50 dog walkers available in Nottingham
| Service | Typical range (GBP) |
|---|---|
| 30-minute solo walk | £11–£15 |
| 60-minute solo walk | £18–£22 |
| Group walk | £8–£12 |
| Drop-in visit | £10–£14 |
| Overnight sit | £28–£50 |
Rates in GBP. Nottingham sits a little below the UK norm at about £11–£15 for a 30-minute walk (Rover's Nottingham median is around £12), with an hour typically £18–£22. Five walks a week runs roughly £60–£75/week (about £250–£320/month); a solo drop-in visit is about £10–£14 and overnight care £28–£50. Prices are estimates and vary by area, dog size, and whether it is a solo or group walk. SnoutWalker takes zero commission, so the walker keeps 100%.
Never book a walker who won't meet your dog first. A good walker wants the meet-and-greet — it's how they check your dog is a fit for them, too. Watch how they say hello: do they crouch and let the dog come to them, or loom over and reach straight for the head? The first is a professional; the second just likes dogs.
They ask you more than you ask them — recall, triggers, medical history, what they'd do if an off-lead dog runs up. Photo updates unasked. Clear on cancellation and rates. They say no to dogs they can't safely handle.
Vague about what happens when something goes wrong. No insurance. No written agreement. Won't say which other dogs are in the group. Cash-only with no records. Takes any dog, any size, no questions. Prices far below everyone with no explanation.
Your dog's microchip number and registry (microchipping is a legal requirement in the UK), your vet's details, current photos, and a second emergency contact who isn't you. A collar ID tag with your name and address is required by law in public. If a walker doesn't ask for these, ask yourself why.
There is no dog licence in England, but microchipping is compulsory across the whole UK: every dog must be chipped by 8 weeks old with the keeper's details kept current, or face a notice to chip within 21 days and a fine up to £500. In public your dog must wear a collar with the owner's name and address under the Control of Dogs Order 1992.
Nottingham City Council runs four dog PSPOs: dogs on leads in certain areas, dogs on leads by direction of an officer anywhere in the city, dogs exclusion from places such as play areas and nature reserves, and mandatory fouling pick-up with a duty to carry a bag or poop-scoop. Importantly, the PSPO also limits the number of dogs one person may walk at once — and this applies to professional dog walkers. At Wollaton Park keep your dog on a lead near the deer herd. Breach can be fined. [VERIFY] the exact maximum dogs-per-walker figure and the fixed-penalty amount against the council's sealed orders.
In England it is a criminal offence under the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 (section 3) to let a dog be dangerously out of control anywhere, and the law applies to the owner AND any person in charge of the dog — so a walker or sitter is directly liable. Civil claims run under the Animals Act 1971, and certain breeds including the XL Bully are banned or restricted. For walkers, their own public liability insurance is non-negotiable. (See the England law tab.)
Nottingham's East Midlands climate is mild but wet, gently rolling, with the River Trent curving along the south of the city.
A walker who talks fluently about mud, Trent flooding, and Wollaton's deer is a Nottingham walker.
In England & Wales the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 (section 3) makes it a CRIMINAL offence to let a dog be dangerously out of control anywhere — and it bites the owner AND any person in charge of the dog at the time, so a walker or sitter is directly on the hook.
These state-level rules apply across England; the local rules that govern day-to-day walking are on the Local bylaws tab.
Under section 3 of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 it is a criminal offence to allow a dog to be dangerously out of control in ANY place — public or private, including a private home. Crucially, the offence is committed by the owner AND, if different, by any person who is for the time being in charge of the dog — so a walker, sitter or handler is directly liable, not just the owner. 'Dangerously out of control' means there are reasonable grounds to apprehend the dog will injure someone — the dog does not have to bite. It becomes an aggravated offence if the dog injures a person (or an assistance dog). Penalties are serious: up to 6 months (magistrates) for the basic offence and up to 5 years' imprisonment on indictment where a person is injured (life where a death results), an unlimited fine, plus destruction and disqualification orders. An owner may have a defence if they left the dog with someone they reasonably believed a fit and proper person to be in charge of it — which puts the exposure squarely on the person handling the dog.
Section 1 of the Act prohibits four types outright — the Pit Bull Terrier, Japanese Tosa, Dogo Argentino and Fila Brasileiro — with type judged by how the dog looks, not its breed name or paperwork. The American XL Bully was added in England & Wales: from 31 December 2023 it had to be microchipped and kept muzzled and on a lead in public, and from 1 February 2024 it became illegal to own one without a Certificate of Exemption (owners had until 31 January 2024 to apply). An exempt XL Bully must be neutered, microchipped, kept muzzled and on a lead in public at all times, and kept securely so it cannot escape. Owning a prohibited dog without an exemption is a criminal offence. This is walker-critical: never take on a dog that may be a banned type or a non-exempt or non-compliant XL Bully.
Separate from the criminal law, the Animals Act 1971 (section 2) is the main civil compensation route. A dog is a non-dangerous species, so it falls under section 2(2): the keeper can face strict liability (no need to prove negligence) where a three-part test is met — the damage was of a kind the dog was likely to cause or likely to be severe, that likelihood was due to characteristics not normal for the species except in particular circumstances, and those characteristics were known to the keeper. A person can be a keeper even without control at the moment of the incident, and there can be more than one keeper. Ordinary negligence claims also run alongside. This is the (non-criminal) route by which an injured person recovers damages.
Microchipping has been compulsory in England since 6 April 2016 (dogs from 8 weeks; keep registered details current — non-compliance can bring a fine up to £500). Under the Control of Dogs Order 1992, a dog on a public highway or public place must wear a collar bearing the owner's name and address — the ID tag is a legal requirement in addition to the chip. There is no blanket national leash law, but councils issue Public Spaces Protection Orders (PSPOs) that can require dogs on leads in specified areas, exclude dogs from places (playgrounds, marked beaches seasonally), require picking up mess, and — critically for walkers — limit the number of dogs one person may walk (often a cap of around four). Breaches draw a Fixed Penalty Notice (commonly £100) or prosecution. PSPOs vary by council, so the rules change from area to area. (This layer covers England & Wales, which share this law; Scotland and Northern Ireland differ.)
A 30-minute walk in Nottingham typically runs about £11 to £15, with a Rover median near £12; an hour is roughly £18 to £22. Five walks a week works out to about £60 to £75 per week, or £250 to £320 per month. Group walks cost less per dog, while solo walks for large or reactive dogs cost more. These are estimates and vary by neighbourhood and by walker.
There is no dog licence in England, but microchipping is a legal requirement across the whole UK: every dog must be chipped by eight weeks old and the keeper's details kept up to date on an approved database, or you can be ordered to chip within 21 days and fined up to £500. Your dog must also wear a collar with the owner's name and address on it in a public place under the Control of Dogs Order 1992. Keeping the microchip registry current is what reunites a lost dog with you.
Nottingham City Council runs four dog Public Spaces Protection Orders: dogs on leads in certain areas, dogs on leads by direction of an officer anywhere in the city, dogs excluded from places like play areas and nature reserves, and mandatory fouling pick-up with a requirement to carry a bag or poop-scoop. Crucially, Nottingham's PSPO also limits the number of dogs one person may walk at once, and this applies to professional dog walkers. At Wollaton Park keep your dog on a lead near the deer herd. Breaching a PSPO can be fined. [VERIFY] the exact maximum dogs-per-walker figure and the fixed-penalty amount against the council's sealed orders.
Yes to both. In England it is a criminal offence under the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 section 3 to let a dog be dangerously out of control anywhere, and the law applies to the owner and to any person in charge of the dog, so a walker or sitter is directly liable while your dog is with them. Civil compensation claims run under the Animals Act 1971, and certain breeds including the XL Bully are banned or restricted. This is why a professional walker should carry their own public liability insurance.
Popular off-lead spaces include Wollaton Park, a grand deer park around Wollaton Hall (keep your dog on a lead near the deer herd), Bestwood Country Park with its woodland and heath trails, and Colwick Country Park by the River Trent with lakes and open grass. Always check for on-lead signs, keep close control near the Trent, and remember Nottingham's PSPO limits how many dogs one person may walk at once.
Ask whether they carry public liability insurance, whether they hold canine first aid training, how many dogs yours would be walked with (Nottingham's PSPO caps the number one person may walk), what they would do if your dog slipped its lead near the Wollaton deer, and how they handle house keys. Because a person in charge of a dog is legally liable under the Dangerous Dogs Act, insurance matters. Always arrange a meet-and-greet first and ask for two client references.
No. SnoutWalker charges zero commission. Walkers set their own rates and keep 100 percent of what they earn. Every walk is GPS-tracked and owners receive a photo report card after each walk.