The Stray Animal
Crisis in Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico's stray animal crisis reflects decades of neglect, inaction, and systemic failure.

A stray dog standing on a Puerto Rico road
  • 600K+/1M+ Stray animals on the island that need help
  • 94% Euthanasia rate at shelters
  • 150% Operation capacity at shelters
  • 1 in 33 For every animal helped, 32 are still waiting

No Time to Waste. Every Animal Deserves More.

Decades of abandonment, overpopulation, and limited veterinary care have created a growing crisis that continues to leave vulnerable animals without the protection, resources, and care they deserve.

What we see today is not one failure, but many layered until it became impossible to ignore.

1950s – 1970s

A Problem Takes Root

As Puerto Rico industrializes, rural communities shift and working animals are left behind. With low spay and neuter rates and limited access to veterinary care, the first generations of stray populations begin to grow — largely unseen.

It doesn’t happen all at once. It builds quietly, over time.

A Problem Takes Root

Photo Credit: Traer Scott

1989-1998

The Cycle Begins

Hurricanes Hugo and Georges displace families — and their animals. Pets are left behind, and stray populations surge as recovery efforts focus on people, not animals.

Every storm leaves more behind. And the numbers never reset.

The Cycle Begins

Photo Credit: Traer Scott

2006

Roosevelt Roads Closes

The naval base in Ceiba shuts down, leaving behind vast, unmanaged land in one of the island’s most animal-dense regions. Strays flood the area, and abandonment increases.

The problem becomes visible, but nothing steps in to stop it.


Roosevelt Roads Closes
2008

The Law Exists

Puerto Rico passes the Animal Protection and Welfare Act, banning cruelty and abandonment. But enforcement remains limited.

A law on paper doesn’t protect an animal on the street.

The Law Exists
2017

Hurricane Maria

One of the most devastating storms in Puerto Rico’s history. Infrastructure collapses, shelters are overwhelmed, and spay and neuter efforts stop. Stray populations surge into the hundreds of thousands.

Everything breaks at once. And the animals are left to survive it.


Hurricane Maria

Photo Credit: Hector Retamal/AFP/Getty Images

2020

Earthquake, Then Global Pandemic

A major earthquake strikes, followed by COVID-19. Rescue groups lose funding, and families facing hardship can no longer care for their pets. Abandonment rises again.

Just as recovery begins, everything hits again.


Earthquake, Then Global Pandemic

Photo Credit: RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/Getty Images

2022

Hurricane Fiona

Another storm. Another wave of abandonment. Without permanent infrastructure, the cycle continues.

By now, it’s predictable because nothing has changed.


Hurricane Fiona

Photo Credit: @cheeryviruet

2025

A Plan in Progress

Estancia Tanamá becomes a 501(c)(3), formalizing a plan to build a permanent sanctuary in Ceiba — transforming one of the island’s most affected areas into part of the solution.

The same place the crisis grew is where change begins.


A Plan in Progress
Today

The Crisis Now

Hundreds of thousands of stray animals remain on the streets of Puerto Rico. Shelters are limited. Veterinary care is still out of reach for many communities.

Rescuers continue the work but without the infrastructure to sustain it.

Compassion exists. Capacity does not.


The Crisis Now
Two puppies on a path in Puerto Rico

This Moment Matters

The sanctuary does not exist yet, but it can. Funding raised now goes directly toward building a facility with intake capacity, veterinary care, rehabilitation space, and long-term infrastructure.

This isn't already built. That's why this moment matters. Puerto Rico deserves more than temporary solutions.

Donate Now