Your dog just attacked another dog. You're probably shaking right now, wondering if animal control will take your pet away forever. I get it—this is every dog owner's nightmare scenario.
Here's what you need to know upfront: Putting down your dog isn't the default response to a dog-on-dog attack. Actually, most dogs involved in these incidents keep their lives. But—and this is important—specific situations can push authorities toward that extreme decision.
Your location matters. The attack's severity matters. Whether this happened before matters. How you handle the next few weeks? That matters most of all.
Let me walk you through what really happens after your dog attacks another dog, what authorities look for, and how you can protect your pet.
Nobody uses a simple checklist here. Animal control officers evaluate each case individually, balancing public safety against your dog's rehabilitation potential.
How badly was the other dog hurt? This question drives almost everything else. Did your dog leave a scratch? Puncture wounds requiring stitches? Did the victim need emergency surgery for torn muscles or internal injuries?
A Level 1 bite (teeth touched skin but didn't break it) barely registers on their radar. Level 4 bites—those deep punctures where your dog bit down and shook—raise serious red flags. Level 5 and 6 bites, where tissue gets shredded or the victim dog dies, often lead straight to euthanasia recommendations.
Officers...