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: Couch Potato · : Teacher's Pet · Dogs - Yes Please · Cats - Yes please
coloradoanimalrescue.org
Senior Coonhound dogs
Meet 6 adoptable senior Coonhound dogs (age 7+) from shelters and rescues across the country. Older dogs are often calm, house-trained, and ready to love from day one.
Senior Coonhounds are often overlooked in favor of puppies, yet they're frequently house-trained, settled in temperament, and ready to bond immediately. Because they're fully grown, you already know roughly how big they are and what they're like — making an older Coonhound one of the most predictable and rewarding dogs you can welcome home.
Last updated July 12, 2026 at 9:30 AM EDT. Listings refresh automatically, usually every 12 hours.
: Couch Potato · : Teacher's Pet · Dogs - Yes Please · Cats - Yes please
coloradoanimalrescue.org
Crate-Trained · Dental Completed in Rescue · Good with Kids · Not Good with Cats · Single Dog Home · Not Good with Dogs
greyfacerescue.org • St. Cloud, MN
How stinking cute is Wade!? He weighs 57 lbs. and is 4 years old. His vaccines are utd and his neuter is included in his adoption. Wade is a sweet boy…
Berkeley County Humane Society • Martinsburg, WV
Meet Pumpkin Spice! A gentle nine-and-a-half-year-old Coonhound currently in Pine Valley, CA, whose journey now includes finding a new loving home aft…
Joyful Pets Animal Rescue • Amherst, MA
Meet Sadie – The Life of the Party, the Keeper of Smiles, and One of Our Sweetest Seniors Sadie is the kind of dog who instantly fills a home with war…
Rescue Ranch • Yreka, CA
Mamacita is a dignified and gentle female dog, hoping to find a loving home. She is quiet and perhaps a bit shy, but once she warms up to you, you'll …
M'Shoogy's Famous Emergency Animal Rescue • Savannah, MO
Most shelters and vets consider a dog "senior" around age 7, though large breeds often age sooner and small breeds a little later. Every dog listed here is 7 years or older.
Open a dog's profile to see the shelter or rescue caring for them, then follow the adoption link or contact details to apply directly with that organization.
Often, yes. An older Coonhound is usually past the high-energy puppy stage and may already know basic commands, which can make ownership easier to ease into. Each profile and shelter can tell you about that dog's individual personality and needs.
Senior dogs are calmer, usually house-trained, and let you skip the chewing and sleepless nights — and because they are the hardest to place, adopting one can quite literally save a life that might otherwise run out of time.
It depends on the individual dog more than the breed alone. Each dog's profile and the shelter or rescue caring for them can tell you about their history with kids, cats, or other dogs. Senior dogs are often calmer and more predictable than puppies, which can make reading compatibility easier before you commit.
Adoption fees vary by shelter and rescue, but senior dogs are frequently discounted or even sponsored — because they wait the longest, many organizations offer reduced fees or cover initial vet care. Open a dog's profile and ask the organization directly for their current fee and what it includes.
Many shelters and rescues offer a foster program, sometimes with a foster-to-adopt path. Fostering a senior Coonhound gets them out of a kennel and into a calm home — which is especially beneficial for older dogs who find shelter life stressful. Ask the organization on any dog's profile whether fostering is an option.
Shelters and rescues can list adoptable senior dogs for free.