Local Cost Guides
Monthly Dog Costs in Johannesburg: Ownership Budget Guide
Monthly dog costs in Johannesburg depend on your dog's size, age, coat, health, food, lifestyle, housing, transport, and emergency planning. This guide helps you build a realistic budget without pretending every household pays the same.
Quick takeaways
Verified local options to start with
Marks Park Dog Club
McKaynine Training Centre
Dog Training at Your Home Johannesburg
FurryFrenz Dog Training
Paws Gone Wild
Happy Paws Mobile
Doggy Do's Groomery
Pampered Pets Grooming Parlour at Orange Grove Veterinary Hospital
New South Veterinary Centre
Fourways Veterinary Hospital
Bryanston Veterinary Hospital
Johannesburg Specialist Veterinary Clinic
Happy Tails Doggy Daycare
JollyWalker
Waggitytails House & Pet Sitting
Pawsome Pups
Keringa-Petwings
Badham's Fourways Kennels
Must Love Dogs Hotel
Team Petsitters Johannesburg
The Puppy Palace
Club Street Kennels
Dog360
Professional Pet Services Johannesburg
Walkhaven Dog Park
Provider-checking checklist
- Confirm services, prices, opening hours, and availability directly before visiting or booking.
- Ask how the provider handles vaccination records, behaviour concerns, illness, emergencies, and cancellation.
- Check whether the provider is realistic for your dog's size, age, temperament, health needs, and transport plan.
- Keep your vet details, emergency contact, microchip or ID details, and written care notes ready.
Monthly dog cost context in Johannesburg
Core monthly cost categories
| Category | What affects it |
|---|---|
| Food | Dog size, age, activity, diet type, body condition, allergies, and vet diets. |
| Parasite control | Weight, tick exposure, flea risk, product type, and vet guidance. |
| Routine vet care | Vaccines, checkups, chronic conditions, dental care, and prevention. |
| Grooming | Coat type, size, shedding, matting, ears, nails, and mobile or parlour choice. |
| Training | Puppy classes, private support, behaviour help, and owner practice needs. |
| Insurance or savings | Premiums, excesses, exclusions, emergency buffer, and claims process. |
| Transport and extras | Fuel, parking, travel gear, toys, bedding, cleaning supplies, and replacement items. |
Illustrative budget examples
| Dog type | Budget pressure points |
|---|---|
| Small adult dog | Food may be lower, but dental care, grooming, barking support, and insurance still matter. |
| Large active dog | Food, parasite control, medication by weight, bedding, transport, and emergency savings can rise. |
| Puppy | Vaccines, deworming, puppy food, training, chewing supplies, and sterilisation discussions affect the first year. |
| Senior dog | Checkups, chronic care, mobility support, dental care, and insurance limits need closer review. |
Questions to ask providers
- Vet: what routine prevention should I budget for this year?
- Groomer: how often does this coat type need professional care?
- Trainer: should I plan for group classes, private sessions, or behaviour support?
- Insurer: what are the excess, limits, exclusions, waiting periods, and claim process?
- Food supplier or vet: how much should this dog eat each month and when should food change?
- Shelter or breeder: what costs should I expect in the first three months?
Monthly budget checklist
- Estimate food based on dog size, age, and feeding guidance.
- Include parasite control and routine vet care, not only food.
- Add grooming if the coat needs regular brushing, clipping, de-shedding, or nail care.
- Set aside emergency savings even if you have insurance.
- Use the DogHaven dog cost calculator and update it when costs change.
Next steps for a monthly dog budget
- Use the dog cost calculator as a starting point, then replace assumptions with current local quotes.
- Use the feeding calculator to check whether food estimates match your dog's size, life stage, and body condition.
- Add grooming, training, routine vet care, parasite prevention, insurance or savings, and transport.
- Review the budget after adoption, illness, a food change, a move, or a new service provider.