Looking to earn extra income without committing to a second full-time job? Pet sitting and dog walking offer the perfect side hustle – flexible hours, rewarding work, and genuine earning potential. Whether you want an extra £500 per month to boost your savings or £2,000+ to significantly supplement your income, this comprehensive guide shows you exactly how to build a profitable part-time pet care business around your existing schedule.
Why Pet Sitting is the Ideal Side Hustle
The Numbers Speak for Themselves
UK pet care market facts:
- Over 12 million dog-owning households
- Over 12 million cat-owning households
- Pet services industry worth £7+ billion annually
- Growing demand for professional pet sitters (outstrips supply in most areas)
- Average dog walker charges £12-15 per 30-minute walk
- Overnight pet sitting pays £45-60 per night
What this means for you: Massive market, high demand, good rates, flexible work.
Perfect for Your Spare Time
Unlike traditional second jobs:
- No boss or fixed schedule
- Work mornings, evenings, or weekends only
- Choose exactly which jobs you accept
- Scale up or down based on your availability
- Build around your full-time job
- No commute if you focus on your local area
Real example: “I work full-time 9-5 as an accountant. I do dog walks at 7am before work (2 dogs, £24), and three evening walks after work 6-7:30pm (£36). That’s £60/day, 5 days a week = £1,200/month, working just 90 extra minutes daily.” – Rachel, Birmingham
Low Barrier to Entry
What you need to start:
- Love of animals (essential)
- Reliable, responsible nature
- Basic smartphone
- Free Trader Street profile
- Total investment: £0
What you DON’T need:
- Qualifications or certifications
- Business premises
- Expensive equipment
- Thousands in startup capital
- Years of experience
How Much Can You Actually Earn?
Part-Time Income Targets (Realistic)
Conservative scenario (5 hours/week):
- 5 × 30-minute dog walks at £12 each
- Monthly: £240
- Annual: £2,880
Moderate scenario (10 hours/week):
- 10 × 30-minute walks at £14 each = £140/week
- Plus 2 weekend overnight sits per month at £50 = £100/month
- Monthly: £660
- Annual: £7,920
Ambitious scenario (20 hours/week):
- 15 weekly walks at £14 = £210/week
- 4 weekend overnight sits at £50 = £200/month
- 1 holiday week per month (overnight) at £350 = £350/month
- Monthly: £1,390
- Annual: £16,680
Super-side-hustler scenario (25+ hours/week):
- 20 weekly walks at £15 = £300/week
- 6 overnight sits monthly = £300/month
- 2 holiday weeks monthly = £700/month
- Monthly: £2,200
- Annual: £26,400
What Determines Your Earnings
Your available time:
- Early mornings (6-8am): High demand for dog walks
- Lunchtime (12-2pm): Perfect for office workers’ dogs
- Evenings (5-8pm): Another peak time
- Weekends: Overnight sitting and full-day care
- Holidays: Premium rates, maximum demand
Your location:
- London/South East: £18-25 per walk
- Major cities: £12-18 per walk
- Suburban areas: £11-16 per walk
- Rural areas: £8-12 per walk
Your services:
- Dog walking only: £10-15 per 30 minutes
- Home visits: £12-18 per visit
- Overnight sitting: £40-60 per night
- Multiple services: Diversified income
Your efficiency:
- Group walks (2-4 dogs): £24-48 per hour
- Strategic scheduling: Minimize travel time
- Local focus: More dogs per hour
Time Management: Fitting Pet Sitting Around Your Life
Before-Work Side Hustle (6:30-8:30am)
Available time: 2 hours before 9am job
Strategy:
- Book 3-4 dog walks within 1-mile radius
- 30-minute walks each
- Travel time: 5 minutes between clients
Sample schedule:
- 6:30am: First walk (£12)
- 7:05am: Second walk (£12)
- 7:40am: Third walk (£12)
- 8:15am: Fourth walk (£12)
- 8:50am: Home to shower and get to work
Daily earnings: £48 Weekly (5 days): £240 Monthly: £960
Client appeal: Office workers who leave before their dogs can be walked. You’re solving a real problem.
After-Work Side Hustle (5:30-8pm)
Available time: 2.5 hours after work
Strategy:
- Mix of dog walks and home visits
- Focus on pets whose owners work late
Sample schedule:
- 5:30pm: First evening walk (£14)
- 6:10pm: Second walk (£14)
- 6:50pm: Home visit for cat (£15)
- 7:25pm: Third dog walk (£14)
- 8:00pm: Done for the day
Daily earnings: £57 Weekly (5 days): £285 Monthly: £1,140
Weekend Side Hustle (Saturday & Sunday)
Available time: Full weekend
Strategy:
- Focus on overnight sitting (Friday-Sunday)
- Or full-day doggy daycare
Option A: Overnight sitting
- Friday evening through Sunday morning
- 2 nights at £50 per night
- Weekend earnings: £100
- Monthly (4 weekends): £400
Option B: Day care
- Saturday and Sunday full days
- £35 per full day
- Weekend earnings: £70
- Monthly: £280
Lunchtime Side Hustle (12-2pm)
Available time: Extended lunch break or flexible work arrangement
Strategy:
- 2-3 quick dog walks near your office
- Return to work by 2pm
Sample schedule:
- 12:00pm: Leave office
- 12:10pm: First walk (£12)
- 12:45pm: Second walk (£12)
- 1:20pm: Third walk (£12)
- 1:55pm: Back at desk
Daily earnings: £36 Weekly (5 days): £180 Monthly: £720
Note: Requires either flexible employer or living close to office. Not feasible for all situations.
Holiday and Vacation Coverage
Christmas, Easter, Summer holidays:
- Highest demand period
- Premium rates (+25-50%)
- One week of intensive work = one month of normal income
Strategy:
- Book 2 weeks annual leave from your main job
- Dedicate to intensive pet sitting
- Overnight care for multiple clients
Example:
- Week 1: 7 nights overnight sitting at £70/night = £490
- Week 2: 7 nights overnight sitting at £70/night = £490
- Plus daytime visits for other clients: £300
- Two-week earnings: £1,280
Annual strategy: Do this twice per year (Christmas and summer) = £2,560 extra
Maximizing Earnings: Work Smarter, Not Harder
Strategy 1: Geographic Clustering
Don’t do this:
- Client in north end of town (30-min drive)
- Client in south end (30-min drive back)
- Wasting 1+ hour daily on travel
Do this:
- All clients within 1-2 mile radius
- 5-minute walks/drives between locations
- Fit 4-5 clients in 2 hours instead of 2 clients
Earnings impact:
- Bad strategy: 2 walks × £12 = £24 in 2 hours (£12/hour)
- Good strategy: 4 walks × £12 = £48 in 2 hours (£24/hour)
How to implement:
- Choose your core area (home/work/both)
- Only accept clients within that zone
- Raise rates for distant clients to compensate travel
Strategy 2: Group Dog Walking
One-on-one walking:
- 30 minutes = £12-15
- Hourly rate: £24-30
Group walking (2-4 compatible dogs):
- 30 minutes with 3 dogs = £30-36 total
- Hourly rate: £60-72
The catch: Dogs must be compatible (similar size, energy, temperament)
How to do it safely:
- Start with individual assessments
- Gradually introduce dogs in pairs
- Never mix reactive/aggressive dogs
- Keep group sizes to 3-4 maximum
Survey insight: Over half of dog owners prefer one-on-one walks for their pets. Market this as your premium service at £15-20, while offering group walks as a budget option at £10-12 per dog.
Strategy 3: Recurring Clients Over One-Offs
One-off holiday booking:
- 7 days overnight sitting = £350
- Then client disappears until next holiday
Weekly regular client:
- £12 walk × 5 days = £60/week
- £240/month
- £2,880 per year from ONE client
Why recurring clients are better:
- Predictable income
- Less marketing needed
- Build relationship with pet
- Easier scheduling
Target: 5-10 weekly regular clients as foundation, then fill remaining time with one-off bookings.
Strategy 4: Package Deals
Individual pricing:
- Client needs 3 walks per week: 3 × £12 = £36/week
Package pricing:
- “3-Walk Weekly Package”: £33/week (save £3)
- Client commits, you get guaranteed income
- They save money, you get security
Other packages:
- 5-walk package: £55 (vs £60)
- 10-walk punch card: £110 (vs £120) – 10th walk free
- Monthly unlimited: £200 for daily walks
Strategy 5: Premium Services
Add high-value services that don’t require much extra time:
GPS-tracked walks: Use app to show exact route, distance, duration
- Add £2-3 per walk
- Appeals to anxious owners
Professional photos: Take 3-4 quality photos per visit
- Add £2 per visit
- Minimal extra effort, high perceived value
Video updates: 10-second clip of happy dog
- Add £2-3 per visit
- Differentiates you from competition
Medication administration: Many sitters charge extra
- Add £5 per visit
- Simple pills easy to do
Example: £12 walk + £2 GPS + £2 photos = £16 walk (33% increase for 2 minutes extra work)
Best Dog Walking and Pet Sitting Services to Offer
High-Demand Services for Part-Timers
1. Early morning dog walking (6-8am)
- Demand level: Very high
- Why: Office workers need pre-work walks
- Rates: £12-18 per 30-minute walk
- Time commitment: 1-2 hours before your job
- Best for: Morning people
2. Evening dog walking (5-8pm)
- Demand level: Very high
- Why: Owners working late, winter darkness
- Rates: £12-18 per 30-minute walk
- Time commitment: 2-3 hours after work
- Best for: Everyone
3. Lunchtime dog walking (12-2pm)
- Demand level: High
- Why: Dogs home alone all day need break
- Rates: £12-16 per walk
- Time commitment: 1-2 hours midday
- Best for: Flexible workers, work-from-homers
4. Weekend overnight pet sitting
- Demand level: Very high
- Why: Weekend trips, visiting family
- Rates: £45-60 per night
- Time commitment: Friday evening – Sunday morning
- Best for: People with free weekends
5. Holiday pet sitting
- Demand level: Extremely high
- Why: Everyone travels during holidays
- Rates: £50-100 per night (premium rates)
- Time commitment: 1-2 weeks intensive work
- Best for: Taking annual leave from main job
6. Weekday daytime home visits for cats
- Demand level: Moderate-high
- Why: Holiday coverage, elderly cats
- Rates: £12-18 per visit
- Time commitment: Flexible throughout day
- Best for: Work-from-home folks, freelancers
Breed-Specific Services (Higher Rates)
Market yourself as experienced with:
- Large breeds (Labradors, German Shepherds, Rottweilers): +£3-5
- Energetic breeds (Border Collies, Huskies, Spaniels): +£2-4
- Small dogs (Chihuahuas, Yorkies): Standard rates
- Giant breeds (Great Danes, Mastiffs): +£5-8
Why this works: Owners of large/energetic breeds struggle to find capable walkers. Less competition = higher rates.
Example profile text: “Experienced dog walker for large breeds and high-energy dogs. Comfortable handling German Shepherds, Huskies, and Rottweilers. Strong lead control and breed-specific exercise knowledge.”
Services to Avoid as Part-Timer
❌ 24/7 live-in pet sitting (1-2 weeks)
- Requires taking extended leave from main job
- Not sustainable long-term as side hustle
❌ Multiple daily visits for puppies (3-4× per day)
- Too disruptive to work schedule
- Better for full-time sitters
❌ Aggressive or reactive dog rehabilitation
- Requires extensive experience and time
- Liability risk too high for side hustle
❌ Exotic pet care without experience
- Reptiles, birds, fish require specialized knowledge
- Steep learning curve
Setting Up Your Side Hustle: Week-by-Week Plan
Week 1: Laying the Foundation
Day 1-2: Create your Trader Street profile
- Professional photos (you with animals)
- Compelling bio emphasizing reliability and experience
- List available services and times
- Set competitive introductory rates
Day 3-4: Research local market
- Check 10 local competitors’ profiles on Trader Street
- Note their rates, services, availability
- Identify gaps you can fill (e.g., early morning walks scarce in your area)
Day 5-6: Legal and admin setup
- Open separate bank account for pet sitting income (tax tracking)
- Download simple spreadsheet for bookings and income
- Consider pet sitting insurance (£10-20/month once established)
Day 7: Marketing launch
- Post on personal Facebook: “Starting pet sitting services!”
- Join local community Facebook groups
- Message friends/family who have pets
Week 2: Getting First Clients
Target: Land 2-3 first bookings
Strategies:
- Offer “introductory rate” discount (20% off)
- Focus on your personal network first
- Be incredibly responsive to inquiries (within 1 hour)
- Offer free meet-and-greets
First client priorities:
- Get experience under your belt
- Earn your first 5-star reviews
- Build confidence
- Create photo content for profile
Week 3-4: Building Momentum
Target: 5-8 total clients
Focus on:
- Delivering exceptional service to first clients
- Requesting reviews immediately after bookings
- Asking satisfied clients for referrals
- Gradually increasing rates toward market average
Measure success:
- Are you getting inquiries?
- Are inquiries converting to bookings?
- Are clients satisfied?
- Are you managing time well?
Month 2: Establishing Routine
Target: Regular weekly clients + holiday bookings
Priorities:
- Convert one-off clients to recurring weekly walks
- Book out your available time slots
- Create consistent weekly schedule
- Raise rates to market level (after 10+ reviews)
Month 3: Optimization
Target: £500-1,000 monthly income
Focus:
- Maximize earnings per hour (group walks, clustering)
- Fill gaps in schedule with one-off bookings
- Build waiting list for peak times
- Consider adding new services
Balancing Your Side Hustle with Full-Time Work
Setting Clear Boundaries
Define your available hours:
- Monday-Friday: 6:30-8am and 6-8pm only
- Weekends: Available for overnight sitting
- Holidays: Available for intensive work
Communicate limits to clients: “I offer morning walks (6:30-8am) and evening walks (6-8pm) Monday to Friday. For midday or other times, I can recommend other excellent sitters on Trader Street.”
Why this works: Clients respect clear boundaries. They know what to expect and don’t ask for unavailable times.
Managing Energy and Avoiding Burnout
Start small:
- Month 1: 2-3 clients
- Month 2: 5-8 clients
- Month 3: 10-15 clients
- Don’t jump to 20 clients immediately
Build in buffer time:
- Don’t book walks back-to-back
- Leave 10-15 minutes between appointments
- Allow for traffic, chatty clients, dog emergencies
Take days off:
- One weeknight off per week (no evening walks)
- One weekend per month with no bookings
- Holidays without pet sitting commitment
Warning signs of burnout:
- Dreading walks you used to enjoy
- Resenting clients
- Cutting corners on care
- Physical exhaustion
If experiencing burnout:
- Pause new client intake
- Raise rates (reduces volume, increases income)
- Drop difficult clients
- Take a week off
Employer Considerations
Check your employment contract:
- Some jobs prohibit second jobs/business
- Others require disclosure or approval
- Violating could risk main employment
If allowed:
- Keep side hustle completely separate
- Never do pet sitting on company time
- Don’t use company resources
- Maintain professional boundaries
If uncertain:
- Speak with HR
- Get approval in writing
- Be transparent
Tax and Legal Considerations for Your Side Hustle
Understanding Your Tax Obligations
You’re self-employed for pet sitting income:
- Register as self-employed with HMRC
- Must register by 5 October after tax year you start
- File Self Assessment tax return annually
Tax-free allowance:
- Trading allowance: First £1,000 profit is tax-free
- If you earn under £1,000/year from pet sitting, no need to register or pay tax
Above £1,000:
- Pay Income Tax on profits
- Pay Class 2 and Class 4 National Insurance
Tax rates (2025):
- 20% on profits £12,571-£50,270
- 40% on profits £50,271-£125,140
- Remember: This is on PROFIT, not revenue
Example calculation:
- Pet sitting income: £6,000
- Expenses (insurance, supplies, mileage): £800
- Profit: £5,200
- Tax due (20%): £1,040
What You Can Claim as Expenses
Deductible expenses:
- Pet sitting insurance (£120/year)
- Mileage (£0.45 per mile for first 10,000 miles)
- Phone costs (percentage used for business)
- Advertising/marketing
- Dog walking equipment (leads, waste bags, treats)
- Professional training/courses
- Website/Trader Street costs (if any)
- Accounting software
Keep records:
- All income (bank statements, invoices)
- All receipts for expenses
- Mileage log
- Retain for 5 years minimum
Insurance: Do You Need It?
Public liability insurance:
- Covers damage caused by dogs in your care
- Costs £10-20/month
- Recommended once you’re established
When to get insurance:
- Once earning £500+/month consistently
- Before accepting large/strong dogs
- When clients start asking about it
- If walking multiple dogs simultaneously
What it covers:
- Dog bites someone while in your care
- Dog damages property
- Dog causes accident (e.g., cyclist falls)
- Legal defense costs
What it doesn’t cover:
- Injury to the dog itself (that’s owner’s pet insurance)
- Deliberate actions
- Professional negligence (need separate coverage)
Contracts and Agreements
Use a simple service agreement:
- Services you’ll provide
- Your rates and payment terms
- Cancellation policy
- Emergency protocols
- Liability limitations
Download free templates online or create simple document covering:
“Services: 30-minute dog walk, Monday-Friday at 7am Rate: £14 per walk Payment: Due weekly, every Friday via bank transfer Cancellation: 24 hours notice required or full fee charged Emergency: I will contact you immediately and seek veterinary care if needed. You authorize treatment up to £500.”
Real Side Hustler Success Stories
Story 1: The Morning Walker
Profile: Emma, 32, Marketing Manager, Bristol
Schedule:
- Full-time job: 9am-5pm
- Side hustle: 6:30-8:15am dog walking
Earnings:
- 4 morning walks Monday-Friday at £14 = £56/day
- Weekly: £280
- Monthly: £1,120
- Annual: £13,440
Time investment: 1 hour 45 minutes per day
Key to success: “I’m already awake early for gym. Swapped gym for dog walking – still getting exercise plus earning £1,100/month. My clients are desperate for reliable morning walkers because so few people want to do it. I’m fully booked with a waiting list.”
Story 2: The Weekend Sitter
Profile: James, 41, Teacher, Manchester
Schedule:
- Full-time job: Monday-Friday teaching
- Side hustle: Friday evening through Sunday morning overnight sitting
Earnings:
- 2 nights per weekend at £55 = £110
- 4 weekends per month: £440
- Plus occasional weekday evening walks: £160/month
- Monthly total: £600
- Annual: £7,200
Key to success: “Teaching is exhausting so I don’t want extra work during the week. Weekend pet sitting is perfect – I bring my laptop, mark papers while pets sleep, and earn £55/night doing what I’d do at home anyway. It’s basically getting paid to sleep in someone else’s house.”
Story 3: The Lunch Breaker
Profile: Priya, 28, Software Developer (WFH), Leeds
Schedule:
- Works from home 9-5:30pm
- Side hustle: 12-1:30pm daily dog walks
Earnings:
- 3 lunchtime walks at £13 = £39/day
- Monday-Friday: £195/week
- Monthly: £780
- Annual: £9,360
Key to success: “Working from home lets me do lunchtime walks. All three clients are within 10 minutes of my flat. I’d be taking a lunch break anyway – now it’s a paid lunch break that gets me outside and moving.”
Story 4: The Holiday Hustler
Profile: Tom, 35, NHS Nurse, Edinburgh
Schedule:
- Full-time rotating shifts
- Side hustle: Takes 2 weeks annual leave during Christmas and summer for intensive pet sitting
Earnings:
- Christmas week: 7 nights at £70/night = £490
- Christmas week 2: 7 nights at £70/night = £490
- Summer week 1: 7 nights at £60/night = £420
- Summer week 2: 7 nights at £60/night = £420
- Plus daytime visits during both periods: £400
- Annual: £2,220 for just 4 weeks work
Key to success: “I don’t want ongoing commitments due to my rotating shifts. But during peak holiday periods, I dedicate 2 weeks to intensive pet sitting. Premium rates during holidays mean I earn what some people make in 3-4 months of part-time work.”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake 1: Undercharging from the Start
The trap: “I’ll start cheap to get clients, then raise rates later”
Why it fails:
- Attracts bargain-hunters who’ll leave when you raise prices
- Difficult to raise rates on existing clients
- Devalues your service
Do instead:
- Start 10-15% below market rate as “introductory”
- Raise to market rate after 5-10 reviews
- Grandfather existing clients at slightly reduced rate
Mistake 2: Accepting Every Client
The trap: “I need clients so I’ll say yes to everyone”
Why it fails:
- Difficult clients drain energy
- Aggressive dogs are liability risks
- Bad clients give bad reviews
Do instead:
- Meet every dog before accepting
- Trust your instincts – decline if uncomfortable
- It’s okay to say “I don’t think I’m the right fit”
Mistake 3: No Geographic Boundaries
The trap: “I’ll travel anywhere to get clients”
Why it fails:
- Waste hours driving
- Earn less per hour
- Burnout from constant travel
Do instead:
- Define core area (2-3 mile radius)
- Only accept clients within zone
- Charge premium (+£5-10) for exceptions
Mistake 4: Over-Committing Your Time
The trap: “I’ll fill every available hour with bookings”
Why it fails:
- No buffer for delays, emergencies
- Constant stress and rushing
- No flexibility for life events
Do instead:
- Block out 20% of time as buffer
- Schedule maximum 80% of available hours
- Leave one evening per week completely free
Mistake 5: Treating It Like a Hobby
The trap: “It’s just a side hustle, I don’t need to be too professional”
Why it fails:
- Clients expect professional service
- Bad reviews damage reputation
- Missing income opportunities
Do instead:
- Treat it like a real business
- Respond promptly to inquiries
- Show up on time, every time
- Provide consistent, excellent service
Your Action Plan: Starting This Week
Monday: Profile Setup
- Create Trader Street profile
- Take profile photos
- Write compelling bio
- Set introductory rates
Tuesday: Market Research
- Browse 10 local competitors
- Note their rates and services
- Identify your competitive advantage
- Join local pet owner Facebook groups
Wednesday: Launch Marketing
- Post on personal Facebook
- Message 10 friends/family with pets
- Join community groups
- Post availability
Thursday: First Inquiries
- Respond within 1 hour to any messages
- Offer free meet-and-greets
- Book first 2-3 clients
Friday: Prep for Success
- Buy essential supplies (leads, waste bags, treats)
- Set up booking spreadsheet
- Plan routes for first walks
Weekend: First Bookings
- Execute first dog walks or home visits
- Take photos for future marketing
- Request reviews from satisfied clients
Week 2: Build Momentum
- Aim for 5 total clients
- Post success photos (with permission)
- Ask for referrals
Scaling Your Side Hustle
Month 3-6: Growing Income
When earning £500+/month:
- Get public liability insurance
- Refine services based on what sells
- Raise rates to market level
- Build waiting list
Month 6-12: Steady Income
When earning £1,000+/month:
- Consider registering as self-employed
- Track income/expenses rigorously
- Develop specializations (large breeds, puppies, overnight)
- Build regular client base
Year 2+: Evaluate Future
Decision point: Stay part-time or go full-time?
Stay part-time if:
- You love your main job
- Side hustle supplements income comfortably
- Don’t want the risk of full-time self-employment
Consider full-time if:
- Earning £2,000+/month part-time
- Potential to double/triple with more hours
- Hate your main job
- Want to be your own boss
Many successful pet sitters:
- Start as side hustle
- Build to £1,500-2,000/month part-time
- Transition to full-time when established
- Never regret building foundation first
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I really earn £500+/month in spare time? Yes, absolutely. Working 10-12 hours per week at average rates (£12-15/walk, £50/overnight) generates £500-800 monthly.
How many clients do I need? For £500/month: 8-10 weekly regular clients (1 walk each) or 2-3 weekend overnight sits per month, or a mix of both.
What if my full-time job has irregular hours? Focus on weekend overnight sitting and flexible daytime home visits. Avoid committing to fixed daily walk times.
Do I need to quit my job to make decent money? No! Many pet sitters earn £1,000-2,000/month part-time while keeping their main job. It’s an “and” not an “or.”
What about holidays from my main job? Perfect time for intensive pet sitting! One week of holiday pet sitting during Christmas can earn £500-700.
How do I handle taxes? Register as self-employed if earning over £1,000 profit annually. Keep records, claim legitimate expenses, file Self Assessment return.
Is insurance necessary from day one? Not essential immediately, but get it once you’re established (earning £500+/month) or walking multiple dogs.
What if a dog gets injured on my watch? Contact owner immediately, seek veterinary care if needed. This is why insurance matters. Always do meet-and-greet to assess dog first.
Ready to start your pet sitting side hustle? Create your free Trader Street profile today and be earning extra income by next week. No startup costs, complete flexibility, and genuine earning potential – all in your spare time.
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