Keeping Dogs Safe in the Heat: The Professional Dog Walker’s Guide

⏱ 10 min read

Dog walking in hot weather is one of those situations where good intentions can cause real harm if you’re not paying attention. A dog who seems happy to head out can be in serious distress within minutes of stepping onto a sun-baked pavement — and as a professional dog walker, that risk lands squarely on you. Your clients trust you to make the call they might not think to make themselves.

This guide covers everything that matters when the temperature climbs: how dogs actually experience heat, how to adjust your walks, what to watch for, and how to protect yourself too. Because whilst the dogs are the priority, working outside on a hot day without the right approach is exhausting, dehydrating, and potentially dangerous for you as well.

Why Dogs Struggle With Heat

Dogs can’t sweat the way we do, which makes hot weather far more dangerous for them than most owners realise — and far more dangerous than it looks on the surface.

Humans cool down primarily through sweating across the skin. Dogs don’t have that option — they have sweat glands only on their paw pads, which contributes very little to overall cooling. Their main mechanism is panting, which evaporates moisture from the tongue and upper respiratory tract. It works, but it’s nowhere near as efficient as human perspiration, and it has limits. Once the air temperature approaches body temperature, panting becomes increasingly ineffective.

This is why a warm day that feels perfectly manageable to you can be dangerous for the dog on the other end of the lead. Add direct sun, pavement radiation, and the reflective heat from buildings and parked cars, and the effective temperature a dog experiences can be significantly higher than the air temperature reading on your phone. A shaded grass route on a 22°C day is a very different proposition from an exposed urban pavement.

Key fact: According to RSPCA guidance, dogs can develop heatstroke within just fifteen minutes of being in a hot environment. The window between “warm and uncomfortable” and “in serious danger” is much shorter than most people expect.

The Seven-Second Pavement Rule

Pavement temperature is the single most actionable check you can make before every warm-weather walk — and it takes seven seconds.

Air temperature is only part of the picture. Tarmac and concrete absorb solar radiation throughout the day and can reach surface temperatures far above the ambient air. On a 25°C sunny day, black tarmac can exceed 52°C. Dog paw pads can sustain burns at anything above 40°C. The damage often goes unnoticed in the moment because adrenaline and the desire to please their walker masks pain — but you’ll see your dog start to limp hours later, and the client will be understandably distressed.

The rule is straightforward: press the back of your hand flat to the pavement surface and hold it there for seven seconds. If you can’t comfortably keep it there for the full seven seconds, the surface is too hot for unprotected paws. This test takes no equipment, no app, and no expertise — just make it a non-negotiable habit before every walk on warm days.

Note on dog boots. Protective boots can help, but most dogs take considerable time to acclimatise to wearing them, and an uncomfortable dog is a distracted, more stressed dog in the heat. Boots are a useful backup, not a replacement for timing your walks sensibly.

When to Walk and When to Wait

Adjusting your schedule is the single most effective thing you can do — no product or technique replaces getting out before the heat builds.

The general guidance from most vets and welfare organisations is to walk dogs before 8am and after 8pm during heatwaves, avoiding the peak radiation window from around 10am through to early evening. As a professional walker managing multiple clients, this often means restructuring your whole day — earlier starts, a longer midday break, later afternoon slots. It’s worth having this conversation with clients proactively at the start of the warm season rather than reactively when the temperature spikes.

It’s also worth knowing that cloud cover changes things less than people expect. Overcast days still allow significant UV and ground radiation, and humidity can make panting less effective even at moderate temperatures. The pavement test matters on cloudy warm days just as much as on bright ones.

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Hot Weather Walk Risk Calculator

Enter current conditions to get a risk assessment before heading out

Recognising Heatstroke in Dogs

Heatstroke in dogs escalates fast. Knowing what to look for — and what to do — could save a dog’s life before the vet even answers the phone.

Early signs are easy to miss, particularly if you’re managing a group walk or distracted by traffic. Watch for excessive, frantic panting that doesn’t slow down with rest; thick, ropy saliva; a bright red or pale gum colour; glazed or unfocused eyes; and sudden reluctance to move. A dog that keeps lying down and refusing to get up on a hot day is not being stubborn — that’s a warning signal. As the condition worsens, you may see vomiting, stumbling, muscle tremors, or collapse.

If you suspect heatstroke, move the dog to shade immediately and begin cooling with cool (not cold) water, particularly around the neck, armpits, and groin. Do not use ice or icy water — rapid cooling can cause the blood vessels near the skin to constrict, trapping heat in the body’s core. Once the dog is stable, contact a vet immediately, even if the dog appears to recover. Internal organ damage from heatstroke can develop hours after the episode.

✓ Early Warning Signs

  • Heavy, continuous panting
  • Excessive drooling or thick saliva
  • Slowing down or refusing to move
  • Seeking shade and lying down repeatedly
  • Bright red gums or tongue

⚠ Serious — Act Immediately

  • Vomiting or diarrhoea
  • Stumbling, loss of coordination
  • Muscle tremors or seizures
  • Pale or grey gums
  • Loss of consciousness
Practical tip: Keep a note of each client’s vet contact in your phone. In a heatstroke emergency, you don’t want to be searching a client’s profile whilst the dog is deteriorating. A simple note titled “Dog — Vet — [Dog’s name]” takes thirty seconds to create and could matter enormously.

Breeds at Greater Risk

Some breeds are physiologically far more vulnerable to heat than others — and it’s not always obvious which dogs those are until you’re already in trouble.

Brachycephalic breeds — those with flattened faces — are the highest-risk group. French bulldogs, English bulldogs, pugs, boxers, shih tzus, and Boston terriers all have narrowed airways that make panting less effective, meaning their cooling mechanism is already compromised before the temperature even rises. These dogs should have significantly shorter, shadier walks on any warm day, and during a proper heatwave, a five-minute garden toilet break may genuinely be the safest option. Research from the Royal Veterinary College has consistently identified these breeds as disproportionately represented in heat-related illness cases.

Beyond flat-faced breeds, elderly dogs and very young puppies have reduced capacity to regulate temperature. Overweight dogs carry an insulating layer that works against them in heat. Double-coated breeds like huskies and malamutes may look as though their thick fur makes them hot, but it actually provides some insulation from solar radiation — though they still need the same sensible timing adjustments as any other dog. The short-coated breeds most people assume are fine — Staffordshire bull terriers and Labradors included — can and do suffer heatstroke, so no dog gets a free pass.

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Safe Walk Duration Planner

Get a recommended maximum walk time based on the dog and temperature

Looking After Yourself in the Heat

Dog walkers spend hours outdoors during the hottest parts of summer. Your own wellbeing matters too — a heat-affected walker is a risk to every dog in their care.

It sounds obvious, but professional dog walkers working full days outdoors in summer genuinely need to treat heat management as part of their operating practice, not an afterthought. You’re likely covering several kilometres across multiple walks, often without long breaks, and the cumulative effect of sun exposure, exertion, and dehydration builds throughout the day in ways that sneak up on you. By the time you feel thirsty, you’re already mildly dehydrated — and mild dehydration degrades your judgement and reaction speed.

Carry at least a litre of water for yourself in addition to the dogs’ supply, wear light-coloured, breathable clothing that covers your shoulders, and apply SPF 30 or above on any exposed skin. A wide-brimmed hat is genuinely useful rather than just a comfort measure — UV exposure on the scalp and face contributes significantly to overall heat load. If you’re managing group walks with several dogs, consider scheduling a proper break in shade between each walk rather than moving immediately from one booking to the next. Fifteen minutes in the shade with water does more for your next walk than you might expect.

Heat exhaustion warning signs in adults: heavy sweating, cold and clammy skin, fast but weak pulse, nausea, dizziness, and headache. If you experience these, stop immediately, move to shade, sip water, and rest. Do not continue the walk. NHS guidance on heat exhaustion is clear that pushing through is not safe.

Communicating With Clients About Hot Weather

Proactive communication about heat policy builds trust with clients and protects you professionally if you ever need to cancel or shorten a walk.

Most dog owners are aware heat can be dangerous but underestimate how quickly it escalates, and they don’t always appreciate that the walker — not the owner — is making judgement calls on the ground. Setting expectations clearly at the start of the summer season, rather than the first time you have to cancel a walk, makes every subsequent conversation much easier.

A simple message to clients at the start of a warm spell — explaining your hot weather policy, the temperature thresholds you work to, and what you’ll do if conditions are unsafe — positions you as the professional in the relationship. It’s also worth capturing in your service agreement that walk times may be adjusted or walks rescheduled during extreme heat for welfare reasons. That’s not a disclaimer in the negative sense; it’s a sign of professionalism that the right clients will genuinely appreciate.

1

Set a clear temperature threshold

Decide in advance the conditions under which you’ll shorten or cancel walks — for example, no midday walks when the air temperature exceeds 25°C — and communicate this to clients in writing at the start of the season.

2

Flag vulnerable dogs in advance

Go through your client list and identify brachycephalic breeds, elderly dogs, and overweight dogs. These clients need more specific communication about what hot weather protocols look like for their particular dog.

3

Offer rescheduling, not just cancellation

If you need to pull a midday walk, offer an early morning or evening alternative where possible. Most clients will prefer a shorter, safer walk at a different time over no walk at all.

4

Keep clients updated on the day

A quick message after each walk noting how the dog got on — especially in borderline conditions — builds confidence and demonstrates exactly the level of care clients are paying for.

Hot Weather Readiness Checker

Audit your current protocols against best practice for dog welfare in heat

Written heat threshold policyYou have a documented temperature or condition threshold above which you shorten or cancel walks, shared with clients.
Seven-second pavement test in practiceYou routinely test pavement temperature before warm-weather walks, not just when it looks very hot.
Clear cancellation and rebook policyClients know in advance how you handle hot-day cancellations and what alternatives you offer.
Brachycephalic breeds flagged in recordsYou’ve identified all flat-faced and high-risk dogs on your books and have specific warm-weather plans for them.
Water carried on every warm-weather walkYou carry a collapsible bowl and sufficient water for every dog on every walk when temperatures are elevated.
Vet contact stored for each dogEach client’s vet details are saved in your phone, accessible quickly in an emergency.
Heatstroke signs and first response learnedYou’re confident identifying early and late signs of heatstroke and know the correct cooling response.
Client hot weather update sentYou proactively contact clients at the start of each warm spell rather than explaining cancellations after the fact.

Frequently Asked Questions

At what temperature is it too hot to walk a dog?

There is no single universal temperature, as the risk depends on humidity, surface type, the time of day, and the individual dog. As a working rule, most vets and welfare organisations advise against walking dogs on tarmac surfaces when the air temperature exceeds 20°C in direct midday sun. On grass, in shade, or in the early morning, 25°C is often manageable for a healthy adult dog with a standard muzzle — but always apply the seven-second pavement test before making a final decision. For brachycephalic breeds, elderly dogs, or those carrying excess weight, the threshold is meaningfully lower.

How do I cool a dog down quickly if it overheats on a walk?

Move the dog to shade immediately and apply cool (not cold or icy) water to the neck, armpits, paw pads, and groin area — these are the regions where blood vessels are close to the surface and cooling happens fastest. Allow the dog to drink small amounts of cool water if it is conscious and able to swallow. Fan the dog or position it in any breeze available. Do not use ice or very cold water, as this can cause surface blood vessels to constrict and trap heat in the core. Contact a vet as soon as the dog is stable enough to move — heatstroke can cause delayed organ damage that is not visible immediately.

Can I walk a dog during a heatwave if I stick to grass?

Grass surfaces are significantly safer than tarmac because they don’t absorb and radiate solar heat in the same way. A shaded grass route dramatically reduces paw burn risk compared to a pavement walk. However, the air temperature and humidity still determine how well the dog can cool itself through panting, so even a well-shaded grass walk during a peak-heat afternoon can cause problems for vulnerable dogs. Short grass walks in shade during the cooler early morning or evening remain the gold standard during a heatwave.

Should I charge clients when I have to shorten or cancel a walk due to heat?

This comes down to your service agreement and what you’ve communicated to clients in advance. Many professional walkers include a welfare clause that allows walk durations to be adjusted in extreme conditions at no charge — framing this as part of the service rather than a failure to deliver it. If you cancel entirely rather than reschedule, offering a credit or make-up walk tends to maintain goodwill better than a refund, and most clients who understand the reason are appreciative rather than frustrated.

Do dog paw boots actually prevent burns on hot pavements?

Yes, they can — but their effectiveness depends entirely on whether the dog will actually wear them comfortably. Many dogs require weeks of gradual habituation before they walk naturally in boots, and a stressed or distracted dog moving awkwardly is itself a risk in hot conditions. Boots are best treated as a useful contingency tool for dogs that have been properly acclimatised to them, not as a solution that makes any surface safe at any temperature. Adjusting walk timing remains a more reliable protective measure than boots alone.

How much water should I carry for a dog on a hot day?

A general guideline is around 30ml per kilogram of body weight for a walk in warm conditions — so a 15kg dog on a warm 40-minute walk would need approximately 450ml. In practice, offering water every ten minutes rather than waiting until the end of the walk is more important than hitting an exact volume. A collapsible silicone bowl weighs almost nothing and makes drinking easy on the go. Always carry more than you think you’ll need; it’s far better to return with water left over than to run short.

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