📊 Real data — every figure on this page comes from Maryland Dept. of Agriculture Annual Shelter Statistics (dogs only, CY2021–2025), with a source link on each year. Generated from the barkhood database. 📑 View the pitch deck (PDF) →
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Dog shelter outcomes · DMV · Maryland

Montgomery County, Maryland

A well-resourced metro county on the demand side of the DMV — strong adoption capacity, low intake per resident. Here is how its dogs actually fared, in the open.

93.4%dog live-release rate (2025)
✓ no-killabove the 90% benchmark, every year
2.0dogs taken in per 1,000 residents
1reporting shelter (1/1 complete)

The headline · 2025

93.4%

live-release rate — of every dog whose outcome was decided, 93.4% left the shelter alive (adopted, returned to owner, or transferred to rescue).

EXACT rate Maryland reports owner-requested euthanasia separately, so this is a measured Asilomar rate — not a floor. Owner-requested euthanasia (end-of-life / medical, at the family’s request) is excluded, the way the field standard does.

The trend · 2021 → 2025

Above the no-kill line, every year.

100% 90% · no-kill 85% 92.590.892.192.393.4 20212022202320242025

Where the dogs went · 2025

2,202 outcomes decided. Here is every one.

The live-release rate is one number; transparency means showing the whole denominator — including the deaths, separated honestly by kind.

2,202 outcomes decided 1,863 left alive  ·  339 did not
1,863 left alive  ·  live-release rate 93.4% 339 did not 921Adopted · 42%715Returned · 32%227207127
921Adopted42%
715Returned to owner32%
227Transferred to rescue10%
207Owner-requested euthanasia — mercy/medical, excluded from the rate9%
127Capacity / behavioral euthanasia — the number that counts against the shelter6%
5Died in care — a medical signal, not a choice0.2%

Bar width is proportional to count, out of 2,202 decided outcomes. 85% left alive; the headline 93.4% live-release rate is higher because the 207 owner-requested euthanasias (mercy cases) are set aside from the denominator, per the Asilomar standard.

By shelter · every reporting year

Montgomery County Department of Animal Services

Each row links to the state source.

YearDog intakeLive outcomesOwner-req. euth.Other euth.Live-releaseBasisSource
20252,1761,86320712793.4%exactMD Ag PDF
20242,1171,73424914092.3%exactMD Ag PDF
20232,2381,82821614892.1%exactMD Ag PDF
20221,8891,51719315190.8%exactMD Ag PDF
20211,6751,39615211292.5%exactMD Ag PDF

Live-release rate = (adopted + returned to owner + transferred out) ÷ (live outcomes + non-owner euthanasia + died in care). Owner-requested euthanasia is excluded (Asilomar / Shelter Animals Count standard). Dogs only.

A demand-side county. Montgomery County takes in roughly 2.0 dogs per 1,000 residents — far below the rural rate of 20–70 — and places nearly all of them. That's the metro half of barkhood's thesis: well-resourced suburbs have adoption capacity to spare while under-resourced rural counties euthanize for lack of it. Counties like this one are where dogs from the strained counties can go. See the full DMV picture →

Methodology · the glass wall

What's measured

  • Dogs only. barkhood is a dog-handling service; cats and other species are out of scope.
  • Source: Maryland Dept. of Agriculture Annual Shelter Statistics, the mandatory state record — linked per row.
  • Completeness 1/1: 1/1 of the county’s reporting facilities filed in 2025; gaps are shown, not guessed.

Why this rate is honest

  • Owner-requested euthanasia is separated — Maryland records it apart from capacity euthanasia, so the rate isn’t inflated downward by mercy cases. That’s why it reads exact, not a floor.
  • Deaths are shown, not hidden — the denominator and every euthanasia number are on the page.
  • Per-capita intake uses U.S. Census 2025 county population (1,074,582).