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All American Pet Resorts

Bestie Paws, July 18, 2026July 18, 2026
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All American Pet Resorts · Boarding · Daycare · Grooming · Webcam · Vaccination Rules · What to Expect

Real answers from the actual policies, parent reviews, and vaccination requirements — covering boarding, daycare, grooming, webcam access, and the questions most people only think to ask after they’ve already booked.

📰
Trending — Premium Boarding Demand Surging as Pet Industry Tops $147 Billion

The U.S. pet boarding market hit $6.8 billion in 2026 and is growing at over 8% annually — driven by dual-income households, more frequent travel, and pet owners who increasingly treat their dogs as family members unwilling to compromise on where they stay. Facilities with live webcam access and daily report cards are pulling significantly more repeat bookings than those without. The biggest shift: 27% of U.S. pet owners now use daycare regularly, not just during vacations — making it a weekly routine rather than an emergency option.

🐕 What All American Pet Resorts Actually Is

All American Pet Resorts (AAPR) is a franchise network of premium dog boarding and daycare facilities founded in 2005, with locations across multiple U.S. states. Every resort offers boarding, supervised group daycare, and grooming services. The three things that set it apart from a standard kennel: 24/7 on-site staffing, live webcam access so you can check on your dog from your phone, and structured group play grouped by size, age, and energy level rather than dumping all dogs together. New guests must complete a free evaluation before their first boarding stay. Pricing, hours, and exact services vary by franchise location — the guidance below applies broadly, but calling your specific resort before booking is always the right move.

📋 Key Questions — Real Answers

These are the questions that come up before a first boarding stay — and a few that only surface after something didn’t go as expected. Covered here first so you’re not surprised later.

  • 1
    How much does All American Pet Resorts charge for boarding? Boarding typically starts around $50–$65/night depending on location · Daycare averages $25–$40/day · Grooming is priced by breed and size · Exact pricing varies by franchise — call your local resort for a quote
    AAPR is a franchise network, which means each location sets its own rates within a general framework. The Dallas location charges $60/night for boarding as a published baseline, which is typical for their mid-market positioning. Urban locations in higher cost-of-living cities run at the higher end; smaller market locations come in lower. When you call for pricing, ask specifically about: the base boarding rate, whether group play is included or extra, what the add-on services cost (grooming, bath, nail trim, private play time), and whether there’s a holiday surcharge for peak dates like Thanksgiving week, Christmas, or spring break. Holiday rates at most AAPR locations run noticeably higher than standard rates.
  • 2
    What vaccinations does my dog need before their first stay? Required at all AAPR locations: Rabies · Distemper (DHPP) · Bordetella · Flea and tick prevention must be current · Some locations also require Leptospirosis · Fecal testing for parasites required at some locations · Bordetella first-timers: must be given at least 72 hours before boarding (2 weeks is ideal)
    The vaccination requirements catch a lot of first-time boarders off guard — especially the Bordetella timing. If your dog has never had the Bordetella (kennel cough) vaccine before, a single dose given two days before drop-off isn’t sufficient protection. The vaccine needs time to build immunity. AAPR asks for a minimum of 72 hours between first Bordetella administration and arrival; two weeks in advance is what they recommend as genuinely protective. If you book a boarding stay and realize your dog’s Bordetella is expired or your dog has never had one, contact the resort before the appointment — they may allow a grace window, or they may require postponing. Trying to handle this at drop-off creates a problem for you and the staff. Leptospirosis requirements vary by location, and some locations also require fecal parasite testing. Verify with your specific AAPR before bringing medical records.
  • 3
    Can I watch my dog on webcam while they’re boarding? Yes — webcam access is a signature feature at AAPR locations · Public play area cameras visible to all pet parents · VIP suite cameras are password-protected and reserved for current guests · Not all suites have dedicated cameras — request one at booking · Some locations offer daily photo updates and report cards
    Webcam access is one of the most-mentioned positives in AAPR reviews, and it’s a genuine differentiator from standard kennels where you drop your dog off and hear nothing until pickup. The setup at most locations: shared cameras show the group play areas, accessible to any current guest during operating hours. VIP suite cameras are private and accessible only to the guest whose dog is in that specific suite. If live camera access matters to you — and for anxious dog owners it’s a significant comfort — ask specifically at booking whether the suite you’re being assigned has a webcam, and request one that does. Daily photo updates and report cards are available at select locations and are usually mentioned at booking. Ask if your location does them — parents consistently describe receiving a photo mid-stay as meaningfully reassuring.
  • 4
    What happens during the pet evaluation — and why is it required? All new guests complete a free evaluation before their first boarding or daycare stay · The evaluation tests temperament, sociability, and how the dog responds to group play · Staff assess play style, energy level, and behavior around other dogs · Usually takes a few hours · A dog that isn’t a good fit for group play is offered private time with staff instead
    The evaluation isn’t a test your dog can “fail” in the sense of being turned away — it’s more about placement. The staff observe how your dog responds to other dogs, to unfamiliar people, and to a new environment. Based on what they see, they determine which playgroup size and energy level suits your dog best, and whether any special handling notes are needed. A reactive or anxious dog doesn’t automatically get rejected; they’re typically placed in a smaller group or offered private one-on-one time with a Pet Care Specialist instead. This costs more than group daycare, but it’s better than forcing an anxious dog into a group situation that makes their stress worse. The evaluation is free and is usually done during a short drop-off visit before the actual boarding stay is scheduled. Don’t skip it — it’s what allows the resort to set your dog up well from the first night.
  • 5
    Can my dog’s medication be administered during their stay? Yes — most medications can be administered to boarding guests · Must be in original container with vet prescription or pharmacy label · Insulin injections are available at select locations — call first to confirm · Medication-only without boarding is generally not available · No restrictions on number of medications for boarding guests
    This is one of the most important questions for owners of senior dogs or dogs with chronic health conditions. AAPR resorts are generally well-equipped to handle medication administration for boarding guests — this includes oral medications, eye drops, and at select locations, insulin injections for diabetic dogs. Bring medications in their original pharmacy container with the label intact; staff cannot accept unlabeled bottles or medications transferred to other containers. If your dog requires insulin, call ahead to confirm that the specific location can handle it — not all AAPR resorts offer this. For dogs on multiple medications or with complex medical needs, explain everything when you make the reservation so staff can prepare. Seniors with special needs are noted in AAPR’s profile as a population the resort actively accommodates — with softer bedding and raised feeders available — but the more detail you give at booking, the better the care during the stay.
  • 6
    Can I bring my dog’s own food, bed, and toys? Food: yes — bring pre-portioned in individual labeled serving bags · Bedding from home: no — AAPR provides clean bedding daily (outside bedding not permitted) · Soft or cloth toys: not allowed for safety · Hard toys may be accepted subject to staff approval · Treats from home: yes, but raw treats are typically not permitted
    The no-personal-bedding rule surprises a lot of first-time boarders who assume bringing something that smells like home will comfort their dog. AAPR’s reasoning is sanitation-based — shared facilities that rotate bedding daily can maintain a cleaner and more hygienic environment than accommodating personal items from various homes. The practical effect is that your dog sleeps on clean facility-provided bedding, which most dogs adapt to quickly. Food is different — if your dog has dietary needs, allergies, or simply doesn’t do well with a food change, bringing your own is not just allowed but encouraged. Pre-portion it in individual serving bags labeled with your dog’s name and the meal (breakfast, dinner, etc.) so staff can feed the right amount at the right time without opening a large bag repeatedly. Treats are generally fine if commercially packaged, but check with your specific location about whether raw treats or fresh food items are accepted.
  • 7
    What are the hours — and what happens if I need to pick up after closing? Typical weekday hours: 7am–7pm · Weekends: 8am–5pm (some locations vary) · After-hours pickup: available at most locations for an additional fee · Early drop-off: available before lobby opens for a fee · 24/7 staffing means your dog is never without supervision — hours affect owner access, not care
    The after-hours pickup fee is one of the less-discussed costs that can catch people off guard. If your flight lands at 8pm and you want to pick your dog up the same night, expect to pay an after-hours service charge — which is reasonable given that a staff member has to accommodate an arrival outside normal lobby hours. Plan your travel pickup window when you book the boarding stay. If your return travel is unpredictable (connecting flights, potential delays), it’s worth letting the resort know and having a plan for whether your dog stays an extra night versus a late pickup. The 24/7 staffing guarantee is the core safety promise of AAPR’s model — unlike smaller kennels where the facility is empty and unsupervised overnight, AAPR maintains staff presence around the clock for every boarding guest.
  • 8
    How is All American Pet Resorts different from a regular kennel? 24/7/365 on-site staffing — not empty overnight · Group play grouped by size, energy, and temperament (not all dogs together) · Climate-controlled indoor and outdoor play spaces · Live webcam access · Daily report cards and photos at many locations · Grooming available on-site · No stacking of kennels
    The difference between AAPR and a traditional boarding kennel is meaningful on the specifics. A standard kennel typically has someone come in to check on dogs a few times a day, with the facility empty at night. Dogs are often housed in rows of runs with limited social interaction. AAPR’s model is built around the “resort” concept — your dog is supervised constantly, participates in structured play sessions with similar-sized dogs, sleeps in a suite rather than an outdoor run, and the whole experience is designed around activity and engagement rather than containment. Whether that difference is worth the higher price point than a basic kennel is a personal call, but for dogs that get anxious or bored in isolation, the structured socialization model genuinely produces a different outcome. The webcam feature is also a functional anxiety reducer for owners — being able to see that your dog is running around with other dogs during play time is materially different from wondering what’s happening behind a closed door.
💰 Pricing and Key Details at a Glance
🛏️ Overnight Boarding
~$50–$65/night
Starting range across locations. Urban markets run higher. Holiday periods (Thanksgiving, Christmas, spring break) typically carry surcharges. Price includes 24/7 supervision and group play during day hours.
🐕 Daycare
~$25–$40/day
Supervised group play all day, grouped by size and energy level. Structured rest periods between play. Some locations offer monthly memberships or daycare packages for regular weekly clients — ask about bundles.
✂️ Grooming
Priced by breed
All locations offer baths. Haircuts, nail trims, teeth brushing, and deshedding vary by location. Bundling grooming with a boarding or daycare stay often saves time. Prices quoted by breed and coat type at booking.
⏰ After-Hours Pickup
Additional fee
Pickup outside normal lobby hours is available at most locations for an added charge. Early drop-off (before lobby open) also carries a fee. Confirm your travel schedule at booking to plan the right pickup window.
💉 Bordetella Timing
72 hrs min
First Bordetella shot must be given at minimum 72 hours before boarding. Two weeks in advance is recommended for new dogs. Expired vaccines also require renewal — don’t wait until the week before travel.
📹 Webcam Access
Included
Public play areas viewable by all current guests. VIP suite cameras are private and password-protected. Request a webcam-equipped suite at booking — not all suites have dedicated cameras.
👥 Staffing Model
24/7/365
Staff present on-site around the clock every day of the year, including holidays. Not just a morning check-in like traditional boarding kennels — continuous human supervision throughout overnight stays.
💉 Vaccination Checklist — What to Have Ready
📋 Required Vaccines Before First Stay
  • Rabies — Current certificate required. Keep a copy in a folder you can bring to check-in. Expired rabies certificates are not accepted.
  • Distemper/DHPP — The combination vaccine covering distemper, hepatitis, parvovirus, and parainfluenza. Must be current according to your vet’s schedule.
  • Bordetella (kennel cough) — Required at all AAPR locations. Critical timing: if this is your dog’s first Bordetella vaccination, it must be given at least 72 hours before arrival. Two weeks in advance is what AAPR recommends. If your dog’s Bordetella expires every 6 months (some vets schedule it this way), stay on top of renewal. Don’t assume the annual shot covers this.
  • Leptospirosis — Required at some AAPR locations. Confirm with your specific resort when booking.
  • Flea and tick prevention — Must be current on an active flea and tick prevention program. Confirm with your resort what forms are acceptable (collar, topical, oral).
  • Fecal parasite test — Required at some locations. Ask when booking whether your location requires this and how recent the test must be.
🧩 Real Situations — What Actually Happens
My dog has never boarded before and I’m worried about separation anxiety
FIRST STAY
First-time boarders are often more anxious than their dogs — which matters because research from the Clever Dog Lab suggests emotional contagion is real: your dog picks up cues from your energy at drop-off. The two things that help most at AAPR specifically: do a short daycare visit before the first overnight stay so your dog learns the environment and the staff before they’re there for multiple nights, and trust the webcam rather than calling repeatedly. Watching your dog running in group play is far more reassuring than talking to a staff member who’s trying to handle 15 dogs and give you a verbal update. AAPR’s structured daycare model — play, rest, play, rest — mirrors a natural rhythm that most dogs settle into within a few hours of the first visit. Dogs that seem anxious at drop-off the first time are often entirely different animals by mid-morning, once they’re engaged with other dogs and a familiar routine takes hold.
💡 Do a daycare visit before the first overnight stay 📹 Watch the webcam — less stressful than calling for updates 🐕 Calm drop-off energy helps your dog settle faster
My dog is reactive or doesn’t play well with other dogs
REACTIVE DOGS
AAPR’s evaluation process is specifically designed to surface this before a dog is placed in group play. A dog that’s reactive with other dogs doesn’t automatically mean they can’t use AAPR — it means they’re placed differently. Private one-on-one time with a Pet Care Specialist is a dedicated add-on service at AAPR locations that exists exactly for dogs who aren’t group play candidates. Staff take them out individually for exercise and interaction with a human rather than putting them in a stressful situation with other animals. Tell the resort about your dog’s history honestly when you book. A dog that lunges or snaps around other dogs that gets placed in group play because the owner didn’t disclose it creates a risk for every animal in that group. Honesty at booking produces better outcomes than hoping for the best. The evaluation will usually catch it anyway — but your advance information makes the whole process smoother.
✅ Reactive dogs: private play time available with staff ⚠️ Disclose reactivity history when booking — always 🐾 Evaluation will assess group compatibility before first stay
My dog is a senior with health needs — can they handle boarding?
SENIOR DOGS
AAPR specifically accommodates senior dogs with softer bedding options and raised feeders to reduce joint strain at mealtime — amenities worth requesting explicitly when you book rather than assuming they’ll be set up without being asked. Medication administration is handled for boarding guests, including insulin injections at select locations. The key for senior dogs is a detailed conversation at booking: share all medications, any mobility limitations, whether your dog tires easily, any dietary restrictions, and how long you’d like rest periods to be. Staff can limit or exclude your senior dog from group play and substitute shorter, less intense individual interaction instead. The 24/7 staffing model is genuinely important for elderly dogs with health conditions — the peace of mind that someone is there at 3am if your dog has a problem is not available at every facility, and it matters more as dogs age.
✅ Soft bedding and raised feeders: request at booking 💊 Medication and insulin: available at select locations — verify first 💡 Share full health history at booking, not at drop-off
I have two dogs — can they board together and will I get a discount?
MULTIPLE DOGS
Yes — two dogs from the same household can share a suite, and most AAPR locations offer a multi-dog discount when they share accommodations. The conditions: they need to be from the same household, in the same play group (which requires them to be compatible in size and energy level), and sharing a suite. If your two dogs are very different in size or energy — a 10-pound senior terrier and a 60-pound young Lab, for example — they may not be placed in the same play group regardless of living together at home, and whether they share a suite in that case depends on the specific resort’s configuration. The discount structure varies by location; ask when you book rather than assuming it applies automatically. Two dogs under separate reservations without a suite share don’t receive the multi-dog rate.
💰 Multi-dog discount: available when sharing suite and play group ⚠️ Different size/energy dogs may not qualify for same play group 📞 Confirm discount structure when making the reservation
I want to add grooming during my dog’s boarding stay — how does that work?
GROOMING ADD-ON
Adding grooming to a boarding stay is one of the most convenient features AAPR offers and one that owners consistently praise in reviews — you drop your dog off for boarding, they get groomed during the stay, and come home looking better than when they left without you needing a separate trip. The grooming appointment is usually scheduled for a specific day during the boarding stay, and the grooming charge is added to your boarding invoice. Bring your grooming preferences in writing if your dog has specific styling requirements or coat sensitivities. Not every AAPR location offers every grooming service — all locations offer baths, but haircuts and breed-specific styling availability varies. Confirm what’s available when you book the boarding stay so the grooming portion doesn’t disappoint. Nail trims and teeth brushing are typically available as individual add-ons at lower cost if a full bath or cut isn’t needed.
✂️ Schedule grooming at same time as boarding reservation 💡 Bring styling preferences in writing — especially for breed cuts 📞 Confirm which services your specific location offers
📍 Find Resources Near You

Use the buttons below to find All American Pet Resorts locations, veterinarians for vaccination records, and pet supply stores near you.

Searching near you…
✅ Before Your Dog’s First Stay — 5 Things to Do
  • Schedule the evaluation before the boarding stay. AAPR requires all new guests to complete a pet evaluation before their first overnight stay. This is free and takes a few hours — treat it as a short daycare day where staff learn your dog and your dog learns the environment. Don’t try to show up for a first boarding stay without it completed.
  • Verify vaccinations at least two weeks before the stay. Check that Rabies, DHPP, and Bordetella are all current. If Bordetella is expired or has never been given, your dog needs it at minimum 72 hours before arrival — and two weeks is better. Don’t leave this for the week before departure.
  • Call to confirm which services your specific location offers. AAPR is a franchise — not every location has the same grooming services, webcam options, or insurance accommodations. A quick call before booking confirms pricing, holiday surcharges, suite types, and whether a webcam suite is available.
  • Pre-portion your dog’s food in labeled individual bags. If your dog eats a specific food, bring it pre-portioned by meal so staff don’t have to measure from a large bag. Include feeding time, quantity, and any supplements in a written note attached to the bag.
  • Share your dog’s full history honestly. Reactivity, health conditions, medications, anxiety triggers, bite history, food allergies, and mobility issues — all of this helps staff care for your dog better. Disclosing these things doesn’t get your dog turned away; it gets your dog better matched to the right care approach from day one.
🔗 Key Links: 🐾 Find Locations: allamericanpetresorts.com/locations 📋 Guest Policies: allamericanpetresorts.com/about-us/guest-policies ❓ FAQ: allamericanpetresorts.com/about-us/faq ✂️ Services Overview: allamericanpetresorts.com/our-services

This guide is for informational purposes only and has no affiliation with, sponsorship from, or compensation from All American Pet Resorts, Inc. or any of its franchise operators. Pricing, services, vaccination requirements, hours, webcam availability, and policies vary by individual franchise location and are subject to change. Always call your specific All American Pet Resorts location to confirm current rates, required documentation, and available services before booking. Vaccination requirements described here reflect general network policies; your local location may require additional documentation. Industry statistics cited are from third-party market research organizations and reflect general pet boarding market data, not AAPR-specific figures.

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