I need to sell her unfortunately and am looking for a price which is appropriate, details are as follows:
-Rottweiler x German Shepherd, 7 month old female.
-Fully vaccinated, not neutered, not tail-docked, regularly de-flead etc.
-Gorgeous colours, well trained and is obedient. Can be walked on/off the lead and is great with people/children/dogs. Rarely ever barks unless there are intruders outside the house.
Nothing, a good forever home should be more inportant then her worth.
She needs to be spayed before going to a new home.
Please read this article on resposbile ways to find a home for your pet.
http://www.brandypup.20m.com/ CAN WE HELP
http://www.wonderpuppy.net/canwehelp/ind ...
If you can't keep your dog, please see if there is a no kill rescue group you can turn her over to. They will find her a home. In order for anyone to adopt her, they will have to pay an adoption fee, pass a home inspection and have a vet reference.
pets question and answers,www.5d2d.com
With most rescue groups, once a dog is accepted by the group - it's accepted for life. So if the new owner is no longer able to keep the dog, the group will take the dog back and find her another home. You won't have to worry about her being used as a bait dog or ending up at a kill shelter.
don't try and make money off of her. just make sure she's going to a fitting home. and make sure you visit the home . also you'll want to discuss what other pets the potential adopter has to ensure there are no conflicts. for example if they have a cat and your puppy isn't well socialized with cats, and the puppy attacks the cat (unlikely im sure ) and the new owners put down the puppy, you wouldn't want that to happen right? good luck and i'm sorry you can't keep your dog.
EDIT: after reading other people's postings, i have to agree, a small rehoming fee of $ 50 should be suitable.
There's not much of a market for a 7 month old cross bred dog. You'll be lucky to get $ 50 for her.
pets question and answers,www.5d2d.com Spay her before you advertise her and sell her for the cost of the spay. At least that way she won't go to a scummy back yard breeder who'll breed her to death.
Please thoroughly check out anyone who offers to take her to ensure she's going to a good forever home.
I would charge a $ 50 rehoming fee.
You don't want to advertise her as free to weed out the people just after a free dog, but you will want to charge a small fee.
You will want to get her desexed before you sell her.
As for what she is "worth" ... nothing really, not many people want an older puppy, especially a mixed breed. You will probably be lucky to sell her quick at $ 50.
Dogs are living, breathing creatures. Not a piece of used furniture.
Do you realize that thousands of dogs (purebred and mixes) are killed in shelters every day because no one wants them?
Finding her a good home with a family that will love her should be your first and foremost concern, and not making money from her.
How much? You'll be lucky to find a good home for her, never mind being paid for her, and this is what you should be concentrating on - if you totally need to rehome her. And get her spayed first, so there's no chance of her falling into the wrong hands, and being used as a breeding-machine. How about contacting the person who bred her, to see whether she can help in rehoming her.
The most difficult dogs to find suitable homes (other than SBTs) are large black and tan dogs.
pets question and answers,www.5d2d.com
Get her spayed before you rehome her and charge a nomonal price for her - you'll get all sorts of unsuitable offers if you offer her for nothing.
You surrender the dog to a rescue and leave a sizable donation.
As your companion? Priceless.
In cash? Nothing because you have a mutt.
This the min price about 30 or the max will be like 100 os so
$ 75
"Worth" depends on "to whom?".
"Price" depends on whether vendor & seeker agree on the monetary equivalent of the "worth".
You are in the same "market" as rescue groups and SPCA shelters.
So the fair price is what they charge for a fully vaccinated & neutered pet, minus the cost of neutering a bit.ch (which usually costs more than does neutering a dog). The result will be close to $ 0.
Or you could have her neutered (despite that she is a long way from the sensible age to neuter, which is at 11-15 months, after her long-bones stop growing. The research reports in
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/The_G ... will tell you why) and then charge the same price as the SPCA do.
pets question and answers,www.5d2d.com More important is that you INSPECT each possibly-suitable enquirer's property and family befire deciding.