuisance animals, injured or abandoned animals, suspected abuse or neglect reports.

Emergency

Immediate danger

If a person is in immediate danger, a serious bite just happened, or an animal is causing a traffic hazard, use emergency services first.

Situation Start Here What to Say
I want to adopt Shelter phone / adoption page “Is [pet name] still available, and can I schedule or visit to meet the animal?”
I found a dog Shelter or dispatch “I found a dog at [exact location]. It is [safe/scared/aggressive/injured]. What should I do?”
Injured or abandoned animal Dispatch to Animal Services Deputy “There is an injured/abandoned animal at [location]. The condition is [brief details].”
Possible abuse or neglect Dispatch to Animal Services Deputy “I want to report possible neglect at [location]. The issue is [food/water/shelter/injury/confinement].”
Urgent bite or public-safety danger Emergency route first “There is an immediate animal-related danger at [location].”

Lincoln County Dog Licensing Rules and Fees

Licensing is not just paperwork. It helps the shelter reunite lost dogs with owners and is required for dogs in Lincoln County under the county’s licensing page.

AGE

When dogs need a license

Lincoln County says dogs must be licensed at 6 months of age or when they have permanent canine teeth, whichever comes first.

NEW

New dog or new resident

Licensing is also required within 30 days of acquiring a dog or within 30 days after new residents move into Lincoln County.

CAT

Cat licenses

Cat licenses are available but not required by law according to the county licensing page.

License Type 1 Year 2 Years 3 Years Needed Proof
Altered animal $5 $10 $15 Rabies certificate and proof of spay/neuter.
Intact animal $35 $65 $90 Rabies certificate.
Reclaim tip: If your lost dog is licensed, LCAS says the first impound fee may be waived. Keep rabies and license information current.

Surrendering a Pet to Lincoln County Animal Shelter

LCAS describes itself as a managed admission shelter for owner surrenders. That means surrender is not always immediate, and the shelter may first try to connect you with resources to help you keep your pet if possible.

Before surrendering

  • Call 541-265-0720 to speak with an Animal Care Specialist.
  • Ask whether food, medical, behavior, housing or rehoming resources could help.
  • Prepare the pet’s age, sex, medical history, vaccine status, behavior notes and bite history.
  • Understand that space may not be immediately available.
  • Ask whether a surrender waitlist is needed.

What LCAS says about surrender

  • LCAS accepts animals from Lincoln County residents as space and resources allow.
  • It does not euthanize animals to make room for another.
  • There are no required fees for stray or owned animals, though donations are welcomed.
  • Animals may stay until a new home is found, unless humane medical or unsafe behavior issues require another decision.
  • LCAS suggests rehoming tools such as Rehome by Adopt-a-Pet and Home to Home when appropriate.
Surrender call script: “Hi, I am a Lincoln County resident and need possible surrender help. My pet is [species/age/sex], with [medical/behavior notes]. Are there resources, rehoming options, or a managed intake process available?”

Found Cats, Kittens and Community Cat Guidance

Many “animal shelter near me” searches are about cats or kittens. Lincoln County’s lost/found page gives different guidance for sick or injured cats, healthy friendly cats, abandoned cats, feral cats, and kittens with or without mom.

Cat Situation What LCAS Guidance Means Practical Action
Seriously sick or injured cat The shelter says it immediately accepts seriously sick or injured cats needing immediate care. Call the shelter or Animal Services Deputy promptly.
Healthy friendly cat Many are outdoor or indoor/outdoor cats near home. Scan for microchip, post signs, post online, and call for guidance before removing.
Known abandoned cat Witnessed abandonment should be reported to an Animal Services Deputy. Provide person, address, vehicle or physical description if known.
Feral but healthy cat Community care and spay/neuter assistance may be the best route. Ask Central Coast Humane Society or local resources about TNR/spay-neuter help.
Mom and kittens Kittens usually do best staying with mom for a minimum period. Watch for mom before moving kittens; call if unable to care for them or if they are in danger.
Kitten-season warning: A kitten alone does not always mean abandoned. Mom may be nearby. Moving healthy kittens too fast can reduce their survival chances.

Volunteer, Foster and Donate to Lincoln County Animal Shelter

The new facility notice mentions volunteer and foster opportunities, including dog walking and cat socializing. Volunteering and donations help shelter animals get enrichment, care and visibility.

VOL

Volunteer

Ask about dog walking, cat socializing, enrichment, cleaning, foster support, events and other current needs.

FOST

Foster

Foster homes can help kittens, shy animals, medical animals, overcrowding situations and pets that need a quieter setting.

GIVE

Donate

The county notice lists monetary donation options and a wish list. Call 541-265-0720 if you want to confirm current needs.

Donation tip: Before dropping off specialty items, call first. Shelters often need specific food, litter, cleaning supplies, enrichment items or medical supplies depending on current intake.

Video Resource Note

I did not embed a random YouTube video because I did not confirm a current official embeddable Lincoln County Animal Shelter video that clearly explains the new facility, adoption steps, lost/found process or Animal Services Deputy routing. This guide uses official county pages instead of forcing an unrelated video.

Best future video to embed: an official Lincoln County shelter tour, adoption-process guide, lost-pet recovery guide, dog licensing explainer, or Animal Services Deputy reporting guide.

What to Bring Before Visiting Lincoln County Animal Shelter

A prepared visitor gets better help. Bring different items depending on whether you are adopting, reclaiming, licensing a dog, reporting a found animal or asking about surrender.

ID

Photo ID

Bring valid identification for adoption, reclaim, licensing, surrender or volunteer questions.

RAB

Rabies certificate

Bring rabies proof for licensing or reclaim. Licensing requires rabies vaccination proof.

FIX

Spay/neuter proof

Bring proof if your pet is altered, because licensing fees differ for altered and intact animals.

DOG

Dog transport plan

Bring or plan for a leash, collar, harness, crate or safe vehicle setup.

CAT

Cat carrier

Bring a secure carrier for cat adoption or reclaim. Loose cats in cars are unsafe.

PROOF

Ownership proof

For reclaim, bring photos, microchip number, tags, vet records, license info and adoption paperwork if available.

After Adoption: First 7 Days at Home

A useful shelter guide should help after adoption too. The first week is often when pets feel stressed, hide, bark, refuse food, escape, or struggle with other animals.

First 24 hours

  • Keep the pet in a quiet starter room or controlled space.
  • Do not introduce every person and resident pet immediately.
  • Use a leash, crate, carrier, baby gate or closed room to prevent escape.
  • Expect stress signs such as hiding, pacing, barking, whining or reduced appetite.
  • Keep adoption records, microchip details, license paperwork and vet certificate together.

Days 2–7

  • Use the free local veterinary exam certificate if included and schedule promptly.
  • Set a predictable feeding, walking, potty, litter and rest routine.
  • Introduce resident pets slowly and safely.
  • Update microchip and license information if needed.
  • Ask for behavior help early if major issues appear.
Adjustment reminder: A shelter pet may need days or weeks to decompress. A calm first week is more useful than taking the new pet everywhere immediately.

Lincoln County Animal Shelter Map, Directions & Arrival Tips

Use this map for the new Waldport facility address from the April 2026 county announcement. Before driving, call if you need adoption, licensing, reclaim, tour, surrender, donation or volunteer help.

Map is for visit planning only. Use your navigation app for live road, weather, traffic and parking updates.
CALL

Call before long drives

Because official pages show transitional details, call 541-265-0720 before visiting from far away.

EARLY

Arrive early

Give yourself time for adoption questions, licensing, reclaim proof or volunteer information.

SAFE

Use dispatch for reports

For found dogs, injured animals or suspected neglect, call dispatch at 541-265-0777 for deputy routing.

Common Mistakes to Avoid at Lincoln County Animal Shelter

These mistakes create wasted trips, delayed reclaims, wrong-location visits and missed pet-reunion chances.

Before visiting

  • Do not drive to an older Newport address without verifying current location.
  • Do not assume the shelter is open on holidays.
  • Do not arrive near closing for adoption, licensing or reclaim paperwork.
  • Do not assume an adoptable pet is still available without checking first.
  • Do not use a normal adoption visit for urgent animal-control reports.

Before adopting, reclaiming or surrendering

  • Do not forget rabies proof for licensing or reclaim.
  • Do not hide behavior, medical or bite history during surrender discussions.
  • Do not move healthy kittens too quickly without checking for mom.
  • Do not wait several days to call if your pet is missing.
  • Do not assume surrender intake is immediate; LCAS uses managed admission as space allows.

Lincoln County Animal Shelter FAQ

Where is Lincoln County Animal Shelter located?

The county’s April 2026 new-facility notice lists Lincoln County Animal Shelter at 220 SW Dahl Ave., Waldport, OR 97394. Call 541-265-0720 before visiting because some older official page views may still show transitional Newport or appointment-only information.

What are Lincoln County Animal Shelter adoption hours?

The April 2026 new-facility notice lists public hours as Tuesday through Saturday from 9 AM to 4 PM. The shelter is closed on holidays. Verify before visiting.

What is the phone number for Lincoln County Animal Shelter?

The shelter phone commonly listed is 541-265-0720. The county also lists 541-265-0777 for non-emergency dispatch to reach an Animal Services Deputy.

How much are adoption fees at Lincoln County Animal Shelter?

Listed fees include puppies up to 1 year at $250, dogs age 1 to 7 at $175, senior dogs at $125, kittens at $100, cats age 1 to 7 at $75, senior cats at $50, and barn/shop cats with no listed fee. Confirm current 2026 pricing before adoption.

What is included with a Lincoln County Animal Shelter adoption?

LCAS says adoptions include initial vaccinations, spay/neuter, microchip, and a certificate for a free local veterinary exam. Dog adoptions also include a one-year license, leash and collar.

Who do I call for a found dog in Lincoln County, Oregon?

Call Lincoln County Animal Shelter at 541-265-0720 and/or non-emergency dispatch at 541-265-0777 to reach an Animal Services Deputy.

How long does Lincoln County Animal Shelter hold stray animals?

The lost/found page says animals without identification are held as stray for 72 hours, and animals with identification are held as stray for 120 hours.

How much does it cost to reclaim a lost dog?

The listed reclaim fee for a lost dog is $30 for altered and $50 for unaltered, plus a $25 per night boarding fee. If the dog is licensed, LCAS says the first impound fee may be waived.

How much does it cost to reclaim a lost cat?

The listed reclaim fee for a lost cat is $15, with a $10 per night boarding fee.

Do dogs need to be licensed in Lincoln County, Oregon?

Yes. Lincoln County says all dogs must be licensed at 6 months of age or when they have permanent canine teeth, within 30 days of acquisition, or within 30 days after moving into the county.

How much is a Lincoln County dog license?

Listed dog license fees are $5, $10 and $15 for altered animals for 1, 2 and 3 years, and $35, $65 and $90 for intact animals for 1, 2 and 3 years. Rabies vaccination proof is required.

Can I surrender a pet to Lincoln County Animal Shelter?

Possibly. LCAS says it accepts animals from Lincoln County residents as space and resources allow. Call 541-265-0720 to speak with an Animal Care Specialist before bringing the pet.

Does Lincoln County Animal Shelter charge surrender fees?

The surrender page says fees are not required for stray or owned animals, though donations are welcomed.

What should I do if I find kittens in Lincoln County?

Do not move healthy kittens immediately unless they are in danger. Mom may be nearby. LCAS says kittens should stay with mom for a minimum period when possible, and you should call the shelter if you cannot care for them or need guidance.

Final Take: Use Lincoln County Animal Shelter the Right Way

Lincoln County Animal Shelter in Oregon is the county’s key animal shelter resource for adoption, lost and found pets, dog licensing, pet surrender guidance, volunteer support and animal care education. In 2026, the most important practical point is the new Waldport facility and the need to verify current visit rules before driving.

The best plan is simple: call first if you are visiting for one specific pet, use the official adoption page for fees and available pets, use 541-265-0777 for Animal Services Deputy reports, keep dog licenses and rabies records current, and act quickly if your pet is missing because stray hold times are limited.

Animal-Shelter.org is an independent informational guide and is not affiliated with Lincoln County Animal Shelter, Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office, Animal Services Deputies, Adopt-a-Pet, Central Coast Humane Society, any veterinarian, any rescue or any official shelter portal. Always verify current details with official sources before visiting, adopting, reclaiming, licensing, surrendering, volunteering 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.