Apartments That Allow Large Dogs: Renting With a Big Dog
For owners of large dogs, the weight limit is the biggest obstacle in the rental market, but pet-inclusive communities remove it entirely.
For owners of large dogs, the weight limit is the biggest obstacle in the rental market. Many buildings welcome pets but cap dogs at 25, 35, or 50 pounds, which quietly excludes labs, shepherds, and most other big breeds. Finding an apartment that allows large dogs is really a search for buildings with no weight limit, and pet-inclusive communities are the most reliable place to find them. This guide covers where to look, what to confirm, and how to get approved with a big dog.
Screen out the weight caps first, and the rest of the search, budget, location, amenities, gets much simpler.
Why apartments set weight limits
Weight limits in housing are largely a proxy for perceived risk and, in some cases, a reflection of landlord insurance. The assumption is that a bigger dog means more wear, more noise, or more liability, even though a well-trained large dog is often a calmer tenant than a small, anxious one. Pet-inclusive buildings reject the premise and drop the limit entirely, which is why they are the best starting point. For a big-dog owner, the practical approach is to apply only where the policy states no weight limit, rather than trying to argue an exception.
What to check before you apply
- Weight limit: many buildings cap dogs at 25 to 50 pounds; pet-inclusive buildings usually have none.
- Breed restrictions: some buildings ban specific breeds; confirm your dog is not on the list.
- Number of pets: buildings often allow one or two; confirm if you have more.
- Pet fees and rent: get the deposit, monthly pet rent, and one-time fee in writing.
- Amenities: a dog park, washing station, or nearby green space makes daily life far easier.
How pet costs work in rentals
Pet costs in rental housing come in a few forms, and they are often confused for one another. Knowing the difference helps you compare buildings fairly and spot which ones are genuinely affordable for a pet owner.
Add these up over a full lease before comparing buildings. A property with low rent but high monthly pet rent can cost more over a year than one with a single upfront fee, so run the yearlong math rather than reacting to the headline numbers.
| Charge | What it is |
|---|---|
| Pet deposit | A refundable amount held against pet-related damage, returned at move-out if none occurs. |
| Monthly pet rent | A recurring charge added to rent each month, commonly 25 to 75 dollars per pet. |
| One-time pet fee | A non-refundable charge paid once at move-in, often 200 to 500 dollars. |
| Pet screening fee | A small fee some buildings charge to review a pet profile or application. |
How to get approved with a large dog
A pet resume does real work here. Include your dog's weight, breed, and age; proof of vaccinations and spay or neuter; and references from a previous landlord and your veterinarian confirming the dog is well-behaved and house-trained. Offer to introduce the dog to the leasing office in person, since a calm, friendly meeting reassures a manager far more than any form. Under the Fair Housing Act, a large dog that is a trained service animal or an emotional support animal is not a pet and is generally exempt from weight limits, though documentation rules apply.
Where to look for big-dog-friendly rentals
- Pet-inclusive buildings, which typically have no weight limit at all.
- Townhomes and ground-floor units, which suit large dogs and simplify walks.
- Buildings with on-site dog runs, a sign large dogs are genuinely welcome.
- Directories that let you filter by weight policy, so you skip the caps.
Questions to ask before you sign
Confirm these with the leasing office before you commit, and get the answers in writing on the lease or an addendum:
- What is the pet deposit, and is it refundable?
- Is there monthly pet rent, and how much per pet?
- Is there a one-time pet fee, and what does it cover?
- Is there a weight limit, breed restriction, or cap on the number of pets?
- Are there pet amenities on site, such as a dog park or washing station?
- What is the policy on assistance animals, which are not pets under federal law?
Daily life with a pet in your building
Where and how you live shapes daily life with a pet as much as the lease terms. Prioritize a unit with quick access to the outdoors, since a short, pleasant route to grass matters more every day than a distant amenity. A ground-floor apartment or a building with fast elevators makes early-morning and late-night walks far easier, especially with a large dog or a young puppy still learning. Look for nearby sidewalks, a park or trail within a short walk, and proximity to a veterinarian and a pet supply store. Consider noise and foot traffic if your pet is anxious. The building that fits your pet's daily rhythm will feel like home far faster than one chosen on rent alone.
Common mistakes renters make with pets
A few mistakes trip up pet owners again and again in the rental market. The biggest is hiding a pet or a breed to get approved, which can void a lease and lead to eviction, so honesty always wins. Another is comparing buildings on headline rent while ignoring pet rent, which can quietly make the cheaper-looking unit the more expensive one over a year. Many renters also skip getting the pet policy in writing, then find the verbal promise does not hold. Others overlook the daily walking route, choosing a building that looks great but has nowhere pleasant to walk. And some forget that assistance animals are not pets under federal law, and pay fees they do not owe. Avoid these and the search gets much easier.
Budgeting for a pet over the full lease
The true cost of a pet in a rental is easy to underestimate, because the charges are spread across different lines. Before you sign, add every pet-related cost over the full lease: the one-time fee, twelve months of pet rent, and any non-refundable amount, treating the refundable deposit separately as a cash-flow item rather than a true cost. A building advertising low rent can end up more expensive than a pricier one once high monthly pet rent is included. Factor in the everyday costs too, food, grooming, and routine vet care, and set aside a small emergency fund for unexpected health issues. Budgeting for the whole picture prevents the slow squeeze that catches renters who only looked at the deposit.
Renters insurance and your pet
Many buildings ask tenants with pets to carry renters insurance that includes animal-liability coverage, and it is worth understanding before you sign. A standard renters policy sometimes covers dog-related liability, but some insurers exclude certain breeds or cap the payout, so read the policy and confirm your dog is covered. Carrying appropriate coverage protects you if your pet ever injures someone or damages property, and it reassures a landlord, which can strengthen a rental application. Ask the leasing office exactly what coverage they require, get any pet-related requirement in writing, and review the policy each year, updating it whenever you add a pet or move to a new home. It is a small cost that prevents a large problem.
Touring a building with your pet in mind
A tour tells you things a listing cannot, so walk the property with your pet's daily life in mind. Check the actual route from your unit to the nearest grass, and time it, since a long trek gets old fast in bad weather. Look at the condition of any dog park or washing station, whether waste stations are stocked, and how other residents' pets seem in the halls. Notice the flooring, since hard surfaces handle pets better than carpet, and ask about noise between units if your pet barks. If you can, visit at the hour you would normally walk, so you see the real foot traffic. What you observe on a tour often matters more than the amenity list.
Talking to the leasing office
How you handle the leasing conversation can decide a close application. Be upfront about your pet's breed, size, and age, and volunteer your pet resume rather than waiting to be asked, since transparency builds trust. Ask for the pet policy and any fees in writing, and confirm how assistance animals are handled, since those are not pets under federal law. If your pet is well-behaved, offer an in-person introduction, which reassures a manager more than any form. And read the pet addendum carefully before signing, because that document, not a friendly verbal assurance, is what governs your tenancy. A clear, honest conversation now prevents disputes later.
Preparing for move-in day with a pet
Move-in day is chaotic, and it is the moment pets are most likely to bolt through a propped-open door, so plan for it. Before the movers arrive, set aside a quiet room or a crate for your pet with water, a bed, and a familiar toy, and put a sign on the door so no one lets it out. Keep your pet's ID tag and microchip details current in case it does slip away. Once the boxes are in, set up your pet's corner first so it has an immediate safe base amid the mess. Introduce the new apartment gradually, one room at a time for a cat, and keep a dog leashed on its first walks until it learns the building and the route outside.
Being a good pet-owning neighbor
Keeping the peace with neighbors protects both your tenancy and the building's pet policy for everyone. Manage barking, since noise complaints are the most common source of pet disputes, and address it early with exercise, training, or help from a professional if needed. Keep your dog leashed in shared spaces, yield to neighbors who may be nervous around animals, and always clean up in common areas and around the grounds. Do not let your pet greet others without asking first. If your building has pet amenities, follow the posted rules and clean up after each use. A considerate pet owner keeps management on the side of pets, which benefits every resident with an animal.
The bottom line
With a large dog, the weight limit decides the search. Filter for pet-inclusive buildings with no weight limit, confirm the policy in writing, and come prepared with a pet resume and references. And remember that a trained service or support animal is not subject to pet weight limits under federal law.
Fuentes
- PetsVivo Compass directory
- Apartments.com pet-friendly search
- HUD assistance animals notice (FHEO-2020-01)
- HUD Fair Housing Act overview
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FAQ Frequently Asked Questions
Filter for pet-inclusive buildings, which typically have no weight limit, and confirm the policy in writing. PetsVivo Compass lets you filter by weight policy.
Often 25 to 50 pounds in pet-friendly buildings. Pet-inclusive buildings usually remove the limit entirely.
No. Under the Fair Housing Act, a service animal or emotional support animal is not a pet and is generally exempt from weight and breed limits, subject to documentation rules.
Bring a pet resume with vaccination records, references, and proof of training, and offer an in-person introduction with the leasing office.
The pet rent and deposit are usually the same regardless of size, but confirm with each building. Add the costs up over the full lease.
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