Everything you need to find your missing dog in Los Angeles — 8 local shelters to contact, 8+ community groups to post in, and a step-by-step recovery guide.
Visit these shelters in person — details can get lost over the phone. In California, shelters are required to hold stray animals for at least 5 days before they can be adopted out or transferred. Bring a photo of your dog.
Post in these groups and check them daily. Community members often spot lost dogs before shelters pick them up.
The first 24 hours are the most critical. With 8 shelters and 8+ community groups in the Los Angeles area, here's exactly how to maximize your chances of a reunion.
Walk a 1-mile radius from where your dog was last seen in Los Angeles. Bring treats, their favorite toy, and call their name. Dogs often hide within a few blocks — check under porches, in garages, and behind bushes. Early morning and dusk are the best times since it's quieter and dogs are more likely to come out.
Call every shelter listed above and visit in person. In California, stray animals must be held for 5 days. Visit every 2-3 days since new animals come in constantly. Ask to check their found-animal log even if you don't see your dog in the kennels.
Post a clear photo, your dog's name, breed, color, where they were last seen, and your phone number. We've listed 8 active groups above — post in all of them.
Upload your dog's photo to online lost pet databases. Many use photo matching technology to compare your dog against found dogs reported at shelters and by community members nationwide.
Post on Nextdoor, put up flyers within a 2-mile radius (focus on intersections, vet offices, and pet stores), and ask neighbors to check their Ring or security camera footage from the time your dog went missing.
Doing all of the above takes hours every day. Services like Petgraphy can automate the entire process — continuously monitoring shelters, community groups, and neighborhood networks across Los Angeles, and alerting you the moment a found dog matches yours.
Understanding how lost dogs behave helps you search smarter, not harder.
Most lost dogs are found within 1-2 miles of home. 95% of dogs who wander stay within 1.8 miles. However, scared dogs or high-energy breeds like Huskies can cover 5-10 miles per day.
A friendly, outgoing dog will likely approach strangers and may be taken in by a good samaritan — check shelters and "found dog" posts. A shy or scared dog will hide and avoid people — focus your search on hiding spots nearby.
Dogs navigate primarily by smell. Leave a worn t-shirt, their bed, and their food bowl outside your door. Many dogs return home on their own overnight, guided by familiar scents.
Lost dogs are often more active at dawn and dusk when streets are quieter. Search with a flashlight at night — you'll catch the reflection of their eyes before you see them. Shake a treat bag and listen for any response.
A well-written post dramatically increases the chances someone recognizes your dog. Here's exactly what to include when posting in the Los Angeles groups listed above.
Use the format: "LOST DOG — [NEIGHBORHOOD], Los Angeles". For example: "LOST Golden Retriever — Midtown, Los Angeles". All caps on "LOST" grabs attention while scrolling.
Choose a clear, well-lit photo that shows your dog's full body and face. Avoid blurry photos or heavy filters. If you have multiple good photos, include 2-3 showing different angles.
List your dog's name, breed (or best guess), color, approximate weight, age, and any distinguishing features — scars, spots, a crooked tail, heterochromia, etc. Mention if they're wearing a collar and whether they're microchipped.
"Last seen near [cross streets] in [neighborhood], Los Angeles on [date] around [time]." The more specific, the better. Include which direction they were heading if anyone saw them.
Always include a phone number — not just "DM me." When someone spots your dog, you need to respond in minutes, not hours. If you're comfortable, mention a reward without specifying the amount.
Petgraphy uses advanced AI to monitor all the shelters, Facebook groups, and neighborhood networks listed on this page — and thousands more — automatically. Our AI compares found dog photos against yours and alerts you the moment there's a potential match.
Start AI-powered search in Los AngelesLost pets can travel. Check these nearby areas too.