Quick Answer
There is no fixed national limit on how many dogs you can walk.
But that does not mean you can walk any number you choose.
Your limit depends on:
- Local council expectations
- Landowner permissions
- Insurance conditions
- Your ability to maintain control
The wrong question
Most people ask: "How many dogs am I allowed?"
The better question is: "How many dogs can I control safely?"
What determines your limit
Local councils
Some councils set guidance or limits. Check with your local authority.
Landowners
Private land often has its own rules. Always check before walking on private or managed land.
Insurance
Your policy may cap numbers. Check your policy carefully.
See the dog walking insurance article for guidance on what your policy should cover.
Your ability and experience
This is the most important factor. Experience alone does not guarantee control.
Control is everything
More dogs means:
- More variables
- More risk
- Slower response time
At some point, control drops. When control drops, trust drops.
Common mistakes
- Copying other dog walkers
- Assuming experience equals control
- Increasing numbers too quickly
Reality check
If something goes wrong, ask yourself:
- Can you intervene immediately?
- Can you manage all dogs safely?
- Can you justify your decision?
If not, your numbers are too high.
A dog walking risk assessment helps you define safe, realistic limits based on your actual setup. See the dog walking risk assessment article for guidance.
Build capacity properly, not by guesswork.
Use structured systems and guidance to define safe, realistic limits.
Summary
- No fixed national number
- Multiple factors influence limits
- Control defines your capacity
- Too many dogs leads to loss of trust
Part of a larger guide
This article is a supporting piece for the full pillar guide on dog home boarding in England.
Read the full guide: Dog Walking Business (UK): Legal, Safety, Trust and How to Do It Properly