Doggy Daycare • Columbia, SC
Irmo Pet Retreat
Irmo Pet Retreat offers doggy daycare in Columbia, SC, with boarding, grooming, and vaccinations, backed by…
Exactly which vaccines your dog needs before boarding or daycare in 2026 — required vs. recommended, timing, cost, and what to bring to drop-off.
Before any reputable boarder, daycare, or groomer takes your dog, they’ll require proof of vaccination. Show up without the right records and you’ll be turned away at the door — or worse, your trip gets derailed the morning you leave. This is the exact checklist of what’s required, what’s recommended, and the timing you need to plan for.
| Vaccine | Status | Frequency | Protects Against |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rabies | Required (also by law) | 1 or 3 years | Rabies virus |
| DHPP / DAPP | Required | 1 or 3 years | Distemper, Hepatitis, Parvo, Parainfluenza |
| Bordetella | Required for boarding/daycare | 6–12 months | Kennel cough |
| Canine Influenza (CIV) | Increasingly required | Annual | Dog flu (H3N2/H3N8) |
| Leptospirosis | Recommended | Annual | Bacterial (water-borne) |
| Lyme | Region-dependent | Annual | Tick-borne disease |
The big three for boarding: Rabies, DHPP, and Bordetella are non-negotiable at virtually every facility. Canine Influenza is now required at most major-metro boarders and daycares — confirm before you book.
Legally mandated in nearly every U.S. state and required by 100% of boarders. Given as a 1-year or 3-year shot. Keep the certificate — facilities need the actual rabies tag number or vet certificate, not just your word.
A single shot covering Distemper, Hepatitis (adenovirus), Parvovirus, and Parainfluenza. This is the “core” vaccine every dog should have regardless of boarding. Usually a 1-year or 3-year interval.
Protects against kennel cough — the highly contagious respiratory infection that spreads in group settings. This is the vaccine people most often forget. Many facilities require it within the last 6 months (not 12), and some require it at least 48 hours before drop-off so it has time to take effect. Available as an injection, an oral, or a nasal spray (the nasal version works fastest).
Dog flu (H3N2 and H3N8 strains) has driven outbreaks in major metros, and boarders increasingly require it. It’s a two-dose initial series (3–4 weeks apart) then annual boosters — so if your dog has never had it, start at least a month before boarding. This is the #1 reason last-minute boarding plans fall through.
The most common mistake is leaving vaccines to the last minute. Here’s the realistic timeline:
See our full dog boarding checklist for everything else to pack.
Mobile vaccine clinics (Vetco, VIP Petcare, PetVet — usually inside Petco, Tractor Supply, or PetSmart) handle routine boarding vaccines cheaply. For a full health check, see a veterinarian. Our vet visit cost guide covers pricing.
Puppies can’t be fully vaccinated until ~16 weeks (the core series finishes around then). Most daycares and boarders won’t accept a puppy until the full DHPP series is complete plus Bordetella. This usually means no group daycare or boarding until about 4 months old. Plan around it — and in the meantime, an in-home pet sitter is the safe option.
Pro tip: most vets have an online portal where you can download a vaccination summary PDF in 30 seconds. Do it the week before, not the morning of.
Each PetSoMo listing notes the facility’s specific vaccination requirements where available — but always confirm directly before booking. Free to compare, no commission.
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