Why Facebook Dog Rehoming Groups Are Failing Good People

And what ethical rehoming actually needs instead

Rehoming a dog is one of the hardest decisions someone can make.

Yet for thousands of people every month, the only visible option is a Facebook group.

At first glance, these groups look like community support. In reality, they are often overwhelmed, chaotic, and emotionally unsafe — not just for dogs, but for the humans involved too.

And that’s not because people don’t care.

It’s because the system is broken.

The problem isn’t Facebook — it’s overload

Facebook rehoming groups were never designed to handle the volume, urgency, or complexity of dog rehoming.

Good people post in distress.

Adopters message dozens of times with no response.

Moderators burn out.

Dogs fall through the cracks.

There’s no structure, no vetting, no safeguarding, and no accountability. Everything relies on speed and visibility — the opposite of what animal welfare needs.

Why good people are judged instead of supported

Many people rehoming a dog already feel ashamed.

They’re navigating changes in housing, health, family breakdown, domestic abuse, or financial pressure.

Instead of support, they’re often met with:

  • Public judgment
  • Demands for explanations
  • Pressure to give the dog away quickly

This creates rushed decisions — and rushed decisions put dogs at risk.

Ethical rehoming isn’t abandonment

Rehoming done ethically is an act of responsibility.

It means:

  • Taking time to find the right match
  • Being honest about the dog’s needs
  • Protecting both the dog and the adopter
  • Accepting that “any home” is not good enough

But none of that is supported in a Facebook comment thread.

What ethical rehoming actually needs

For rehoming to work safely, there needs to be:

  • Clear expectations
  • Vetting on both sides
  • Private, respectful communication
  • Safeguards against selling, scams, and pressure
  • A process that prioritises welfare over speed

This is not something social media platforms were built to provide.

Why HomeWagger exists

HomeWagger was created because too many dogs — and too many good people — are being failed by systems that were never designed for rehoming.

HomeWagger is:

  • Not a marketplace
  • Not about speed
  • Not about judgment

It’s a structured, ethical rehoming platform designed to:

  • Support people who are doing their best
  • Help adopters show they’re responsible and ready
  • Reduce pressure on shelters by improving matches
  • Put welfare first, always

A better way forward

Facebook groups will always exist. And they help in moments of crisis.

But dogs deserve more than a comment section.

And people deserve support, not shame.

Ethical rehoming isn’t about finding any home.

It’s about finding the right one.

If you believe rehoming should be done with care, transparency, and dignity, you’re already part of the solution.

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