About Pets Dad
The small things your pet does — we notice them too.
Some dogs circle three times before they settle. Some cats won't drink from a still bowl. Some pets spend the whole afternoon hunting for the one cool tile in the house. We started Pets Dad because we kept noticing those small signals — and couldn't find a store that took them seriously.
Most pet gear is either overpriced “premium” or cheap marketplace filler that falls apart in a couple of months. We wanted the bit in between: well-made, fairly priced, and honest about what it is. So we built it.
A small range, chosen with care
We don't carry a thousand products. We carry the ones we'd want for our own animals — beds an anxious pet can sink into, fountains that actually keep water fresh, mats that stay cool on a hot afternoon. Every product earns its place by doing one thing well: helping a pet feel more settled.
If something doesn't pass that test, it doesn't go on the site. We'd rather keep a short, honest catalog than a long one full of filler.
Ships from the U.S.
Your order ships from a U.S. warehouse, so it arrives in days — not the two-to-four weeks you wait on overseas stores. You'll get a tracking number the moment it leaves, and we keep you posted along the way. No guessing, no fine print.
What calm means to us
Everything here is built around one idea: a settled pet is a happy pet, and a calm pet makes for a calmer home. The raised-rim bed your dog finally stops circling in. The fountain a fussy cat actually drinks from. Calm isn't just a mood — it's what good gear quietly produces. That's the through-line of everything we carry.
Our promise
Every order is backed by a 30-day comfort guarantee. If a product isn't right for your pet, send it back — no guilt, no runaround. We'd rather lose the sale than have an unhappy animal in your home.
And if you're ever unsure — whether something suits your dog, which size to pick, how to set it up — email us at contact@petsdad.com. You'll get a straight answer from a real person, including an honest “this probably isn't the right fit” when that's the truth.