Adopting a dog in Regina
Regina is the capital of Saskatchewan and the main adoption hub for the southern part of the province. Dog adoption here works through two distinct rescues: the Regina Humane Society, which handles the bulk of urban and regional intake, and Bright Eyes Dog Rescue, which runs a foster network with a heavy focus on international rescue dogs from the Caribbean and Mexico.
LocalPetFinder is not a shelter. We do not house dogs or process adoptions. We pull listings from both rescues into one place and refresh them on a regular cycle, so what you see is close to what is genuinely available right now. You apply through the rescue directly. The site is free and we never add a fee on top of the rescue's adoption cost.
The Regina Humane Society
The Regina Humane Society is the primary animal welfare organisation in southern Saskatchewan, operating from a large facility on the north side of the city. Their intake covers urban surrenders, strays, and regional transfers from smaller communities, with the steadiest flow of dogs in the region.
Every Regina Humane dog is assessed, vetted, and cared for before placement, with honest staff notes on temperament and needs. Walk-in viewing is available during shelter hours, and approved applicants can often complete adoption the same day. The shelter's ShelterBuddy-based listing exposes complete medical and behavioural info for every dog before you commit.
Bright Eyes Dog Rescue
Bright Eyes Dog Rescue (BEDR) is a foster-based rescue with a different niche. They pull dogs from underserved communities locally plus run an international rescue programme bringing dogs from the Dominican Republic and Mexico into Saskatchewan foster homes. Every BEDR dog lives in a foster home before adoption, which means the personality profile you read is written by someone who has actually lived with the dog.
BEDR adoptions take a bit longer than Regina Humane (foster-based rescue is always slower because the foster has a real say in who adopts), but the trade-off is detailed behavioural information you cannot get from a facility-based shelter.
What the adoption fee covers
A Regina rescue adoption fee is not the dog's price. It offsets the medical work the rescue has already paid for, and it is a fraction of what that work costs out of pocket. Fees generally cover the spay or neuter surgery, core vaccinations, a microchip, deworming and basic parasite treatment, and a veterinary health check before placement.
Confirm the current fee and exactly what is included on the dog's own listing, since it varies with age and any special medical care. The point that matters: an adopted, fully vetted dog is far cheaper than a free online dog you then have to vet yourself, and the fee stays with the rescue to help the next animal.
Owning a dog through a Regina winter
Regina winters are long, cold, and windy. January overnight lows in the minus 30s are normal, and the wind across the open prairie makes cold snaps feel worse. A dog needs a real plan for it.
- Match the coat to the cold. Thin-coated dogs need an insulated winter coat plus booties on minus-20 days; double-coated breeds (Husky, Shepherd, Lab) handle the cold but still need limited time on exposed paws against road salt.
- Keep walks shorter and more frequent in deep cold. A 15-minute walk twice a day beats one 45-minute walk when the air bites.
- Watch for frostbite on ears, tails, and pads on minus-25 days or colder. If a dog starts lifting paws or stopping, head home.
- Wascana Park and the Wascana Lake path are the easiest off-leash and on-leash exercise options through spring, summer, and fall. AE Wilson Park and the off-leash dog park on McDonald Street are favourites for winter when daylight is short.
Why adopt instead of shop
Saskatchewan sees a steady flow of dogs needing homes, including the prairie mixed-breed dogs that often make some of the most adaptable family pets. Adopting frees shelter space for the next dog coming in, and it costs far less than buying.
You also adopt with better information. A breeder or an online seller cannot tell you how a puppy will handle a toddler, a cat, or being alone all day. Regina Humane staff and Bright Eyes foster homes have spent time with the dog in front of you and can describe how it already behaves, which is the single best predictor of how the next year goes.
Browse dogs from Regina Humane Society, Bright Eyes Dog Rescue. Looking elsewhere in the province? See all Saskatchewan adoption options.