Pet Sitting License and Insurance in North Dakota
North Dakota pet sitters should start with Secretary of State business registration and then check each city served. Fargo, West Fargo, Grand Forks, Bismarck, and Minot show the local pattern: dog or pet licenses often apply by age threshold and require proof of current rabies vaccination. For pet sitting, the key distinction is whether the service is in the client's home or whether pets are boarded, transported, groomed, or kept for daycare. North Dakota sitters should verify the local business layer, then build intake around rabies records, pet registration where it applies, keys, access, medication, and emergency contacts.
The checks to run first
Most independent pet sitters should separate four questions: business registration, local license or tax receipt, animal-care rules, and insurance. In-home drop-ins and overnights may be treated differently from boarding, daycare, transport, grooming, kennel services, or keeping pets at your own home.
- North Dakota business setup starts through the Secretary of State.
- City pet-license rules can apply to dogs and cats where local rules include cats and cats at six months or older.
- Current rabies vaccination proof is a recurring local licensing document.
- Boarding, daycare, grooming, transport, or keeping pets at the sitter's home can trigger different rules than in-home drop-ins and overnights.
Official sources to use
| Source | How to use it |
|---|---|
| North Dakota Secretary of State: Start a Business | North Dakota provides official guidance for planning and starting a business. |
| North Dakota Department of Agriculture: Dogs, Cats and Ferrets | North Dakota requires dogs, cats, and ferrets over 12 weeks entering the state to have current rabies vaccination documentation. |
| Fargo Pet Licensing | Fargo requires a copy of the animal's current rabies vaccination form for pet licensing. |
| Grand Forks Dog and Cat Licensing | Grand Forks requires cats and dogs six months or older in the city to be licensed and asks for proof of current rabies vaccination. |
Insurance and intake
Insurance is not just a checkbox for landlords or clients. A professional sitter should ask about general liability, care/custody/control coverage, bonding, and commercial auto if driving client pets. The policy should match the actual service: cat visits, dog drop-ins, overnights, house sitting, transport, boarding, and employee or contractor help are not the same risk profile.
Client intake should ask for rabies status where relevant, local license or tag information, vet contact, emergency contact, medication notes, bite history, litter and feeding instructions, home access, alarm codes, plant or mail expectations, and route limits. That paperwork also makes outreach stronger because you can say exactly how you handle safety and home-care boundaries.
Local checks still matter
This state guide is the starting point. Before taking clients, verify the city or county where the sitter actually operates, then use the DogWalkr local guides for nearby market examples.
FAQ
Usually the first checks are business registration, city or county licensing, local animal rules, and insurance. Boarding, daycare, grooming, transport, or keeping pets at your home can trigger additional requirements.
General liability, care/custody/control coverage, bonding, and commercial auto are common places to start. Confirm details with a licensed insurance professional.
Yes. Rabies vaccination, local license or tag status when relevant, vet contact, emergency contact, medication, access instructions, and home-care boundaries belong in professional intake.