Multnomah County Animal Shelter, Adoption & Pets 2026

Official Portland metro animal services guide

Multnomah County Animal Services Adoption, Lost Pet & Field Services Help

Use official Multnomah County Animal Services resources to check Troutdale shelter hours, view adoptable pets, understand adoption fees, search lost and found pets, buy a pet license, report animal emergencies, handle dog bites, use low-cost pet resources, find rehoming help, foster, donate, and avoid confusing MCAS shelter services with private rescues or neighboring county shelters.

🐾 Mon/Tue/Thu/Fri 11–5:30 πŸ“ 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy ☎️ 503-988-7387 Updated May 2026
β˜… Official shelter help finder
Find Your Multnomah County Animal Shelter Path

If you are searching for multnomah county animal shelter, choose the task closest to what you need. This finder points users to the correct official MCAS path for adoption, shelter hours, available pets, foster animals, lost pets, found pets, licensing, animal emergencies, dog bites, nuisance complaints, wildlife, pet food help, rehoming and foster support.

🐢 Adopt a pet β€” start with official MCAS adoptable pets

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Use this for: dogs, cats, rabbits, ferrets, birds, reptiles, amphibians and small pets listed by Multnomah County Animal Services.

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Best official path: search adoptable pets online, visit during open hours, and plan up to two hours for meeting pets, counseling and adoption processing.

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Before you go: adopters must be 18+ with valid ID. Leave resident pets at home and bring a collar/leash for dogs or a collar/carrier plan for cats.

⚠️ Official first: Do not rely only on screenshots, private pet directories or old adoption posts. Use Multnomah County Animal Services before visiting.
πŸ‘‰ This dropdown does not pull live shelter inventory into your website. It guides users to the correct official Multnomah County Animal Services resource for each task, which is safer than sending every visitor to one generic link.
At a glance

Multnomah County Animal Shelter Quick Facts Before You Visit

Multnomah County Animal Services, often called MCAS, is the public animal shelter and animal protection agency for Multnomah County, Oregon. The shelter is located at 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060. The main customer service phone number is 503-988-7387.

MCAS serves Portland, Gresham, Troutdale, Wood Village, Fairview, Maywood Park and unincorporated Multnomah County for animal protection and field services. The shelter handles adoptions, lost and found pets, licensing, animal emergencies, abuse and neglect investigations, bite investigations, dangerous dog issues, nuisance complaints, foster pets, volunteer support and community pet resources.

πŸ“ Shelter address 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy Troutdale, OR 97060
⏰ Main weekday hours Mon/Tue/Thu/Fri 11 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
🐾 Wed/Sat/Sun 11–4:30 Verify before visiting
☎️ Shelter phone 503-988-7387 Customer service and field calls
🚨 After-hours emergency 911 Animal-related emergencies only
⚠️ Important: Pet availability, adoption specials, licensing fees, shelter hours, foster applications, field service response, lost/found records, bite reporting rules and emergency routing can change. Always verify the official Multnomah County Animal Services page before driving, adopting, reclaiming a pet, paying a fee or filing a report.
πŸ”— Source verification: Official information used in this guide was checked against Multnomah County Animal Services pages for Adoptables, Adoption Information, Lost & Found, Licensing, Investigations & Field Services, Animal Nuisances, Pet Food Assistance, Rehoming, Foster and the official MCAS hours/address footer. Publish-ready as of May 8, 2026.
Page guide

What This Multnomah County Animal Shelter Guide Covers

Hours and location

Multnomah County Animal Services Hours, Address and Best Visit Time

The official customer service hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.. The shelter address is 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060.

For adoptions, timing matters. MCAS says the adoption process may take up to two hours, and adoption counseling for new adoptions ends at 3:30 p.m.. You may still browse after that, but the queue for new counseling sessions closes, and new adoptions may not be processed. Arriving early is not optional if you want a realistic chance at same-day adoption.

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday

Hours: 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Use these days for adoption visits, lost/found questions, license help and general shelter service.

Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday

Hours: 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Adoption counseling still closes earlier, so do not arrive late if you intend to adopt.

Adoption counseling cutoff

New counseling sessions close: 3:30 p.m.

Plan up to two hours for pet meetings, counseling, waiting periods and processing.

Main contact

Phone: 503-988-7387.

Address: 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060.

⏰ Visit advice: Weekend wait times may be longer. If you are serious about adopting, check adoptable pets online first, arrive early, bring required supplies and do not bring your current pets to the shelter.
Adoption process

How to Adopt a Pet From Multnomah County Animal Services

MCAS adoptions are handled differently depending on whether the pet is physically at the Troutdale shelter or in foster care. In-person shelter adoptions are first come, first served. Adopters cannot submit applications in advance for shelter animals, and adoption holds are not available for normal in-shelter pets.

Foster animals use a different path. If a pet is in foster care, the adoption profile’s β€œHow to Adopt” button directs users to Adopets, where they can apply to meet and adopt the foster pet. Applications are reviewed first come, first served, and a foster parent or staff member may contact the best match.

1

Search official adoptable pets first

Open the MCAS Adoptables page and review pet profiles. The official website updates throughout the day with available pets, photos, special considerations and descriptions.

2

Confirm whether the pet is at the shelter or in foster

If the pet is at the Troutdale shelter, visit during open hours. If the pet is in foster care, use the Adopets application link from that animal’s profile instead of showing up at the shelter expecting to meet the pet.

3

Bring valid ID and required supplies

All adopters must be at least 18 years old and must present a government-issued ID. For dogs, bring a collar and leash. For cats, bring a collar and plan for a carrier; a temporary carrier may be provided.

4

Leave resident pets at home

MCAS does not assist with pet-to-pet meets at the shelter, including dog-to-dog or cat-to-cat meets. Staff provide guidance for introducing adopted pets at home instead.

5

Plan for licensing and final paperwork

Multnomah County residents must purchase a pet license for dogs or cats at the time of adoption. License fees are not included in the adoption fee and must be paid separately.

🐾 Strong adoption filter: Do not adopt only because a pet is cute, urgent, discounted or heavily shared online. Choose based on housing, budget, schedule, children, other pets, medical care, training ability and long-term commitment.
Fees and included costs

Multnomah County Animal Shelter Adoption Fees for Dogs, Cats and Other Pets

MCAS lists regular adoption fees by species and age. The Director of Animal Services may also allow adoption fee waivers or reductions when needed to create adoption incentives, so always check current adoption specials before visiting.

Required pet license fees for dogs and cats are not included in the adoption price and must be paid separately by Multnomah County residents. That is a common surprise for adopters who only look at the adoption fee.

Dog adoption fees

Puppies under 7 months: $300.

Dogs 7 months to under 6 years: $160.

Dogs 6 years and older: $60.

Cat adoption fees

Kittens under 7 months: $150.

Cats 7 months to under 6 years: $80.

Cats 6 years and older: $30.

BOGO cat note: the second cat of equal or lesser fee may be half the normal adoption fee when adopting a pair, unless another offer applies.

Small and special pets

Rabbits or ferrets: $30.

Pocket pets: $10.

Reptiles and amphibians: $15.

Domestic birds: $15.

Exotic birds: $125.

License fee reminder

Multnomah County residents need to pay dog or cat license fees separately at adoption.

Check the official licensing page for current license pricing and replacement tag details.

Adoption cost reality users should not miss

  • Adoption specials can reduce fees, but old specials may no longer be active.
  • License fees are separate from dog and cat adoption fees.
  • MCAS notes that start-up costs for new pets can commonly run from $200 to $300.
  • Budget for food, toys, bed, crate, grooming, vet care, training, license fees, collars, leashes, tags, litter and emergencies.
  • Dogs and cats can live 10 to 18 years, so the adoption decision is a long-term commitment.
  • Some pets may show new behavior after leaving the shelter and need patient training.
Pet search online

How to View Multnomah County Dogs, Cats and Adoptable Pets Online

MCAS updates its adoptable pet website throughout the day. The online system may show species, breed, sex, age, size, coat, color, location, foster status and estimated costs. Some pets are at the Troutdale shelter, while others may be in foster care.

Pet profiles are helpful, but they are not a reservation. A pet can be adopted, moved to foster, placed on hold, become temporarily unavailable, or have an active foster application. If you want a foster pet, follow the Adopets application path from the pet profile.

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Browse Official MCAS Pets

Use the official Adoptables page first. It is the source that updates throughout the day with shelter and foster animals.

Official inventory first
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Check Foster Status

Foster pets use an online application through Adopets. Do not drive to Troutdale expecting to meet a foster pet without following the profile instructions.

Avoid wasted trip
⚠️ Availability warning: Online status can change quickly. Refresh the official profile before leaving home, and do not assume a pet is available because you saw a shared social media post.
Lost and found

Multnomah County Lost Pets, Found Pets and Owner Lookup Help

MCAS has a full Lost & Found section with tools to report a lost pet, search for your lost pet, search lost pet reports, report a found pet, find an owner by license number, review outdoor cat information and use found kitten resources.

If your pet is missing, move fast. Search the MCAS found animal listings, file a lost report, update the microchip company, check local shelters, post clear photos, search the neighborhood and keep checking repeatedly. A pet may enter the shelter after your first search.

If your pet is missing

Search MCAS found pets, file a lost pet report, update microchip information, check license records, post local alerts and visit the shelter if you see a possible match.

If you found a pet

Check for tags, use the license number lookup when a license is present, scan for a microchip if safe, file a found pet report and follow MCAS found pet resources.

Outdoor cats and kittens

Use MCAS outdoor cat information and found kitten resources before moving healthy kittens or assuming every outdoor cat is lost.

Proof of ownership

Bring photos, vet records, microchip number, license details, adoption paperwork, unique markings and valid ID when reclaiming a pet.

Lost pet steps that actually help

  • Search official MCAS found pet listings.
  • File a lost pet report through MCAS.
  • Update your pet’s microchip registration immediately.
  • Use the license number lookup if a tag is involved.
  • Post clear photos with cross streets, date, size, color and safe contact method.
  • Check nearby shelters if your pet may have crossed county or city boundaries.
  • Keep checking daily because intake and online posting may not happen at the same time.
⚠️ Lost pet reality: One social media post is not enough. Use MCAS tools, microchip updates, license lookup, signs, shelter checks and neighborhood searches together.
Licensing

Multnomah County Pet License, Replacement Tag and Owner Lookup

MCAS has official licensing pages for buying a pet license, buying a replacement tag, updating license information, finding licensing locations, licensing facilities, free livestock registration and finding an owner by license number.

For adopters, the most important point is simple: Multnomah County residents must buy a pet license for dogs or cats at adoption, and license fees are not included in the adoption fee. If your pet already has a license tag and someone finds the pet, the license number lookup can help reconnect the pet with you.

Buy or renew a license

Use the official MCAS licensing page to buy a pet license, buy a replacement tag or update license information.

Adoption license requirement

Multnomah County residents adopting dogs or cats need to purchase the required license at the time of adoption.

Owner lookup

If a found pet has a license number, use the official β€œFind an owner by license number” tool to help locate the owner.

Livestock and facilities

MCAS also provides licensing information for facilities and free livestock registration links for applicable situations.

Animal control

Multnomah County Animal Control, Field Services, Dog Bites and Emergencies

MCAS is the primary agency responsible for animal abuse and neglect investigations in Multnomah County. The field services unit serves Portland, Gresham, Troutdale, Wood Village, Fairview, Maywood Park and all unincorporated areas of the county.

For animal-related emergencies during regular hours, call 503-988-7387. For emergencies after hours, call 911. For non-emergency pet-related issues, call during regular hours. MCAS says all complaints except barking may be reported by phone.

Emergency response and rescue

MCAS field services cover abandoned animals, animals in distress, cruelty and neglect investigations, injured or sick animal rescue, loose animals in traffic, and protective care or custody of animals.

Public health and safety

MCAS handles loose aggressive animals, animal bite investigation and quarantine, potentially dangerous dog investigation and classification, and dead animal removal from public property.

Neighborhood livability

Field services also cover barking dog disturbances, loose animal nuisance complaints, stray holding dog pickup service and animal facility inspections.

Dog bite reporting

To report a dog bite, suspected neglect or abuse, or another animal control issue, call 503-988-7387 during regular hours. Completed bite report forms may be sent to mcas.dispatchers@multco.us.

⚠️ Emergency rule: If an animal is loose on a freeway, in a hot vehicle, being beaten or attacked, in distress, or if there is a loose aggressive dog, call MCAS during regular hours. After hours, report emergencies to 911.
Support before surrender

Multnomah County Pet Food Assistance, Low-Cost Resources and Rehoming Help

MCAS links users to low-cost resources, pet food assistance, Spay and Save, rehoming resources, training resources, deceased animal and end-of-life services, and fee payment resources. These resources matter because many shelter problems are not truly adoption problems. They are food, housing, training, veterinary cost, behavior or short-term crisis problems.

Before surrendering or rehoming, check whether a support resource can keep the pet safely with the family. If the issue is temporary food need, training help, spay/neuter cost, end-of-life care, or another resource need, use the official resources section before assuming the shelter is the only option.

Pet food assistance

Use MCAS pet food assistance resources if food cost is creating pressure to give up a pet.

Low-cost resources

Use MCAS low-cost resource links and Spay and Save information for affordable pet care support.

Rehoming resources

Use official rehoming resources if you can no longer keep a pet and want to explore safe placement outside shelter intake.

Training resources

Behavior problems are often solvable with the right support. Use training resources before surrendering when safe and realistic.

πŸ“Œ Hard truth: Surrender should not be the first move if the real issue may be food, training, vet cost, housing, fencing, temporary hardship or lack of information. Use support resources early.
Special cases

Multnomah County Wildlife, Rabbits, Birds, Coyotes and Dead Animal Reports

Not every animal issue belongs to the shelter. MCAS provides specific routing for wildlife and special cases. For wildlife issues other than coyotes, MCAS points users to Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. For sick or injured birds or coyote issues, MCAS points users to Bird Alliance of Oregon Wildlife Care Center.

If you find a sick or deceased rabbit, MCAS says to report it directly to the Oregon Department of Agriculture because of rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus tracking. Dead bird reports may go to Multnomah County Vector Control. Livestock regulations and beekeeping questions are routed through Multnomah County Vector Control, and free livestock registration is available.

Sick or deceased rabbit

Report suspected rabbit hemorrhagic disease concerns to Oregon Department of Agriculture at 1-800-347-7028 or through the official ODA reporting path.

Wildlife other than coyotes

For wildlife issues other than coyotes, MCAS directs users to Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife at 503-947-6000.

Sick/injured birds or coyotes

MCAS directs sick or injured bird and coyote issues to Bird Alliance of Oregon Wildlife Care Center at 503-292-0304.

Dead birds and livestock

Dead bird reports may go to Multnomah County Vector Control. Livestock regulations, beekeeping and free livestock registration use county vector control and licensing resources.

⚠️ Wrong-path mistake: A loose aggressive dog, sick rabbit, injured bird, coyote concern, dead bird, livestock question and adoption visit all need different official routes. Do not force every animal issue through the adoption desk.
Map and location

Multnomah County Animal Shelter Map and Visit Location

The official Multnomah County Animal Services shelter is located at 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060. Use this address for adoption visits, lost pet searches, found pet questions, licensing help, public shelter services and general MCAS customer service.

Multnomah County Animal Services

Address: 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060

Most searched questions

Multnomah County Animal Shelter FAQs

Where is Multnomah County Animal Shelter located?

Multnomah County Animal Services is located at 1700 W Historic Columbia River Hwy, Troutdale, OR 97060.

What is the Multnomah County Animal Services phone number?

The main customer service phone number is 503-988-7387. Use this number for shelter questions, adoption questions, lost/found help, licensing and animal-related emergency calls during regular hours.

What are Multnomah County Animal Shelter hours in 2026?

Customer service hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; and Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Always verify the official site before visiting around holidays or major events.

How do I adopt a pet from Multnomah County Animal Services?

Search adoptable pets online, visit the shelter during open hours, bring government-issued ID, leave resident pets at home and plan up to two hours for the process. In-shelter adoptions are first come, first served. Foster pets use the Adopets application path from the pet profile.

What time does adoption counseling close at MCAS?

MCAS says new adoption counseling sessions close at 3:30 p.m. Adopters may still browse after that, but new adoptions may not be processed. Arrive early if you want to complete an adoption.

Can I bring my current dog to meet a shelter dog?

No. MCAS says it cannot assist with pet-to-pet meets at the shelter, including dog-to-dog or cat-to-cat meets. Staff provide resources for introducing newly adopted pets at home.

How much are Multnomah County dog adoption fees?

Regular dog adoption fees are $300 for puppies under 7 months, $160 for dogs 7 months to under 6 years, and $60 for dogs 6 years and older. Adoption specials may reduce fees, so check the official site before visiting.

How much are Multnomah County cat adoption fees?

Regular cat adoption fees are $150 for kittens under 7 months, $80 for cats 7 months to under 6 years, and $30 for cats 6 years and older. MCAS also lists a BOGO cat discount where the second cat of equal or lesser fee may be half the normal adoption fee when adopting a pair, unless another offer applies.

Are license fees included in the adoption fee?

No. Required pet license fees for dogs and cats are not included in the adoption fee and must be paid separately by Multnomah County residents at the time of adoption.

How do I find my lost pet in Multnomah County?

Search MCAS found pets, file a lost pet report, update microchip information, check license records, visit the shelter if you see a possible match and keep searching daily. Pets may enter the shelter after your first search.

What should I do if I found a pet in Multnomah County?

Check for tags, use the license owner lookup if a license tag is present, scan for a microchip when safe, file a found pet report and follow MCAS found pet resources.

Who handles animal control in Portland and Multnomah County?

Multnomah County Animal Services is the primary animal protection and field services agency for Portland, Gresham, Troutdale, Wood Village, Fairview, Maywood Park and unincorporated Multnomah County.

Who do I call for an animal emergency after hours?

For animal-related emergencies during MCAS regular hours, call 503-988-7387. For emergencies after hours, call 911.

Does MCAS handle wildlife?

Some wildlife issues are routed to other agencies. MCAS directs wildlife issues other than coyotes to Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, sick or injured birds and coyote issues to Bird Alliance of Oregon Wildlife Care Center, and sick or deceased rabbit concerns to Oregon Department of Agriculture.

Final summary

Best Way to Use Multnomah County Animal Services in 2026

The best path is simple: use the official MCAS website first, check adoptable pets online, arrive early for adoption counseling, bring the required supplies, and do not bring resident pets to the shelter. For foster animals, use the Adopets application path from the pet profile instead of visiting the shelter unprepared.

For the focus keyword multnomah county animal shelter, this guide covers the full user intent: Multnomah County Animal Services hours, Troutdale address, phone number, adoption process, adoption fees, dogs, cats, rabbits, small pets, foster pets, lost pets, found pets, license lookup, pet licensing, field services, animal emergencies, dog bite reports, nuisance complaints, wildlife routing, pet food assistance, rehoming resources, foster, donations, map and official links.

Important Notice: This article is an independent informational guide and is not Multnomah County Animal Services, Multnomah County, a veterinary clinic, a law office or an emergency service. Adoption availability, shelter hours, fees, licensing costs, field-service response, emergency routing, lost/found records, foster applications, wildlife reporting and county animal laws can change. Always verify urgent or official matters directly with Multnomah County Animal Services or the correct local agency before acting.

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