Low Cost Spay & Neuter Information
New Hope Pit Bull Rescue is a member of Humane Net. If you would like for us to send you an application for a voucher, please email us at and put in the subject line of your email: Humane Net Application. Or call (843) 875-4031.

National Low Cost Spay & Neuter Programs
(If you know of a program that we have not listed here, please email us with information and we will add it to our site.)
SPAY/USA - A program of North Shore Animal League America, is a nationwide network and referral service for affordable spay/neuter services.
Friends of Animals - From its beginning in 1957, FoA has assumed a leadership role in advocating low-cost spaying and altering as the most effective means of preventing the births of unwanted dogs and cats, and their subsequent abandonment, suffering and mass killing. For more than four decades, we have operated the only nationwide breeding control program in the United States facilitating more than 2 million spay/neuter procedures.
Pets 911 - Enter your zip code and find Spay & Neuter Clinics in your area.
Pit Bull Rescue Central - Offers low cost Spay & Neuter assistance to those with no other programs in their area. (PBRC operates on limited funds, so please check our other links before contacting PBRC, to find out if you may qualify for a program in your area.)
Top 10 Reasons to Spay or Neuter Your Pet
From ASPCAspay
1. Your female dog or cat will live a longer, healthier life.
Spaying (the removal of the ovaries and uterus) is a veterinary procedure
performed under general anesthesia that usually requires minimal hospitalization.
Spaying a female cat or dog helps prevent pyometra (pus-filled uterus)
and breast cancer. Treatment of pyometra requires hospitalization, intravenous
fluids and antibiotics. Breast cancer can be fatal in about 50 percent
of female dogs and in 90 percent of female cats. Spaying your pet before
her first heat offers the best protection from these diseases.
2. There are major health benefits for your male animal
companion, too.
Besides preventing unwanted litters, neutering your male dog
or cat—the surgical removal of the testicles—prevents testicular
cancer, if done before six months of age.
3. Your spayed female won't go into heat.
While cycles can vary greatly, female felines usually go into heat four
to five days every three weeks during breeding season. In an effort
to advertise for mates, they'll yowl and urinate more frequently—sometimes
all over the house. Unspayed female dogs generally have a bloody discharge
for about a week, and can conceive for another week or so.
4. Your male dog won't need to roam away from home…
An intact male in search of a mate will do just about anything to get
one! That includes digging his way under the fence and making like Houdini
to escape from the house. And once he's free to roam, he risks injury
in traffic and fights with other males.
5. …and he will be much better behaved to boot!
Neutered cats and dogs focus their attention on their human families.
On the other hand, unneutered dogs and cats may mark their territory
by spraying strong-smelling urine all over the house. Indoors, male
dogs may embarrass you by mounting on furniture and human legs when
stimulated. And FYI, a neutered dog protects his home and family just
as well as unneutered dog--and many aggression problems can be avoided
by early neutering.
6. Spaying or neutering will NOT make your pet fat.
It's no use to use that old excuse! Lack of exercise and overfeeding
will cause your pet to pack on the extra pounds—not neutering.
Your pet will remain fit and trim as long as you continue to provide
exercise and monitor food intake.
7. Spaying or neutering is highly cost-effective.
The cost of your pet's spay or neuter surgery is a lot less than the
cost of having and caring for a litter. It also beats the cost of treatment
when your unneutered tom escapes and gets into fights with neighborhood
strays…or the cost of cleaning the carpet that your unspayed female
keeps mistaking for her litter box, or the cost of…well, you get
the idea!
8. It's good for the community.
Stray animals pose real problems in many parts of the country. They
can prey on wildlife, cause vehicular accidents, damage the local fauna
and scare children.
9. Your pet doesn't need to have a litter for your children
to witness the miracle of birth.
We've heard this one a lot. But you know what? Letting your pet produce
offspring you have no intention of keeping teaches your children irresponsibility.
Anyone who has seen an animal euthanized in a shelter for lack of a
home knows the truth behind this dangerous myth. There are countless
books and videos available to teach your children about birth in a responsible
manner.
10. It packs a powerful punch in the fight against pet overpopulation.
Millions of cats and dogs of all ages and breeds are euthanized
annually or suffer as strays. These high numbers are the result of unwanted,
unplanned litters that could have been prevented by spaying or neutering.

