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Helping an Elderly Parent Rehome a Yorkie

You are watching a parent struggle — with mobility, with memory, with the daily care a Yorkie needs — and you know something has to change. Supporting an ageing parent through the decision to rehome their Yorkie is one of the most emotionally complex situations a family can face. SA Yorkie Rescue understands this. You will not be judged. You are doing the right thing by seeking help.

Need to rehome a parent's Yorkie?

Complete the surrender form with as much detail as possible about the situation. Include the owner's circumstances (frail care, illness, passing), the Yorkie's age and health, and who is managing the process.

This is one of the hardest conversations a family can have

That Yorkie may have been your parent's companion for years. The dog may be the one constant through illness, loss of independence, and the slow erosion of what life used to look like. Asking a parent to consider rehoming feels like asking them to give up a piece of themselves.

But there are moments when the kindest thing — for both your parent and the dog — is to acknowledge that the situation is no longer working. If your parent:

  • Cannot walk the dog safely anymore
  • Forgets to feed, medicate, or let the dog out
  • Has fallen while trying to care for the dog
  • Is entering frail care, assisted living, or a retirement home that does not allow pets
  • Has passed away and the dog needs urgent placement

Then reaching out for structured help is not betrayal. It is love — for both your parent and the dog they care about.

Common situations SAYR helps with

Parent entering frail care or a retirement homeMost care facilities in South Africa do not allow pets. The dog cannot go with them, and the family cannot always take the dog in.
Parent's health decliningMobility issues, dementia, or chronic illness mean the parent can no longer provide the daily care a Yorkie needs.
Parent has passed awayThe family is managing the estate and needs to find a safe home for the dog — often urgently, and often while grieving.
Parent is resistant but the situation is unsafeThis is the hardest scenario. The parent loves the dog deeply but cannot see the risk. The family has to make the call.

How to approach the conversation with your parent

If your parent is still able to participate in the decision:

  • Start with love, not logistics. “We want what is best for Bella — and for you.” Not “You cannot look after her anymore.”
  • Frame it as planning, not giving up. “Let us make sure Bella is looked after no matter what happens.”
  • Involve them in the process where possible. Let them share what kind of home they hope the dog will find. Their voice matters.
  • Do not make promises you cannot keep. Do not say “we will take the dog” unless you genuinely can — for the dog's whole life. Temporary arrangements that collapse within months are harder on everyone.
  • Acknowledge the grief. This is a real loss. Treat it as one.

How SAYR helps

1
Complete the form with full context

Tell SAYR about the situation: the parent's circumstances, the Yorkie's age, health, temperament, and whether the dog has been well cared for recently.

2
Sensitive triage

The team understands these cases are emotionally complex. Senior dogs from elderly owners are assessed carefully — age is not a barrier to acceptance.

3
Foster placement

Your parent's Yorkie goes to a calm, experienced foster home — never a kennel. The foster family understands the dog may be grieving or confused.

4
Gentle adoption matching

Matching focuses on finding a stable, quiet home that suits an older or possibly anxious dog — not rushing to place the dog with the first applicant.

Why SAYR is the right path for elderly-owner cases

Experienced with senior dogsSAYR regularly places older Yorkies into suitable homes. Age is never a reason to refuse help.
Compassionate, not clinicalThe team understands these are family situations, not just dog placements. You will be treated with respect and empathy.
Free and confidentialNo charge. No judgement. Your family's privacy is protected.
No kennelsA senior Yorkie who has lost their owner does not need a cage. They need a quiet foster home where someone understands what they have been through.

Frequently asked questions

My parent has passed away and the dog needs placement now. Can you help?

Yes. These are treated as urgent welfare cases. Complete the form, WhatsApp to flag the urgency, and include details about the dog and who has temporary custody. See the urgent rehoming page.

Will you take an older Yorkie — 10, 12, 14 years old?

Yes. Senior dogs are assessed carefully but age alone does not prevent SAYR from helping. Be honest about health, mobility, and any medical conditions so the team can find an appropriate foster home.

My parent does not want to give up the dog but I am worried about safety.

This is incredibly difficult. Contact SAYR to discuss the situation. The team can advise on whether temporary foster care might be an option while the family works through the decision with your parent.

Can SAYR collect the dog from a care facility or hospital?

Transport arrangements depend on location and volunteer availability. Mention in the form exactly where the dog is and whether you can assist with transport.

You are doing the right thing — for your parent and for their dog

This is not failure. It is care. Complete the surrender form and let SAYR help you find the safest, kindest path forward for the Yorkie your parent loves.