0 dog walkers available in Flint
| Service | Typical range (USD) |
|---|---|
| 30-minute solo walk | $14–$21 |
| 60-minute solo walk | $26–$32 |
| Group walk | $11–$15 |
| Drop-in visit | $15–$20 |
| Overnight sit | $33–$60 |
Rates exclude tax. Flint runs below the US national average (~$21.45) at about $18 for a 30-minute walk (Rover median ~$20 before Rover's service fees) — mid-Michigan is an affordable market. An hour runs about $29, five walks a week about $88/week (~$350/month). Book someone genuinely in your part of town (Carriage Town, the College and Cultural district, the east side, Grand Traverse, Flint Township next door). Solo walks cost more than group; cold, snowy winters push demand toward midday daylight. SnoutWalker takes zero commission, so the walker keeps 100%. (30-minute rate is an estimate anchored to the Rover Flint median.)
Never hire a walker who won't meet your dog before the first booking. A good walker wants this — it's how they assess whether your dog is a fit for them, too. Watch how they greet your dog: do they crouch, let the dog approach, and ignore them for a moment, or do they loom over and reach straight for the head? The first is a professional; the second just likes dogs.
They ask you more questions than you ask them — recall, triggers, medical history, what they'd do if a coyote or another dog appears. They send photo updates unasked. They're clear on cancellation policy and rates. They say no to dogs they can't handle.
Vague answers 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. Will take any dog, any size, any temperament, no questions. Prices well below everyone else with no explanation.
Your dog's microchip number and its registry, your city licence tag number, current photos, your vet's contact, and a second emergency contact who isn't you. If a walker doesn't ask for these, ask yourself why.
Flint's local rules come from the City of Flint Code of Ordinances (Chapter 9, Animals), with license and leash enforcement by Genesee County Animal Control, which serves the city and county.
Under § 9-7, it is unlawful for any person owning, keeping, harboring, or having charge of a dog to permit it to run at large within the limits of the City of Flint — off the owner's property a dog must be leashed and controlled, off-leash only inside a designated dog park. Michigan layers a statewide at-large restriction on top: the state Dog Law (MCL 287.262) makes it unlawful to allow a licensed dog to stray unless properly held in leash, with narrow exceptions for working dogs. Confirm the exact at-large fine on the Flint code before relying on a number. [VERIFY] local fine amount not confirmed to primary text.
Michigan is a strict-liability state. Under MCL 287.351, if a dog bites a person without provocation while that person is in a public place or lawfully on private property (including the owner's own property), the owner is liable regardless of the dog's prior history or the owner's knowledge of any viciousness — there is no "one free bite." A statewide leash/at-large layer (MCL 287.262) sits alongside it, so an unleashed dog can trigger both a bite claim and an at-large violation. For walkers, the takeaway is blunt: a leash does not shield you from bite liability here, so keep tight control and carry your own insurance. (See the Michigan law tab.)
Michigan requires an annual dog license; for Flint it is issued through Genesee County, and proof of current rabies vaccination is required. The county fee is roughly $10/year sterilized and $30/year unaltered, with discounted three-year options — confirm the current amount with the Genesee County Treasurer before publish. [VERIFY] fee current as of research but confirm before relying on it.
The trails along the Flint River are the classic on-leash route.
Flint sits on the Flint River in mid-Michigan — a humid-continental climate with genuine four-season contrast (roughly 17°F winter lows to low-80s°F summer highs, about 44 inches of snow a year).
A walker who talks fluently about salt burn, Flint River ice and flooding, and mud season is a Flint walker.
Michigan is a strict-liability state (MCL 287.351) and, unusually, has a statewide leash-and-license law (MCL 287.262) on top of local rules.
These state-level rules apply across Michigan; the local rules that govern day-to-day walking are on the Local bylaws tab.
Michigan is a strict-liability state. Under MCL 287.351, if a dog bites a person without provocation while that person is on public property or lawfully on private property (including the owner's own), the owner is liable for any damages — regardless of the dog's former viciousness or the owner's knowledge of it. There is no one free bite, and breed is not a defense.
Limits and defenses: strict liability applies to bites only — a dog that knocks someone down, scratches, or jumps is handled under common-law negligence (which does require showing the owner knew the dog was dangerous, Hiner v. Mojica); provocation is a defense (a proportional reaction to being teased or hit; a disproportionate response is not provoked); and the victim must be lawfully present.
Unlike most states, Michigan sets baseline rules at the state level: all dogs over 6 months old must be licensed, wear a collar with the current tag, and be appropriately leashed off the owner's property (working or training dogs excepted). Female dogs in heat must be leashed when off the premises. Local ordinances add more on top — leash-length caps (for example, Grosse Pointe caps the leash at 10 feet), fencing, signage, and microchip rules for dangerous dogs. Violating a leash law is negligence and can support liability if a bite or injury results.
Tethering (Penal Code 750.50): a tether must be at least three times the dog's body length and allow free movement. Bite reporting: under the Michigan Public Health Code, every bite must be reported to the local health department, generally within 24 hours — a duty shared by owners, physicians, and veterinarians — which triggers a rabies quarantine (typically 10 days) and creates the official record.
A court can declare a dog dangerous (MCL 287.321) if it bit or attacked a person or seriously attacked another dog without justification. A later bite by a known-dangerous dog can be a misdemeanor; one that kills or seriously injures someone can expose the owner to felony charges — up to four years, heavy fines, and possible euthanasia. Detroit specifically requires, for dangerous animals, a locked 6-ft enclosure, a muzzle and a leash no longer than 6 ft off-property, a handler 18 or older, and posted warning signage. Michigan's personal-injury limit is three years (MCL 600.5805).
A 30-minute walk in Flint typically runs about $14 to $21, averaging near $18 (the Rover Flint median is about $20 after service fees) — below the national average of $21.45. An hour is roughly $29; five walks a week works out to about $88 per week or $350 per month. Group walks cost less per dog, and independent local walkers often price below the big platforms. These are estimates.
Yes. Michigan law requires an annual dog license, issued for Flint through Genesee County. Proof of a current rabies vaccination is required. The county fee is about $10 per year for a spayed or neutered dog and about $30 for an unaltered dog, with discounted three-year options — confirm the current amount with the Genesee County Treasurer or Animal Control before relying on it.
Under City of Flint Code of Ordinances section 9-7, it is unlawful to permit a dog to run at large within the city — off the owner's property a dog must be leashed and controlled, off-leash only in a designated dog park. Michigan's statewide Dog Law (MCL 287.262) adds a parallel at-large restriction, and Genesee County Animal Control enforces license and leash laws.
Very likely yes. Michigan is a strict-liability state under MCL 287.351: if your dog bites someone without provocation while they are in a public place or lawfully on private property, you are liable regardless of whether the dog was leashed or had ever bitten before. Leashing is still essential for safety and for the separate at-large ordinance, but it does not shield you from bite liability the way it might in a one-bite state.
City of Flint off-leash options include Woodlawn Park Dog Park (fenced, with agility equipment), Farnumwood Park (a small fenced dog park), and Ballenger Park (fenced play areas with agility gear and water stations). Nearby, Flushing County Park has a large dog park divided for big and small dogs. For on-leash miles, the trails along the Flint River are the classic route.
Ask whether they carry liability insurance — Michigan's strict-liability bite law makes this matter — whether they have pet first aid training, how many dogs yours would be walked with, what they would do if your dog slipped its collar on ice, and how they handle keys. 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.
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