0 dog walkers available in Ogden
| Service | Typical range (USD) |
|---|---|
| 30-minute solo walk | $16–$24 |
| 60-minute solo walk | $30–$36 |
| Group walk | $12–$18 |
| Drop-in visit | $18–$23 |
| Overnight sit | $38–$72 |
Rates exclude tax. Ogden runs close to the wider Salt Lake metro for dog walking — about $20 for a 30-minute walk, right around the US national average (~$21.45). An hour runs about $33, five walks a week about $100/week (~$400/month), and full-day daycare about $32. All figures are local estimates — confirm each walker's posted rate. Book someone near your part of town (Downtown/25th Street, East Bench, Ogden Valley side, near WSU). 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.
Under Weber County ordinance, all dogs and cats over four months old must be vaccinated for rabies and licensed. Licensing is handled through Weber County Animal Services at the county shelter. [VERIFY - confirm current fee amounts with the shelter.]
Ogden requires humane restraint in all public areas under Ordinance 13-2-6: in parks, walkways, playgrounds, streets, and common areas all dogs must be leashed, off-leash only inside Ogden's fenced dog park. [VERIFY - specific leash-violation fine not confirmed to a primary source.]
Utah is a strict-liability state under Utah Code § 18-1-1: a dog's owner or keeper is liable for injury the dog causes, regardless of the dog's prior history, so a keeper or walker with the dog can be exposed (a 2025 amendment refined the rules — treat fine/scope specifics as needing confirmation). For walkers: leash to Ogden's rule, keep control, and carry your own insurance. (See the Utah law tab.)
Everywhere else, including the Ogden River Parkway trail, dogs must be leashed.
Ogden sits at the north end of the Wasatch Front at about 4,300 feet, wedged between the Wasatch wall and the Great Salt Lake — a high-desert, mountain-town climate.
A walker who talks fluently about inversion days, ski-season snow and salt, and foothill foxtails and rattlesnakes is an Ogden walker.
Utah imposes statutory strict liability on "every person owning or keeping a dog" — no one-bite rule — so a walker or keeper is a named strictly-liable party for a bite (statute amended 2025).
These state-level rules apply across Utah; the local rules that govern day-to-day walking are on the Local bylaws tab.
Utah (Utah Code § 18-1-1) is a statutory strict-liability state, and the language reaches the walker directly: every person owning or keeping a dog is liable for injury the dog commits, without needing to prove the dog was vicious or that the owner or keeper knew it. There is no one-bite rule — the owner or keeper is liable for a bite even the first time and even with reasonable precautions. Utah firms confirm that keepers, handlers, and dog-sitters can share liability.
A 2025 amendment (Chapter 311, effective May 7, 2025) added a defense where the dog was reasonably secured within a fence or enclosure on private property, and refined the law-enforcement-dog exemption; there is also an at-large definition (§ 18-1-1.2) and an optional binding-arbitration process (§ 18-1-4, awards capped at $50,000 plus medical). The strict-liability statute covers bites; purely non-bite injuries (knockdowns, chasing a cyclist) generally run through negligence. Comparative fault reduces recovery, and the defenses include trespass, provocation, the new fenced-enclosure defense, and police or military dogs. The personal-injury limit is four years.
A 30-minute walk in Ogden typically runs about $16 to $24, averaging around $20 - right around the national average of $21.45. An hour is roughly $33; five walks a week works out to about $100 per week or $400 per month. Group walks cost less per dog. These are local estimates, so confirm each walker's posted rate.
Yes. Under Weber County ordinance, all dogs and cats over four months old must be vaccinated for rabies and licensed. Licensing is handled through Weber County Animal Services at the county shelter - confirm current fee amounts with the shelter.
Ogden requires humane restraint in all public areas under Ordinance 13-2-6: in parks, walkways, playgrounds, streets, and common areas all dogs must be leashed. The only exception is inside Ogden's fenced off-leash dog park.
Very likely yes. Utah is a strict-liability state under Utah Code section 18-1-1: a dog's owner or keeper is liable for injury the dog causes regardless of the dog's prior history or whether it was leashed. Because the statute reaches a keeper, a walker or sitter holding the leash can be exposed too. A 2025 amendment refined the rules, so treat the fine and scope specifics as needing confirmation.
Ogden's fenced off-leash dog park has separate areas for large and small dogs with water stations and waste-bag dispensers, and a newer, larger fenced off-leash park opened in late 2025. Everywhere else, including the Ogden River Parkway trail, dogs must be leashed.
Ask whether they carry liability insurance - in Utah the person holding the leash carries keeper-level legal responsibility - whether they have pet first aid training, how many dogs yours would be walked with, what they would do on a bad-air inversion day or in winter snow, 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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