Setting your pet sitting rates can feel like walking a tightrope. Charge too little and you’ll be overworked and underpaid. Charge too much and you’ll price yourself out of the market. This comprehensive guide breaks down exactly what to charge for every pet sitting service in 2025, with regional variations, factors that affect your rates, and strategies to maximise your earnings without losing clients.
Understanding the UK Pet Sitting Market in 2025
The pet care industry in the UK is booming, with the market valued at over £7 billion annually. Pet owners increasingly view professional pet sitters as essential rather than luxury services, especially as more people return to offices post-pandemic and travel picks up.
Current market trends affecting pricing:
- Rising cost of living has increased rates by 15-20% since 2022
- Demand for pet sitters outstrips supply in most regions
- Premium services (medication, special needs) command higher rates
- Platform fees (where applicable) affect take-home earnings
- Competition from kennels and daycare influences pricing
The good news: Pet owners are willing to pay fair rates for quality, reliable care. The key is positioning yourself appropriately for your experience level and local market.
National Average Rates by Service Type
Here’s what pet sitters across the UK typically charge in 2025:
Dog Walking
- 30-minute walk: £10-15
- 60-minute walk: £18-25
- Group walks (2-4 dogs): £8-12 per dog
- Solo walks (one-on-one): £15-20 per dog
Home Visits (Dog/Cat Care)
- 15-20 minute visit: £8-12
- 30-minute visit: £12-18
- 60-minute visit: £20-28
- Multiple pet surcharge: +£3-5 per additional pet
Overnight Pet Sitting (In Owner’s Home)
- Per night: £35-60
- Per night (experienced sitters): £50-80
- Holiday periods: £60-100+
- Multiple pets: +£10-15 per additional pet
Doggy Day Care (Your Home)
- Full day (8-10 hours): £25-40
- Half day (4-5 hours): £15-25
- Overnight boarding: £30-50
Specialized Services
- Medication administration: +£5-8 per visit
- Puppy care (multiple visits): £15-20 per visit
- Senior pet care: +£5-10 per visit
- Injection administration: +£10-15 per visit
- Basic grooming (brushing, nails): £10-20
- Pet taxi service (vet visits): £15-25 + mileage
Emergency and Last-Minute Bookings
- Same-day booking: +50% to standard rate
- Holiday periods: +25-50% to standard rate
- Overnight emergency: £80-120
Important note: These are averages. Your actual rates will depend on multiple factors we’ll explore below.
Regional Pricing Variations Across the UK
Location dramatically impacts what you can charge. Here’s the regional breakdown:
London and South East
Premium pricing zone
- Dog walking (30 min): £15-20
- Home visits (30 min): £18-25
- Overnight sitting: £60-100
- Why higher? Higher cost of living, greater demand, affluent clientele
Major Cities (Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Bristol, Leeds)
Above-average pricing
- Dog walking (30 min): £12-18
- Home visits (30 min): £15-20
- Overnight sitting: £45-70
- Why higher? Urban density, professional demographics, limited alternatives
Suburban Areas (Home Counties, Commuter Towns)
Standard-to-high pricing
- Dog walking (30 min): £12-16
- Home visits (30 min): £14-18
- Overnight sitting: £40-65
- Demographics: Families, professionals, good disposable income
Rural Areas and Smaller Towns
Standard-to-moderate pricing
- Dog walking (30 min): £10-14
- Home visits (30 min): £10-15
- Overnight sitting: £30-50
- Considerations: Lower cost of living, longer travel distances, less competition
Northern Ireland, Wales, Rural Scotland
Moderate pricing
- Dog walking (30 min): £8-12
- Home visits (30 min): £10-14
- Overnight sitting: £30-45
- Note: Lower rates but also lower competition
Pricing strategy tip: Research what other sitters charge in your specific area on Trader Street. Filter by your town/postcode and review 5-10 profiles to establish your local market rate.
12 Factors That Affect Your Pricing
Your rates shouldn’t be static. These factors should influence what you charge:
1. Your Experience Level
0-6 months (Beginner)
- Start 10-20% below market average
- Build reviews and reputation
- Raise rates after every 10-15 positive reviews
6-18 months (Intermediate)
- Charge market average rates
- Add premium for specialized services
- Introduce package deals
18+ months (Experienced)
- Charge 10-20% above market average
- Premium pricing for expertise
- Selective about clients
3+ years (Expert)
- Top-tier pricing (20-30% above average)
- Niche specialization premiums
- Waiting list of clients
2. Qualifications and Training
Add £2-5 per service for:
- Pet first aid certification
- Canine behavior training
- Professional grooming qualifications
- Veterinary nursing background
Premium positioning (£5-10 extra):
- Multiple certifications
- Breed-specific expertise
- Rescue/rehabilitation experience
3. Pet Size and Breed
Small dogs/cats (under 10kg): Standard rate
Medium dogs (10-25kg): +£2-3 per service
Large dogs (25-40kg): +£3-5 per service
Giant breeds (40kg+): +£5-8 per service
Challenging breeds (high energy, reactive, strong): +£5-10
Reasoning: Larger dogs require more physical effort, stronger handling skills, and carry higher liability risks.
4. Number of Pets
Pricing structure:
- First pet: Full rate
- Second pet: +50-70% of base rate
- Third+ pets: +30-50% of base rate each
Example: 30-minute dog walk
- One dog: £12
- Two dogs: £12 + £8 = £20
- Three dogs: £12 + £8 + £6 = £26
Cap your pet numbers: Most sitters max out at 3-4 pets per household for safety and quality care reasons.
5. Service Duration and Frequency
Longer bookings = economies of scale:
- Single visit: Full rate
- Weekly package (5-7 visits): 10% discount
- Monthly package (20-30 visits): 15-20% discount
- Long-term overnight (7+ days): 10% discount after 5th night
Example: 30-minute home visits at £15 each
- Single visit: £15
- 5-visit week: £67.50 (£13.50 each, save 10%)
- 20-visit month: £240 (£12 each, save 20%)
Why discount?: Guaranteed income, reduced marketing costs, scheduling efficiency.
6. Time of Day and Availability
Premium time slots (higher demand):
- Early morning walks (6-8am): +£2-3
- Lunchtime visits (12-2pm): +£2-3
- Evening walks (5-7pm): +£2-3
- Weekend services: +£3-5
Off-peak slots (standard rates):
- Mid-morning (9-11am)
- Afternoon (2-4pm)
- Weekday daytimes
Overnight/anti-social hours:
- Late night medication (10pm-midnight): +£5-8
- Overnight emergencies: +50-100%
7. Holiday and Peak Season Pricing
Major holidays (Christmas, New Year, Easter):
- +25-50% on all services
- Some sitters double rates for Christmas Day/New Year’s Day
School holidays:
- +10-20% during peak weeks
- Higher demand = justified premium
Bank holidays:
- +20-30% for the holiday itself
- Standard rates for surrounding days
Advance booking incentive: Offer 5-10% discount for holiday bookings made 8+ weeks in advance to secure your schedule.
8. Special Needs and Medical Care
Basic medical care:
- Oral medication: +£5 per visit
- Eye drops: +£5 per visit
- Topical treatments: +£3-5 per visit
Advanced medical care:
- Insulin injections: +£10-15 per visit
- Multiple medications: +£8-12 per visit
- Wound care/bandaging: +£10-15
Behavioral challenges:
- Separation anxiety: +£5-8
- Reactive dogs: +£8-12
- Aggressive history: +£15+ (if you accept these clients)
Senior pet care:
- Mobility assistance: +£5-8
- Frequent toilet breaks: +£5-10
- Extra monitoring: +£5
9. Travel Distance
Most sitters offer services within a specific radius:
Within 2 miles: No travel charge (included in rate)
2-5 miles: +£2-5 per visit
5-10 miles: +£5-10 per visit or mileage rate
10+ miles: Mileage rate (£0.45-£0.60 per mile round trip)
Alternative model: Set your rates higher for your core area (2-mile radius) and don’t accept bookings outside it. This maximizes your hourly earning potential.
10. Additional Home Services
Security services (included or small add-on):
- Bringing in bins: FREE (goodwill)
- Collecting post: FREE
- Rotating lights/curtains: FREE
- Watering plants: +£3-5 per visit
Premium home services (separate charges):
- Plant watering (extensive): £5-10
- Basic house cleaning: £15-25
- Garden watering: £10-15
11. Client Type
New clients: Standard rates (occasionally introductory discount)
Regular clients (weekly+): 10-15% loyalty discount
Referral clients: 10% off first booking (to thank referrer)
Corporate clients (house sitting agencies, relocation companies): +20-30% (B2B premium)
12. Your Unique Selling Points
Charge premium rates if you offer:
- Exclusively solo walks (no group walks)
- Video updates every visit
- GPS-tracked walks with reports
- Professional photography
- Specific breed expertise
- Bilingual services
- Flexible cancellation policies
- 24/7 availability
How to Structure Your Pricing: Three Approaches
Option 1: Tiered Service Packages
BASIC Package
- What’s included: Standard service, text updates
- Price point: Market average
- Target client: Price-conscious pet owners
PREMIUM Package
- What’s included: Extended time, photo updates, minor home tasks
- Price point: +20% above basic
- Target client: Busy professionals wanting peace of mind
LUXURY Package
- What’s included: Video updates, GPS tracking, daily reports, additional services
- Price point: +50% above basic
- Target client: High-end clients wanting concierge service
Example: 30-minute dog walking
- Basic: £12 (walk + text update)
- Premium: £15 (extended walk + photos + bin collection)
- Luxury: £18 (extended walk + video + GPS + detailed report)
Option 2: A La Carte Pricing
Base service rate + optional add-ons:
30-minute dog walk: £12
- +Solo walk (vs group): £5
- +GPS tracking report: £2
- +Professional photos: £3
- +Extended 45 minutes: £5
- +Additional dog: £7
Client builds their own package based on needs and budget.
Option 3: Subscription Model
Weekly/monthly subscriptions for regular clients:
Bronze Plan – £160/month
- 10 x 30-minute walks
- Text updates
- (£16 per walk if bought individually = £10 saving)
Silver Plan – £280/month
- 20 x 30-minute walks
- Photo updates
- Priority booking
- (£14 per walk if bought individually = £40 saving)
Gold Plan – £420/month
- 30 x 30-minute walks
- Video updates
- GPS tracking
- Free emergency visits
- (£14 per walk if bought individually = £60 saving)
Benefits: Predictable income, client commitment, reduced admin.
Setting Your Rates: Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Research Your Local Market
- Browse 10-15 pet sitter profiles in your area on Trader Street
- Note their rates for comparable services
- Identify the range (lowest to highest)
- Calculate the average
Step 2: Assess Your Position
Beginner (0-6 months, few reviews):
- Start at the lower end of the range
- Aim for 10-20% below average
Intermediate (6-18 months, 10+ reviews):
- Charge the average rate
- Match the market standard
Experienced (18+ months, 25+ reviews):
- Charge 10-20% above average
- Premium positioning
Step 3: Calculate Your Minimum Viable Rate
Work backwards from your income goals:
Desired monthly income: £1,500 Available hours per month: 100 hours Required hourly rate: £15/hour minimum
Now factor in non-billable time:
- Travel between clients: 20% of time
- Admin and communication: 10% of time
- Total productive time: 70%
Adjusted required rate: £15 ÷ 0.70 = £21.43 per hour
If a 30-minute dog walk takes 45 minutes total (including travel), you need to charge at least £16 to hit your £1,500/month goal.
This is your floor rate – never go below this or you’re working for less than you need.
Step 4: Set Your Initial Rates
Based on your market research and minimum viable rate:
30-minute dog walk: £12-14 30-minute home visit: £14-16 Overnight sitting: £40-50
Step 5: Test and Adjust
First 3 months:
- Start with your initial rates
- Track booking conversion rate
- Monitor client feedback
If you’re fully booked within 2 weeks:
- Your rates are too low
- Raise prices by 10-15%
If you get very few inquiries:
- Your rates might be too high (or other issues like profile quality)
- Consider 5-10% reduction or added value
Optimal booking rate: 60-80% of your available time filled. This allows for flexibility and premium clients while maximizing income.
When and How to Raise Your Rates
Raise Rates When:
- You have 10+ five-star reviews
- You’re consistently fully booked
- You’ve been in business 6+ months at current rates
- Cost of living increases significantly
- You’ve gained new qualifications
- Demand exceeds your capacity
How to Raise Rates (Without Losing Clients)
For new clients:
- Simply update your Trader Street profile with new rates
- No announcement needed
For existing regular clients:
- Give 4-6 weeks notice
- Explain the reason (increased demand, rising costs, improved service)
- Offer a loyalty discount (keep them at slightly below new client rate)
- Grandfather them for 1-2 months before increase
Example communication: “Hi Sarah, I wanted to let you know that starting March 1st, I’ll be adjusting my rates to £14 per walk (currently £12) to reflect increased demand and my expanded services. As a valued regular client, I’d like to offer you a continued loyalty rate of £13 per walk. I really appreciate your ongoing trust in me to care for Max!”
Rate increase schedule:
- Year 1: Start low, raise after 6 months
- Year 2: Annual 5-10% increase
- Year 3+: Annual inflation adjustment (3-5%)
Package Deals and Discounts That Work
Weekly Walking Packages
Monday-Friday Morning Walks
- Individual price: 5 x £12 = £60
- Package price: £55 (save £5)
- Your benefit: Guaranteed £220/month income
Holiday Care Bundles
Week-Long Holiday Package
- 2 visits per day x 7 days = 14 visits
- Individual price: 14 x £15 = £210
- Bundle price: £180 (save £30)
- Your benefit: Secured booking, less competition
New Client Introductory Offers
First Booking Discount
- 20% off first booking (max £10 discount)
- Converts to full price thereafter
- Builds your review base quickly
Referral Rewards
Give £5, Get £5
- Existing client refers friend: both get £5 off next booking
- Cost to you: £10
- Value to you: New client worth £500+ annually
Long-Term Care Discounts
Monthly Commitment
- Commit to 4+ weeks of daily care: 15% off
- Reduces your client acquisition costs
- Provides stable income
Negotiation Strategies: When to Flex, When to Hold Firm
When to Offer Discounts
Acceptable reasons:
- Multiple pets from same household
- Regular ongoing bookings (weekly+)
- Extended holiday care (7+ days)
- Off-peak time slots
- Referral incentive
- Last-minute cancellation fill-in
When to Hold Your Rates Firm
Don’t discount for:
- “My last sitter charged less” (then use them)
- “I’m on a tight budget” (kennels exist)
- “It’s just a quick 10-minute walk” (your time is valuable)
- Last-minute holiday bookings (premium rates apply)
- Vague promises of “lots of future work”
How to Handle “You’re Too Expensive”
Response template: “I understand pet care is an investment. My rates reflect my experience with [breed type], professional insurance, and the personalized attention I provide. I’m confident you’ll find the service worth the investment, but if budget is a primary concern, I’m happy to recommend some excellent alternatives.”
Then stop talking. Either they book or they don’t. Don’t justify or apologize for your rates.
Pricing Psychology: Making Your Rates Seem Fair
Anchor Your Pricing
Show value by comparison: “My overnight sitting is £50/night – that’s less than a basic hotel room, and your dog stays in their own comfortable home with one-on-one attention.”
Bundle for Perceived Value
“The holiday package saves you £30 compared to booking individual visits – and guarantees your preferred time slots are reserved.”
Explain What’s Included
Don’t just list a price. Detail the value: “£15 for a 30-minute visit includes feeding, fresh water, playtime, litter box cleaning, medication if needed, and a photo update sent directly to you.”
Use Odd-Number Pricing
£14 feels notably cheaper than £15 psychologically, even though it’s just £1 difference.
Offer Three Options
When presenting packages, include:
- Basic option (good)
- Mid-tier option (better) ← Most people choose this
- Premium option (best)
The mid-tier seems like the “sensible” choice when bracketed by other options.
Common Pricing Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Underpricing to Win Clients
Why it fails: Attracts bargain-hunters who’ll leave for anyone cheaper. You’ll burn out working too much for too little.
Fix: Charge fairly from the start. You want clients who value quality over price.
Mistake 2: Not Factoring in Travel Time
Why it fails: A £12 walk that requires 15 minutes of driving each way means you’re working 60 minutes for £12 (£12/hour before expenses).
Fix: Calculate your real hourly rate including travel. Charge more for distant clients or refuse bookings outside your core area.
Mistake 3: Free Add-Ons Without Boundaries
Why it fails: “Could you also water the plants / bring in the bins / check the oven / rearrange my closet” – small favors become expectations.
Fix: Include reasonable add-ons (bins, post) but charge for anything beyond 5 minutes of extra time.
Mistake 4: Not Raising Rates as You Improve
Why it fails: You get better, busier, more qualified – but earn the same as Day 1.
Fix: Scheduled rate reviews every 6-12 months. Gradual increases prevent big shocks.
Mistake 5: Matching the Cheapest Competitor
Why it fails: Race to the bottom. Someone will always undercut you.
Fix: Compete on value, not price. Be the best, not the cheapest.
Your Pricing Action Plan
This week:
- Research 10 local competitors’ rates on Trader Street
- Calculate your minimum viable hourly rate
- Set your initial rates based on experience level
This month: 4. Create 2-3 package deals for common scenarios 5. Design your tiered service structure (Basic/Premium/Luxury) 6. Write your rate sheet for client inquiries
This quarter: 7. Track your booking rate and client feedback 8. Adjust rates up or down by 5-10% if needed 9. Add specialty services with premium pricing
This year: 10. Schedule quarterly rate reviews 11. Implement annual rate increase for existing clients 12. Develop subscription model for regular clients
Real Pet Sitter Rate Examples
Case Study 1: Emma, Leeds (New Sitter)
- Experience: 3 months
- 30-min walk: £10 (20% below £12.50 local average)
- Home visit: £12 (below £15 average)
- Overnight: £35 (below £45 average)
- Strategy: Building review base with competitive pricing
- Results: Fully booked within 6 weeks, raising rates to £12/£14/£40 after 15 reviews
Case Study 2: James, Birmingham (Intermediate)
- Experience: 14 months
- 30-min walk: £14 (at local average)
- Home visit: £16 (at average)
- Overnight: £50 (at average)
- Specialty: Large breed experience, adds £3 for dogs over 30kg
- Results: Steady bookings, £1,800/month part-time income
Case Study 3: Sarah, London (Experienced)
- Experience: 3 years
- 30-min walk: £20 (premium positioning)
- Home visit: £25 (premium)
- Overnight: £75 (premium)
- USP: Pet first aid certified, professional photos included, video updates
- Results: Selective clientele, £3,500/month working 25 hours/week
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I offer a discount for my first few clients? Yes, but frame it as an “introductory rate” not a permanent discount. After your first 5-10 clients leave reviews, raise to market rates.
How do I tell clients I’m raising my rates? Give 4-6 weeks notice, explain briefly (increased demand/rising costs), and offer loyalty discounts to long-term clients. Most will understand.
What if a client asks me to match a cheaper competitor? Politely explain your rates reflect your experience, insurance, and quality of service. Suggest they might be happier with the lower-cost option if price is their priority.
Should I charge more for puppies? Yes. Puppies require more visits, more attention, and more energy. Charge 20-30% more for puppy care.
How do I handle last-minute cancellations? Include a cancellation policy: 48+ hours notice = full refund, 24-48 hours = 50% charge, under 24 hours = full charge. This is standard and protects your income.
Is it okay to have a minimum booking charge? Absolutely. Many sitters have a £10-12 minimum per visit to make short trips worthwhile.
Ready to set competitive rates that attract clients while earning what you deserve? Create your free Trader Street profile and start building your successful pet sitting business today.
