How we choose our puppy partners: ethical breeders only.
Pawty Yoga partners with vetted, ethical breeders for every session. Not puppy mills. Not random sellers. Specific, verified breeders we've personally evaluated against a clear checklist. Here's why we made that choice โ and what we look for in every breeder partnership.
"Where do the puppies come from?" is one of the most important questions to ask any puppy yoga operation, and it's the one we get most often before booking. The honest answer is that we work selectively with ethical breeders โ and we hold those partnerships to a higher bar than most operators in this category.
Why ethical breeders, specifically
For puppy yoga to work as a class, the puppies need a few things going for them: known vaccination status, predictable temperament, an age that makes social exposure beneficial (typically 8โ12 weeks), and a stable handler who knows each puppy as an individual. Ethical breeders provide all of this in a way that's harder to coordinate at scale through any other source.
It also means the puppies in our sessions are getting something genuinely valuable: structured, calm exposure to humans during their critical socialization window, just before they go home with their permanent families. Done well, a Pawty Yoga session is part of a healthy early-life experience for them.
What "ethical breeder" means to us
The phrase "ethical breeder" gets thrown around loosely. Here's the specific list we use to evaluate any breeder partnership:
- Single-breed or limited-breed focus. Breeders who specialize in one or two breeds, not a generic operation churning out whatever's trending on social media.
- Visit-able facilities. We've personally walked through the facility, met the parent dogs, seen where the puppies are raised. No "we ship from a farm somewhere" arrangements.
- Limited litter count per year. Breeders who produce a small number of litters annually, not high-volume operations.
- Health testing on parents. Genetic and orthopedic health screening on the breeding dogs, with documentation we can review.
- Vaccinations on schedule. Every puppy is current on age-appropriate vaccinations through the breeder's veterinarian, with records.
- Temperament awareness. The breeder knows each puppy individually โ which one is bold, which one is shy, which one is a snuggler. Puppies who are anxious in social settings stay home; only well-adjusted ones come to class.
- Placement standards. The breeder screens prospective families before placing puppies. No "first email gets the dog" sales.
- Lifetime return policy. The breeder will take any of their puppies back at any age, no questions asked. This is the single biggest signal of an ethical operation.
- References we can call. Past buyers, vets, other partners โ verifiable.
Any breeder who can't check every one of those boxes doesn't get to partner with Pawty Yoga. We've turned down breeders who failed even one criterion.
What this looks like in practice
For a typical Pawty Yoga session:
- Our breeder partner identifies 6โ10 puppies in the right developmental window who have shown comfort in social environments.
- The puppies arrive at the studio about 30 minutes before class with the breeder or a trusted handler.
- They participate in the 75-minute session with handlers present at all times.
- After class, they return to the breeder's care to rest and continue their pre-placement socialization. Within a few weeks, they go home with their permanent families.
- If a guest at our class falls in love with one of the puppies and would be a good fit, we'll connect them with the breeder. The breeder runs the placement process directly using their normal screening โ we don't broker.
The questions you can ask any puppy yoga class
Whether you're booking with us or anyone else, these are the questions worth asking before you click "buy ticket":
- Where do the puppies come from? The answer should be specific and named. "A breeder we work with" without a name is a red flag. "We rotate puppies from various sources" is a bigger one.
- Are the puppies vaccinated? Should be unambiguous yes, with records available on request.
- Has the operator visited the facility in person? "Yes, recently" is the right answer. "We rely on the breeder's certification" isn't enough.
- How big is the group? Anything above 25 humans starts compromising the experience for the puppies.
- What happens to a puppy that gets stressed mid-class? The right answer is "we have a quiet zone they can retreat to and a handler watching for stress signals." The wrong answer is silence.
- Is the breeder operating at high volume? Ethical breeders produce few litters per year. If a partner is supplying puppies week after week without rotation, that's a sign of a high-volume operation.
What we won't do
- We don't partner with high-volume breeders, puppy mills, or pet store suppliers.
- We don't accept puppies whose parents haven't been health-tested.
- We don't run back-to-back sessions with the same puppies. They get one session, then rest.
- We don't take on more than 20 guests per public session.
- We don't allow alcohol during class.
- We don't oversell tickets. "20 max" means 20 max.
The rescue-vs-breeder debate, briefly
You'll see plenty of opinions online about whether puppy yoga should source from rescues or breeders. We've thought hard about it and come down on the breeder side for one main reason: the puppy yoga setting requires known health, known temperament, known vaccination history, and an experienced handler who can pull a puppy if it gets stressed. Ethical breeders are positioned to provide all of that as a baseline. Rescue puppies, however well-intentioned the placement, often don't have complete health records โ and a puppy yoga class isn't the right setting to manage that uncertainty.
It's not anti-rescue. We support rescue work generally and admire the operators who do it well. For our specific format โ a small, intimate, screened class โ we've concluded that working with ethical breeders is the responsible choice. Different operators may reach different conclusions; what matters is that the choice is intentional and held to a high standard either way.
Have a specific question about our breeder partners?
Email [email protected]. We're happy to share specifics with anyone who wants to know more before booking.
๐๏ธ Or book a sessionThe shortest version
Our puppy partners are vetted, ethical breeders we've personally evaluated. We hold them to a clear standard. We turn down breeders who don't meet it. The puppies in your class are healthy, screened, and exactly where they should be developmentally. That's the whole story.