0 dog walkers available in Edmond
| Service | Typical range (USD) |
|---|---|
| 30-minute solo walk | $15–$22 |
| 60-minute solo walk | $28–$34 |
| Group walk | $11–$16 |
| Drop-in visit | $17–$22 |
| Overnight sit | $36–$70 |
Rates exclude tax. Edmond is an affordable but slightly higher-end OKC-suburb market — about $18 for a 30-minute walk, near the US national average (~$21.45), with the affluent north-metro neighborhoods pulling rates up a touch. An hour runs about $30, five walks a week about $92/week (~$369/month), and full-day daycare about $32 (estimates anchored to regional Rover/Care.com data). Book someone near your area (downtown Edmond, Oak Tree, the far east, the OKC edge). Solo walks cost more than group. SnoutWalker takes zero commission, so the walker keeps 100%.
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.
Edmond requires dogs to be licensed and currently vaccinated against rabies, under Title 7 (Animals) of the municipal code, handled by Edmond Animal Services (part of the Edmond Police Department). Dogs generally must be licensed once they reach a few months of age. Rabies vaccination is mandatory under Oklahoma law. [VERIFY] the current license fee with Edmond Animal Services before publish.
Under Title 7 of the Edmond municipal code, a dog must be leashed and under control when off the owner's property, off-leash only in a designated dog park. [VERIFY] the current at-large fine on the municipal code before relying on an amount.
Oklahoma is a strict-liability state: under 4 O.S. § 42.1, a dog's owner is liable for a bite when the victim was in a place they had a lawful right to be and did not provoke the dog, regardless of the dog's history — so lawful presence and control decide. A leash-ordinance violation is also negligence. (See the Oklahoma law tab.)
Dogs must be currently vaccinated.
Edmond, on Oklahoma City's affluent north edge, sits in the heart of Tornado Alley, and weather is the defining walking factor.
A walker who talks fluently about tornado-season sky-watching, triple-digit summers, and ice days is an Edmond walker.
Oklahoma is a strict-liability state — but with a curious geographic carve-out: the strict-liability statute doesn't apply in rural areas or any town without US mail delivery.
These state-level rules apply across Oklahoma; the local rules that govern day-to-day walking are on the Local bylaws tab.
Oklahoma (4 O.S. § 42.1) is strict liability: the owner is liable for the full amount of damages when the dog, without provocation, bites or injures a person who is lawfully in a public or private place — no prior-knowledge or one-bite defense. Because it says bites or injures, it can reach some non-bite injuries (though pure knockdowns may still route through negligence).
The Oklahoma oddity (§ 42.3): the strict-liability statute does not apply in rural areas, or in any city or town that does not have US mail delivery service. In those places a bite falls back to common-law one-bite / negligence. So Oklahoma's strict liability is effectively an urban / mail-served rule — a genuinely unusual geographic line a local page should note.
The defenses are provocation, trespass, and assumption of risk for professionals who knowingly accept the risk (vets, groomers, kennel workers), and comparative negligence can reduce recovery. The dangerous-dog law (§ 42.4, § 44) requires registration, $50,000 insurance, enclosure, and leash and muzzle off-property, with felony exposure if a known dangerous dog kills. The personal-injury limit is two years.
A 30-minute walk in Edmond typically runs about $15 to $22, averaging around $18 — near the national average of $21.45, with the affluent north-metro neighborhoods a touch higher. An hour is roughly $30; five walks a week works out to about $92 per week or $369 per month. Group walks cost less per dog. These are estimates anchored to regional data.
Yes. Edmond requires dogs to be licensed and currently vaccinated against rabies, under Title 7 of the municipal code, handled by Edmond Animal Services. Rabies vaccination is mandatory under Oklahoma law. Confirm the current license fee with Edmond Animal Services before relying on an amount.
Under Title 7 of the Edmond municipal code, a dog must be leashed and under control when off the owner's property, off-leash only in a designated dog park. Confirm the current at-large fine on the municipal code before relying on an amount.
Likely yes. Oklahoma is a strict-liability state under 4 O.S. section 42.1 — an owner is liable for a bite whenever the victim was somewhere they had a lawful right to be and did not provoke the dog, regardless of the dog's history. Leashing does not by itself remove liability; lawful presence and provocation are what decide. A leash-law violation is also treated as negligence.
The Edmond Dog Park at Bickham-Rudkin Park (379 E 33rd St) is a fenced four-acre park with a separate small-dog area, shaded seating, a double-gated entrance, and lake access for swimming. Dogs must be currently vaccinated.
Ask whether they carry liability insurance, whether they have pet first aid training, how many dogs yours would be walked with, what they would do if your dog got loose, and how they handle keys. Because Oklahoma is a strict-liability bite state, an insured, careful walker 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.
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