All LifeLine shelters will be closing earlier on Thursday, 9/26, at 4pm. The LifeLine Community Animal Center will reopen at 11am and our Fulton County and DeKalb County shelters will reopen at 1pm on Friday, 9/27. All shelters will resume normal hours on Saturday, 9/28, barring any complications from the storm.
OUR FALL MERCH COLLECTION HAS DROPPED! Shop meow for Atlanta Pride and Howloween!
LifeLine offers a variety of services to help people and pets. We provide affordable veterinary care and offer pet support programs for people with little-to-no access to pet services. Additionally, we have many resources for managing community cats. LifeLine also manages Atlanta’s two county shelters where you’re sure to find your new best friend!
LifeLine believes that everyone should have access to quality vet care. Our Community Animal Center clinic offers full-service, affordable veterinary care, including vaccines, dental care, emergency visits, surgery and more. NEW! The Fulton County Animal Services Veterinary Clinic is now open offering yearly pet exams, vaccines and heartworm and flea and tick preventatives. Book an appointment today.
The LifeLine Spay & Neuter clinics provide low-cost, high-quality spay/neuter surgeries, and have performed over 140,000 procedures. These surgeries not only help control pet overpopulation, but they also prevent certain medical and behavioral problems and help pets live longer, happier lives.
LifeLine manages the Fulton and DeKalb County Animal Services shelters, two of the largest county shelters in metro Atlanta. Over the past few years, we’ve achieved and sustained no-kill rates at both. In addition to overseeing shelter operations, LifeLine also manages the Animal Enforcement and Field Operations Division for Fulton County.
LifeLine’s Community Cats Program is metro Atlanta’s first and largest Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) assistance program dedicated to humanely managing community cat colonies using TNR.
LifeLine’s Pets for Life outreach program connects people to resources and helps to close the gap that exists in impoverished areas, where people have little or no access to pet wellness resources.