Login Free Trial

Dog Daycare vs Boarding: Which Is Right for Your Dog?

A plain-language comparison from 16+ years of running Calgary's kennel-free dog daycare.

Quick Answer

Choose daycare when you are at work or away during the day and your dog needs supervision, exercise, and company — but comes home at night. Choose boarding when you are traveling or away overnight and your dog cannot stay home alone. Many Calgary dog owners use both: daycare as a regular weekday routine, boarding for trips.

I get this question from Calgary dog owners almost every week: "Should I sign my dog up for daycare, or is boarding what I actually need?" After 16+ years at PAWS, I can tell you there is no single right answer — it depends on your schedule, your dog's temperament, and what you are trying to solve. This guide breaks down both options clearly so you can make the right call.

Jump to:  At-a-Glance Table · What Is Daycare? · What Is Boarding? · When to Choose Daycare · When to Choose Boarding · Can You Combine Both? · Calgary Costs · FAQ

At a Glance

Daycare vs Boarding: Quick Comparison

The core differences between dog daycare and dog boarding, side by side.

FeatureDog DaycareDog Boarding
ScheduleMorning drop-off, evening pickupMulti-night stays
DurationDay only (typically 7 AM – 7 PM)One night or longer
OvernightNo — dog goes home each nightYes — dog stays overnight
ExerciseFull day of supervised activity + pack walksVaries by facility or sitter
SocializationHigh — group play, pack walks dailyModerate to low depending on type
Calgary cost$37–$59.50/day + GST$45–$97/night + GST
Best forWorking owners, puppies, social dogsTraveling owners, multi-night trips

Dog Daycare Explained

What Is Dog Daycare?

Dog daycare is a supervised group care environment for dogs during the daytime hours — typically Monday through Friday. You drop your dog off in the morning before work, and pick them up in the evening. Your dog goes home every night.

At a quality daycare like PAWS, a full day is structured — not just unmonitored play in a room. Dogs arrive between 7:00 and 10:00 AM, join their playgroup (sorted by size and temperament), go out for a 45-60 minute pack walk through the neighbourhood, spend time in supervised open play, rest mid-afternoon, and are ready for pickup between 3:30 and 7:00 PM.

A Typical Daycare Day at PAWS

7:00 – 10:00 AM
Drop-off & check-in. Dogs are welcomed and settled into their playgroup. Pack leaders do a quick health check.
10:00 – 11:00 AM
Adventure pack walk. 45–60 minutes of structured, on-leash walking through Calgary's parks and pathways in small groups.
11:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Supervised open play. Free interaction in play areas matched by energy level and size.
1:00 – 2:00 PM
Rest & recharge. Quiet time with fresh water and calm enrichment.
2:00 – 3:30 PM
Afternoon play session. A second round of supervised activity before pickup begins.
3:30 – 7:00 PM
Pickup window. Dogs are cleaned up and ready for their owner.

Who Is Daycare For?

Daycare works best for dogs who are social and comfortable around other dogs, and for owners who work regular daytime hours. Puppies learning to socialize, high-energy breeds that need an outlet, and dogs that struggle with separation anxiety at home all tend to thrive in daycare. It is not ideal for reactive dogs, dogs that are recovering from illness or surgery, or dogs that simply prefer quiet and solitude.

Dog Boarding Explained

What Is Dog Boarding?

Dog boarding is overnight care — your dog stays with a caregiver or facility while you are away for one or more nights. It is the solution for travel, holidays, extended work trips, or any situation where your dog cannot stay home alone overnight.

There are three main types of boarding available in Calgary, each with significant differences in experience, cost, and stress level for your dog:

Traditional Kennel

Dogs sleep in individual runs or kennels at a facility. Typically the most affordable option ($45–$75/night in Calgary). Exercise may be limited or an added cost. Best for dogs that are kennel-trained and travel frequently.

In-Home Boarding

Your dog stays in a private home — either through a network like PAWS Pros or a platform like Rover. Dogs sleep in a real home environment, no kennels. Much lower stress than a facility. Rates typically $40–$97/night depending on what's included.

Luxury / Boutique Boarding

Premium facilities offering private suites, TVs, and individual attention. Similar pricing to in-home options ($75–$120+/night) but in a facility setting. Best for dogs that need medical monitoring or prefer structure over a home environment.

What Makes In-Home Boarding Different

In-home boarding provides overnight care in a private home environment — your dog sleeps on a couch or dog bed, interacts with one person or a small family, and follows a routine much closer to what they experience at home. Research on canine overnight care consistently shows that dogs in home-based settings settle more quickly and exhibit calmer behaviour than in facility environments. For dogs that thrive on routine and familiarity, in-home boarding through a trusted caregiver is the closest thing to staying home.

At PAWS, boarding through our PAWS Pro network adds another layer: your dog already knows the Pro from daycare. The transition from "daycare day" to "overnight with Melissa or Kandy" is familiar, not frightening. Learn more on the PAWS Pros page.

Decision Guide

5 Situations Where Daycare Is the Right Call

  • 1
    You work regular weekday hours

    This is the most common reason people sign up for daycare, and it is the best fit. If you leave the house for 8–10 hours a day, Monday through Friday, your dog is alone for the better part of their active hours. Daycare converts those hours into exercise, socialization, and stimulation — and your dog comes home tired and satisfied instead of pent-up. At PAWS, clients who work downtown often drop off as early as 7:00 AM on their way in.

  • 2
    Your dog has separation anxiety

    Dogs with separation anxiety are not suited to spending long stretches alone at home — they bark, chew, pace, or injure themselves trying to escape. A daycare environment gives them company and a structured routine, both of which are clinically shown to reduce anxiety behaviours. The key is a gradual introduction: start with two or three days per week and build from there. Within a few weeks, most anxious dogs visibly look forward to the routine.

  • 3
    You have a young, high-energy dog

    Puppies and high-drive breeds — Border Collies, Vizslas, Huskies, Weimaraners, young Labs — need far more exercise and stimulation than the average dog owner can realistically provide on a weekday. A single 30-minute walk before work and another in the evening simply is not enough for these dogs. At PAWS, every dog gets 45–60 minutes of structured pack walking plus hours of supervised play. Many of our regulars arrive bouncing and leave calm. That is not a coincidence.

  • 4
    You want consistent socialization for your puppy

    The socialization window for puppies closes around 12–16 weeks of age. Dogs that miss this window are significantly more likely to develop fear responses, reactivity, and aggression as adults. Puppy daycare during this period — with appropriate playmates, supervised interaction, and positive reinforcement — is one of the most effective investments you can make in your dog's long-term behaviour. Puppies are welcome at PAWS from 12 weeks with at least two sets of vaccinations.

  • 5
    Your dog is social and gets bored at home

    Some dogs genuinely love being around other dogs and people. If your dog greets every person and dog on a walk, is visibly excited by social situations, and shows destructive behaviour at home (which often signals boredom and under-stimulation), daycare is likely a better use of your pet care budget than more toys or longer solo walks. Daycare meets the social need; toys do not.

Decision Guide

5 Situations Where Boarding Is the Right Call

  • 1
    You are traveling or away overnight

    This is the core use case for boarding — there is simply no substitute when you are out of town. Daycare ends at 7:00 PM; after that your dog needs to be somewhere safe. If you are flying to Vancouver for three days, heading to a wedding in Banff, or away on a work trip, boarding is the only appropriate solution. The question is not daycare vs boarding — it is which type of boarding is right for your dog.

  • 2
    Your dog cannot be left home alone overnight

    Most adult dogs can handle 8–10 hours alone during the day with a midday walk, but leaving a dog alone overnight — 12 or more hours — is not appropriate for the vast majority of dogs. Senior dogs, puppies, dogs with medical conditions, and dogs with separation anxiety all require overnight supervision. Boarding ensures your dog is not left alone, unsafe, or in distress while you are away.

  • 3
    Your regular caregiver or family is unavailable

    Many Calgary dog owners rely on a family member, neighbour, or friend to watch their dog when they are away. When that person is unavailable, boarding is the professional backup. It is smart to establish a boarding relationship with a trusted provider before you need it in a pinch — last-minute bookings around peak periods like summer, Christmas, and spring break fill quickly.

  • 4
    Your home is being renovated, staged for sale, or otherwise disrupted

    Home renovations, real estate showings, and family events can make your home temporarily unsafe or unsuitable for your dog. Boarding provides a calm, consistent environment during disruption. Short stays of two to five nights are very common for this reason. This is an underrated use case — your dog is not subject to construction noise, unfamiliar contractors, or the stress of being moved from room to room all day.

  • 5
    You want continued structure and care during an extended absence

    For trips longer than four or five nights, a structured boarding arrangement — particularly one that includes daytime daycare — is significantly better for your dog than simply leaving them with a pet sitter who visits twice a day. Dogs that are boarded with a PAWS Pro continue to attend daycare during the week, maintaining their normal routine even while you are away for a week or two. They come home to you having lost no ground on their daily habits.

The Best of Both

Can You Combine Daycare and Boarding?

Yes — and this is actually the ideal setup for most Calgary dog owners who travel regularly.

At PAWS, existing daycare clients have access to overnight boarding through the PAWS Pro network. Your dog already spends their weekdays at PAWS, and they already know the Pros from daily interaction. When you travel, the transition is seamless: your dog comes in on Monday morning as usual, and at the end of the day goes home with the same Pro who has been walking them for months. No unfamiliar strangers, no strange facilities.

This model — regular weekday daycare combined with in-home overnight boarding through a trusted Pro — is the gold standard of dog care for busy Calgary families. Your dog's routine is preserved whether you are in town or not. They get pack walks every weekday, come home to a real home every night, and are cared for by people they genuinely know and like.

How it works at PAWS: Register your dog for daycare and establish the routine first. When you have a trip coming up, contact us with your dates. We will match your dog with an available Pro, they will reach out to you directly, and boarding is booked through the same familiar team. No separate registration, no starting from scratch with a new provider.

Interested? Learn more about dog boarding in Calgary through PAWS, or meet the PAWS Pros who provide in-home overnight care.

Calgary Pricing

Daycare vs Boarding Costs in Calgary

Current pricing for both services, including PAWS rates and typical Calgary market ranges. All prices in CAD before GST.

ServicePAWS RateCalgary Market RangeWhat's Included
Daycare — Drop-In$59.5/day$44–$65/dayFull day, pack walk, supervised play
Daycare — 5-Visit Pass$57.3/day$40–$60/daySame as drop-in, flexible dates
Daycare — 10-Visit Pass$54.4/day$38–$58/daySame as drop-in, never expires
Daycare — 20-Visit Pass$47.45/day$35–$55/daySame as drop-in, 50% refund on unused
Daycare — Calendar Month~$37/day$35–$55/dayUnlimited visits, nail trims, 10% off grooming
Boarding — In-Home (PAWS Pro)$97/night$40–$97/nightWeekday daycare included, real home, insured
Boarding — Traditional Kennel$45–$75/nightBasic overnight care, limited exercise
Boarding — Rover / App-Based$40–$80/nightVaries by sitter; exercise not guaranteed

How to Think About the Cost Difference

At first glance, PAWS boarding at $97/night looks more expensive than a kennel at $50/night. But the PAWS rate includes a full day of daycare — pack walks, supervised play, enrichment. If you add a kennel night ($50) plus a daycare day at the same facility ($50+), you are already close to parity. The difference is the quality of the environment and the familiarity of the caregiver.

For regular daycare, the PAWS calendar month pass at $769/month works out to approximately $37/day — less expensive per visit than most individual drop-in rates in Calgary, and with unlimited visits. See the full daycare rates page for all packages and discounts.

Try PAWS — First Day Is Free

Book Your Free Intro Day

Dog daycare vs boarding — questions answered.

What is the difference between dog daycare and dog boarding?

Dog daycare is a daytime service — your dog comes in the morning and goes home at the end of the day, typically between 7 AM and 7 PM. Dog boarding is overnight care — your dog stays one or more nights because you are away. Daycare suits dogs whose owners work during the day; boarding suits owners who are traveling or away overnight.

Is daycare or boarding better for dogs?

Neither is universally better — it depends on your schedule and your dog's needs. Daycare is better for routine stimulation, socialization, and managing separation anxiety when you are at work. Boarding is necessary when you are traveling overnight and your dog cannot stay home alone. Many Calgary families use both: regular daycare during the week and boarding for travel.

What type of boarding is best for dogs?

In-home boarding provides the most home-like overnight experience — your dog stays in a private home with a trusted caregiver, maintains a familiar routine, and sleeps in a real home environment. Traditional kennel boarding is a solid option for kennel-trained dogs that travel frequently. In-home boarding through the PAWS Pro network adds another advantage: your dog already knows the Pro from daycare, so the overnight transition feels natural rather than unfamiliar.

How much does dog boarding cost in Calgary?

In-home boarding through PAWS Pros costs $97 per night including weekday daycare (pack walks, supervised play, and enrichment). Traditional kennel boarding in Calgary typically ranges from $45 to $75 per night. In-home boarding through app-based platforms like Rover ranges from $40 to $80 per night, though what is included varies significantly by sitter.

Can my dog do both daycare and boarding at PAWS?

Yes. Existing PAWS daycare clients have access to overnight boarding through the PAWS Pro network. Your dog already knows the Pros from daily daycare, which makes the transition to overnight stays natural and low-stress. Contact us with your travel dates and we will match your dog with an available Pro. Learn more on the dog boarding page.

Last updated