0 dog walkers available in Clarksville
| Service | Typical range (USD) |
|---|---|
| 30-minute solo walk | $15–$21 |
| 60-minute solo walk | $28–$30 |
| Group walk | $11–$16 |
| Drop-in visit | $18–$20 |
| Overnight sit | $38–$72 |
Rates exclude tax. Clarksville — northwest of Nashville at the Kentucky line, next to Fort Campbell — is an affordable, fast-growing market below the US national average (~$21.45) at about $18 for a 30-minute walk. An hour runs about $29, five walks a week about $88/week (~$352/month), and full-day daycare about $31. Military demand from Fort Campbell and the 101st Airborne (deployment and PCS cycles) is a defining factor. What moves the price: solo vs group, walk length, your dog, neighborhood (Downtown, Sango, St. Bethlehem, near Austin Peay/Fort Campbell), military schedules, midday peak, and frequency discounts. 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.
Clarksville / Montgomery County requires dogs to be vaccinated against rabies and licensed, through Montgomery County Animal Care & Control. Confirm the current license fee before relying on an amount.
Clarksville requires dogs to be leashed or under physical control in public spaces, off-leash only in designated dog parks. The state running-at-large law (§ 44-8-408) applies on top. Confirm the current leash-length spec and at-large fine on the Clarksville City Code before publish.
Under the Dianna Acklen Act (T.C.A. § 44-8-413), an owner is strictly liable for a dog that injures someone in public or lawfully on another's property when not under reasonable control — no prior history needed. A residential exclusion reverts to one-bite for bites on the owner's own property, and the statute's owner carve-out for a temporary keeper is unsettled and should not be treated as a shield. For walkers: keep genuine physical control, leash to Clarksville's rule, and carry your own insurance. (See the Tennessee law tab.)
Clarksville is northern Middle Tennessee on the Red and Cumberland rivers — warm humid summers, green and growing.
A walker who talks fluently about Middle-TN heat, the Red River greenway, copperheads, and Fort Campbell military scheduling is a Clarksville walker.
Tennessee (Dianna Acklen Act, T.C.A. § 44-8-413) is strict-liability when a dog isn't under reasonable control or is running at large and injures someone in public — but a residential exclusion flips it back to one-bite on the owner's own property.
These state-level rules apply across Tennessee; the local rules that govern day-to-day walking are on the Local bylaws tab.
Tennessee (T.C.A. § 44-8-413, the Dianna Acklen Act of 2007) imposes strict liability with a specific trigger: an owner has a duty to keep the dog under reasonable control at all times and not running at large. Breach that duty and the dog injures someone in a public place or lawfully on another's private property, and the owner is liable regardless of the dog's history or the owner's knowledge. No one-bite required — the public walk is squarely in the strict-liability zone.
If the injury happens on the dog owner's own residential, farm, or noncommercial property (or where they are a lawful tenant), strict liability does not apply — the victim must instead prove one-bite scienter, that the owner knew or should have known of the dog's dangerous propensities. So the standard flips based on where the injury happens: the sidewalk and the park are strict liability; the owner's own yard is not.
The statute defines owner as one who regularly harbors, keeps, or controls the dog — and Tennessee firms confirm that dog sitters, walkers, and caretakers may be held responsible if they fail to keep the animal under reasonable control. There is no liability where the injured person was a trespasser on nonresidential property, provoked the dog, was subject to the dog protecting its owner, or where the dog was securely confined in a kennel or crate, or was a police or military dog doing its work.
There is no statewide leash law — local ordinances govern, where running at large means off the property and unleashed, and a violation supports negligence / negligence per se. Rabies vaccination is required statewide with local licensing; dangerous dogs fall under § 44-17-117. Tennessee uses modified comparative fault with a 50% bar, and the personal-injury statute of limitations is just one year (§ 28-3-104) — among the shortest in the country.
A 30-minute walk in Clarksville typically runs $15 to $21, averaging about $18 — below the national average. An hour is roughly $29; five walks a week works out to about $88 per week or $352 per month. Group walks cost less per dog.
Yes. Clarksville and Montgomery County require dogs to be vaccinated against rabies and licensed, through Montgomery County Animal Care and Control. Confirm the current license fee with the city before relying on an amount.
Clarksville requires dogs to be leashed or under physical control in public spaces, off-leash only in designated dog parks. The state running-at-large law (T.C.A. section 44-8-408) applies on top.
Under Tennessee's Dianna Acklen Act (T.C.A. section 44-8-413), an owner is strictly liable for a dog that injures someone in public or lawfully on another's property when the dog was not under reasonable control — no prior history needed. The residential exclusion applies only to bites on the owner's own property, which revert to a one-bite standard. The statute's owner carve-out for a temporary keeper is unsettled and should not be relied on.
The Clarksville Dog Park at Heritage Park and nearby fenced parks. For on-leash walking, the Clarksville Greenway along the Red River, Rotary Park with its wooded trails, and Liberty Park and Freedom Point along the Cumberland River are the classics.
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. 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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