Paws Animal Shelter & Control: Adoption Hours 2026

Official Floyd County, Georgia P.A.W.S. guide

P.A.W.S. Animal Shelter Adoption Hours, Fees, Lost Pets & Floyd County Animal Control Help

Use official Floyd County Public Animal Welfare Services resources to check adoption hours, view adoption rules, understand dog and cat fees, find lost-pet steps, learn surrender appointment rules, contact animal control, review spay/neuter and microchip guidance, and avoid confusing Floyd County P.A.W.S. in Rome, Georgia with unrelated PAWS shelters in other locations.

🐾 99 North Ave NE ☎️ 706-236-4545 ⏰ Wed closed to public Updated May 2026
★ Official shelter help finder
Find Your Floyd County P.A.W.S. Path

If you are searching for paws animal shelter, this page is for Public Animal Welfare Services (P.A.W.S.) in Floyd County, Georgia. Choose the task closest to what you need so you reach the correct official path for adoption, hours, lost pets, animal control, fees, rehoming, surrender appointments or spay/neuter and microchip guidance.

Official path
Choose the service you need

Choose one option. The official action card below updates for adoption, hours, lost pets, animal control, adoption fees, surrender appointments, rehoming and microchip guidance.

🐶 Adopt a pet — start with official Floyd County P.A.W.S. adoption guidance

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Use this for: dogs and cats available through Floyd County Public Animal Welfare Services in Rome, Georgia.

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Best official path: read the official adoption page, review the requirements, then visit 99 North Avenue NE during public adoption hours.

Before you go: adopters must be over 18, bring a driver’s license and physical address, and renters need written landlord permission.

⚠️ Official first: “PAWS” is a very common shelter name. Make sure you are using Floyd County P.A.W.S. in Rome, Georgia before visiting or sharing hours.
👉 This dropdown does not pull live pet inventory into your website. It guides users to the correct official Floyd County P.A.W.S. resource for each task.
At a glance

Floyd County P.A.W.S. Quick Facts Before You Visit

Public Animal Welfare Services, commonly called P.A.W.S., is Floyd County’s official animal control and shelter department in Rome, Georgia. P.A.W.S. handles animal control field operations, shelter management and care, adoption and rescue programs, community education, lost and unwanted animals, and situations where animals are considered a hazard to the community.

The focus keyword paws animal shelter is broad, so the article must be specific. This page covers only Floyd County Public Animal Welfare Services at 99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161. It is not about PAWS organizations in Washington, Pennsylvania, India, Canada or other cities that use the same name.

📍 Shelter address 99 North Ave NE Rome, GA 30161
☎️ Main phone 706-236-4545 Telephone hours apply
Adoption hours Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri 11:30 AM–4:30 PM
🐾 Saturday 1 PM–4:30 PM Wednesday public closed
💳 Adoption fees $40 dogs / $35 cats Spay/neuter included
⚠️ Important: Adoption hours, phone hours, fee-waiver events, animal availability, surrender appointments, shelter closures, rescue procedures and local ordinance enforcement can change. Always verify directly through Floyd County P.A.W.S. before driving, adopting, surrendering, reporting or publishing time-sensitive details.
🔗 Source verification: Official information used in this guide was checked against Floyd County Public Animal Welfare Services, Adopting a Pet, FAQs, Contact P.A.W.S., Rehome Your Pet, Donate to P.A.W.S., Rescue Groups, and Spaying, Neutering & Microchipping pages. Publish-ready as of: May 10, 2026.
Page guide

What This P.A.W.S. Animal Shelter Guide Covers

Official hours

P.A.W.S. Adoption Hours, Telephone Hours, Address and Phone Number

Floyd County P.A.W.S. is located at 99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161. The main phone number listed on Floyd County’s official pages is 706-236-4545. The shelter separates public adoption hours from telephone hours, so users should not assume both are identical.

Adoption hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11:30 AM to 4:30 PM. Saturday adoption hours are 1:00 PM to 4:30 PM. Wednesday is closed to the public, and Sunday is closed. Telephone hours are listed as Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM, and Thursday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM.

Shelter address

99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161

Use this location for adoption visits, lost-pet checks, in-person shelter questions and official P.A.W.S. services.

Main phone

706-236-4545

Use during official telephone hours for shelter questions and appointment discussion.

Adoption hours

Mon: 11:30 AM–4:30 PM.

Tue: 11:30 AM–4:30 PM.

Wed: closed to the public.

Thu: 11:30 AM–4:30 PM.

Fri: 11:30 AM–4:30 PM.

Sat: 1:00 PM–4:30 PM.

Sun: closed.

Telephone hours

Mon, Tue, Wed, Fri: 9:00 AM–4:30 PM.

Thu: 9:00 AM–4:00 PM.

Call first for surrender availability because surrenders are appointment-only.

⏰ Visit advice: Wednesday being “closed to the public” does not mean nobody answers phones. Read the correct column before planning a visit or calling with a lost-pet concern.
Adoption process

How to Adopt a Dog or Cat From Floyd County P.A.W.S.

P.A.W.S. shelters dogs and cats that need second chances, and the adoptable pet list changes often because new animals arrive regularly. The official adoption page tells visitors to check back frequently if the right pet is not available today.

1

Start with the official adoption page

Use Floyd County’s official adoption page first so you see current adoption fees, included care and the correct shelter contact path.

2

Check whether you qualify before visiting

Official FAQ guidance says adopters must be over 18, must not have Animal Control violation citations within the previous two years, and renters or leaseholders need written landlord permission to keep a pet on the property.

3

Bring the right documents

Bring your driver’s license and physical address information. If you rent, bring written landlord permission. Do not arrive empty-handed and expect the shelter to skip its process.

4

Meet the animal before deciding

P.A.W.S. notes that visitors can spend time with shelter animals in play areas before deciding to adopt. Use that time to ask about temperament, energy level, other pets, children, medical needs and home fit.

5

Plan for follow-through after adoption

Be prepared to schedule, pay for and follow through with vaccinations and sterilization requirements within the required period. Adoption is not finished when you pay the fee; responsible ownership starts then.

🐾 Strong adoption filter: A cheap fee does not make a pet cheap to own. Food, parasite prevention, vet care, training, housing rules and emergency treatment cost far more than the first-day adoption fee.
Fees and included care

P.A.W.S. Dog and Cat Adoption Fees in 2026

Floyd County P.A.W.S. lists dog adoptions at $40 and cat adoptions at $35. Official guidance says all adoptions include spay or neuter, rabies vaccine and age-appropriate shots.

Temporary fee-waiver events can happen. Floyd County announced a 32-day adoption fee waiver in early 2026 in honor of K-9 Deputy Mike Williams. That type of event is time-limited, so do not use an old promotion as the permanent standard fee.

Dog adoption fee

$40

Includes spay/neuter, rabies vaccine and age-appropriate shots.

Cat adoption fee

$35

Includes spay/neuter, rabies vaccine and age-appropriate shots.

Payment types

Official FAQ guidance lists cash, check, debit, Visa and Mastercard for adoption fee payment.

Temporary specials

Fee-waiver events may happen, but verify the current official page before claiming a discount or free adoption.

Before paying a P.A.W.S. adoption fee

  • Confirm the pet is still available.
  • Ask what medical records come with that individual animal.
  • Confirm whether any temporary adoption promotion is active or expired.
  • Ask about sterilization and vaccine follow-through requirements.
  • Budget for food, supplies, routine vet care, heartworm prevention, flea/tick prevention and emergencies.
Pet search

How to View P.A.W.S. Animals Available for Adoption

Floyd County’s FAQ says visitors can look at animals available for adoption by visiting 99 North Avenue during walk-in hours or by using the online animal-viewing path linked from the official FAQ. The safest user action is to start at Floyd County’s own P.A.W.S. pages, then follow the official route provided there.

Animal availability changes often. A dog or cat may be adopted, reclaimed, transferred, placed with rescue or updated after you last checked. Save the animal details you saw, but verify again before driving if your visit depends on one specific pet.

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Visit in Person

Use official adoption hours and meet shelter animals at 99 North Avenue before making a serious decision.

Best for real fit
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Check Frequently

P.A.W.S. says adoptable pets change weekly because many new animals arrive.

Inventory changes fast
⚠️ Availability warning: Never promise readers that a specific pet is still available. A helpful page sends users to the official current adoption path instead of freezing old inventory in an article.
Lost pets

Lost a Pet in Rome or Floyd County? What P.A.W.S. Says to Do

If your dog or cat is lost, Floyd County P.A.W.S. gives blunt advice: come to the facility in person and look for your pet. The FAQ explains that staff may not be able to identify an animal from a phone description because many animals are at the facility, and in-person checking gives owners the best chance of recognizing their pet.

P.A.W.S. also says pets are held for three days before being made available for adoption. That means waiting several days before searching is a bad strategy. Move quickly, check repeatedly, and do not rely on one phone call or one social post.

First action

Go to the facility in person and check whether your pet is there.

Lost & found board

Check the Lost and Found board at the P.A.W.S. facility.

Three-day hold

P.A.W.S. states that pets are held for three days before they become available for adoption.

Identification

Keep a microchip, ID tag and collar on your pet to improve the chance of return.

Lost pet steps that actually help

  • Visit P.A.W.S. in person instead of relying only on a phone description.
  • Ask neighbors whether they have seen or temporarily sheltered the pet.
  • Call nearby veterinarians to ask whether the pet has been seen.
  • Check the facility’s Lost and Found board.
  • Check with the Rome/Floyd Humane Society frequently.
  • Use printed signs, grocery-store boards, laundromats and local notices.
  • Carry a clear color photo for identification.
Animal control

What Floyd County P.A.W.S. Handles Beyond Adoption

P.A.W.S. is not only an adoption shelter. Floyd County states that Public Animal Welfare Services is responsible for animal control field operations, shelter management and care, and the animal adoption/rescue program. Its mission also includes sheltering lost, unwanted and neglected animals, preventing suffering, containing animals deemed a hazard to the community, public education and rescue work.

Floyd County’s FAQ also explains restraint rules. If an owner is not physically outside with a dog or cat, the animal must be restrained to the property. If the owner is outside and the animal is off leash, the owner must have verbal control. A separate leash law applies within Rome city limits.

Field operations

P.A.W.S. handles animal control field operations for Floyd County Animal Control.

Hazard response

The department’s mission includes humanely capturing and containing animals deemed a hazard to the community.

Restraint rule

If the owner is not outside with the pet, dogs and cats must be restrained to the property.

Rome city leash law

Within Rome city limits, a leash law applies in addition to county restraint guidance.

🚨 Practical rule: Adoption questions, lost-pet checks and urgent animal-control hazards are different user needs. Do not send every visitor down one generic adoption path.
Surrender and rehome

P.A.W.S. Surrender Appointments and Rehoming Help

Floyd County’s official P.A.W.S. page states that surrenders are by appointment only and asks residents to call to discuss availability. That is important because bringing an owned pet without planning can create unnecessary stress for the animal and may not match shelter capacity that day.

P.A.W.S. also provides an official Rehome Your Pet resource with a downloadable guide for finding a loving forever home. That route matters when a safe direct rehome may be more suitable than a rushed surrender.

Surrender rule

Appointment only.

Call P.A.W.S. first to discuss availability before bringing an owned pet.

Rehome resource

Use the official Rehome Your Pet page and downloadable guide if direct rehoming may be possible.

Be honest

Share accurate age, health, vaccination, behavior, bite history and reason for surrender or rehoming.

Do not wait

Moving day, eviction day or crisis day is the worst time to start looking for options.

Hard truth: Last-minute surrender is usually poor planning. Early calls and honest details give the animal more options than a rushed handoff.
Responsible ownership

Spaying, Neutering and Microchipping Guidance From P.A.W.S.

P.A.W.S. provides official education on spaying, neutering and microchipping because those practices reduce unwanted litters, lower stray and feral populations, and improve the chance that a lost pet can be identified and returned. The agency specifically notes that collars and tags can be lost, while a microchip provides a more permanent identification method.

Microchipping only helps when the registration information stays current. If you move, change phone number or change email address, update the microchip record immediately. A chip with old contact information is a weak safety plan.

Spay/neuter

Helps reduce unwanted litters and contributes to community animal welfare.

Microchip

Provides a permanent identification method when collars and tags are lost.

Update records

Keep microchip contact information current to improve return chances.

Adoption follow-through

Official FAQ guidance says adopters must follow through with required vaccinations and sterilization.

🏷️ Practical note: A pet with a microchip, current rabies tag, visible ID tag and accurate owner contact information is far easier to return than a pet with no usable identification.
Portal confusion

Floyd County P.A.W.S. vs Other PAWS Shelters Online

The search phrase “paws animal shelter” is dangerous if you do not add location context. PAWS is used by many unrelated animal organizations across the United States and abroad. This page is only about Public Animal Welfare Services in Floyd County, Georgia.

This page covers

Floyd County P.A.W.S. at 99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161.

Not the same as

PAWS shelters in Washington, Pennsylvania, Chicago, India or other regions with the same acronym.

Why it matters

Wrong PAWS page means wrong hours, wrong phone number, wrong address, wrong fee and wrong animal-control service area.

Fast check

Confirm Floyd County, Rome, Georgia, the official domain and the 99 North Avenue address before acting.

Map and location

Floyd County P.A.W.S. Map and Visit Location

Public Animal Welfare Services is located at 99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161. Use this location for adoption visits, lost-pet in-person checks, shelter questions and official Floyd County P.A.W.S. services.

Public Animal Welfare Services (P.A.W.S.)

Address: 99 North Avenue NE, Rome, GA 30161

Most searched questions

P.A.W.S. Animal Shelter FAQs

Which P.A.W.S. animal shelter does this page cover?

This page covers Floyd County Public Animal Welfare Services (P.A.W.S.) in Rome, Georgia, located at 99 North Avenue NE. It does not cover unrelated PAWS organizations in other states or countries.

What are Floyd County P.A.W.S. adoption hours in 2026?

Adoption hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11:30 AM to 4:30 PM, and Saturday from 1:00 PM to 4:30 PM. Wednesday is closed to the public and Sunday is closed.

What is the P.A.W.S. Rome GA phone number?

The main official phone number listed for Floyd County P.A.W.S. is 706-236-4545.

How much does it cost to adopt from Floyd County P.A.W.S.?

Official adoption fees are $40 for dogs and $35 for cats. All adoptions include spay/neuter, rabies vaccine and age-appropriate shots.

What do I need to adopt from P.A.W.S.?

You must be over 18, have no Animal Control violation citations within the past two years, bring a driver’s license and physical address, and provide written landlord permission if you rent or lease.

What should I do if my pet is lost in Floyd County?

P.A.W.S. recommends visiting the facility in person to look for your pet, checking the Lost and Found board, contacting nearby veterinarians, checking with the Rome/Floyd Humane Society frequently, posting signs and keeping a clear color photo for identification.

How long does P.A.W.S. hold lost pets before adoption?

P.A.W.S. states that pets are held for three days before they are made available for adoption.

Does P.A.W.S. accept pet surrenders?

Yes, but surrenders are by appointment only. Call P.A.W.S. first to discuss availability before bringing an owned pet to the shelter.

Does Floyd County have a leash law?

Floyd County has a restraint rule requiring dogs and cats to be restrained to the property when the owner is not physically outside with them. A separate leash law applies within Rome city limits.

Does P.A.W.S. help with spaying, neutering and microchipping information?

Yes. P.A.W.S. provides official education on spaying, neutering and microchipping, including why microchips improve the chance of returning lost pets to owners.

Can I donate supplies to P.A.W.S.?

Yes. Floyd County has an official Donate to P.A.W.S. page listing requested shelter supplies and donation options.

Is P.A.W.S. only an adoption shelter?

No. Floyd County states that P.A.W.S. is responsible for animal control operations, field operations, shelter management and care, and the adoption/rescue program.

Final summary

Best Way to Use Floyd County P.A.W.S. in 2026

The best path is simple: first confirm you are dealing with Floyd County P.A.W.S. in Rome, Georgia, not another organization with the same acronym. Then use the official Floyd County pages for adoption hours, adoption fees, lost-pet guidance, surrender appointments, rehoming, code information and responsible pet ownership resources.

For the focus keyword paws animal shelter, this guide covers the full user intent: adoption hours, address, phone number, dog and cat fees, adoption requirements, lost-pet steps, three-day hold rule, animal-control duties, restraint-law basics, surrender appointments, rehoming, microchipping, map and official links. That is far more useful than a thin page that only repeats “PAWS shelter” without saying which PAWS it means.

Important Notice: This article is an independent informational guide and is not Floyd County Government, Public Animal Welfare Services, a veterinarian, law enforcement, or a legal authority. Adoption availability, adoption fees, shelter hours, phone hours, fee-waiver events, animal-control response, restraint-law interpretation, lost-pet holding periods, surrender availability, rehoming resources and shelter operations can change. Always verify urgent or official matters directly with Floyd County P.A.W.S., emergency services or the appropriate official agency before acting.

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