Adopt

My name is Rusty!

Posted 5 days ago | Updated 5 days ago

Adoption process
1

Visit the Facility and Find a Pet

2

Pay Fee

3

Take the Pet Home

Adoption fee: $150

This helps Rexburg Animal Shelter with pet care costs.

My basic info

Breed
Labrador Retriever/Pointer
Color
Brown/Chocolate
Age
3 years old, Adult
Size
Med. 26-60 lbs (12-27 kg) (when grown)
Weight
Sex
Male
Pet ID
6152

My story

Here's what the humans have to say about me:

Available 1/20/2025

This is Rusty!
He is a lab mix of some type. He is a very sweet boy and fairly intelligent. He seems to do fine with female dogs, but 50/50 with other intact males. He does not mind neutered males. We think he is around 2-3 years old so he is still young and teachable. If you are interested come in and meet him!

Inquiries are on a first come first serve basis if you are interested in adoption feel free to stop by, call us, or send us a message.
Call: (208) 359-3005 (we only answer during open hours)
Email: animalshelter@rexburg.org
Facebook: Rexburg Animal Shelter
Instagram: @rexburganimalshelter
Shelter

Contact info

Pet ID
6152
Contact
Scott Chapman
Address
490 W 4th N, GPS Friendly - 400 N 5th W, Rexburg, ID 83440
Donation

Their adoption process

1.

Visit the Facility and Find a Pet

2.

Pay Fee

3.

Take the Pet Home

Additional adoption info

Adoption Fees (No Apple Pay):
Cats males-$95, females $110 (includes Spay/Neuter, Vaccination, Rabies, Microchip, and City License)
Dogs $125-$190 (includes Spay/Neuter, Vaccination, Rabies, Microchip, and City License)
Fees may vary based upon weight of the dogs.

Adopters will need to provide Photo ID.
If they do not own the home adopters will need to provide proof that they are able to have the animal, they are interested in at the location they reside. (this might be a letter from a landlord, rental contract, or other documentation)

Go meet their pets

Rexburg Animal Shelter
490 West 4th North
Rexburg, ID 83440
(208) 359-3005

Saturday and Sunday Closed
*Closed all holidays

More about this shelter

Many people look to animal control and the shelter as a last resort when they have tried other options and been unsuccessful; we're working to change that image. Animal control and the shelter should be looked at as a resource; here you have people trained in handling animals and animal behaviors, people with the experience and references to help you and your animal with obedience training, to work past behavioral issues, or to help the neighbor quiet their noisy dog. The shelter is also here to help reunite lost animals with their families or to find new homes for those animals where their families can no longer provide the environment needed.

Other pets at this shelter