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May is National Chip Your Pet Month. Here’s how low-income residents can get pets chipped

Volunteers Maria McMillion (left) and Kathy Newschwander, both of Tacoma, give a bath to a newly arrived stray dog at the Humane Society for Tacoma & Pierce County in Tacoma, Washington, on Wednesday, July 7, 2021.
Volunteers Maria McMillion (left) and Kathy Newschwander, both of Tacoma, give a bath to a newly arrived stray dog at the Humane Society for Tacoma & Pierce County in Tacoma, Washington, on Wednesday, July 7, 2021. toverman@theolympian.com

If you’re looking to ease your fear and anxiety about your pet potentially getting lost, then you might want to consider microchipping.

Chip Your Pet Month is celebrated every May and is meant to encourage microchipping so pets can be quickly found and reunited with their owners if they go missing, according to National Today.

About 10 million pets are lost in America every year, according to Animal Humane.

Lindsey Heaney, The Humane Society for Tacoma & Pierce County director of communications and outreach, said in an interview that microchipping your pet is an important preventative tool and encourages all pet parents to chip their pets.

“We see this often at our shelter where an animal comes to us that was found and thankfully when we scan it, they have a microchip and it’s updated with the most up-to-date information and we’re able to reunite that pet with their family, so it keeps that pet out of the shelter,” Heaney said.

The process of microchipping your pet is quick and painless and only needs to be done once in a pet’s lifetime.

Heaney explained that the microchip is about the size of a grain of rice and is placed beneath the pet’s skin, usually between the shoulders using a needle.

“There’s no medical care that needs to be done or anything like that,” Heaney said. “It’s very, very quick, just like a getting a vaccine for your pet.”

Where can you get microchipping?

The HSTPC offers pet microchips to low-income residents for $25 which includes national registration. No appointment is necessary and the shelter can do this procedure seven days a week during business hours.

Heaney said that the shelter can only offer this procedure to residents that can self-attest as a low-income resident. Most veterinary clinics offer microchips for pets.

The following veterinary hospitals offer microchips for pets:

    If you are taking your pet to a new veterinary hospital, your pet may need to undergo a general exam before being chipped. Prices for exams vary depending on the veterinarian hospital.

    This story was originally published May 3, 2024 at 5:00 AM.

    Rosemary Montalvo
    The News Tribune
    Rosemary Montalvo was previously a service journalism reporter based in Tacoma, WA. She started as a summer news intern after graduating from California State University, Fullerton in May 2023. She has also worked as the photo editor and reporter for her university’s student-run newspaper. She was born in Inglewood, California.
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