Doggy Daycare • Columbia, SC
Irmo Pet Retreat
Irmo Pet Retreat offers doggy daycare in Columbia, SC, with boarding, grooming, and vaccinations, backed by…
Daycare or boarding? The real difference in cost, what each is for, and how to choose — plus when a pet sitter beats both. A clear decision guide for 2026.
Daycare and boarding sound similar but solve completely different problems. Daycare is for the workday; boarding is for the overnight trip. Pick the wrong one and you either overpay or leave your dog under-cared-for. This guide lays out the real difference in cost, purpose, and fit — and covers when a pet sitter beats both.
| Doggy Daycare | Dog Boarding | |
|---|---|---|
| What it’s for | Daytime care while you work | Overnight care while you travel |
| Duration | Drop off AM, pick up PM (same day) | Overnight, multi-night |
| Typical cost | $20–$45/day | $40–$110/night |
| Overnight stay? | No | Yes |
| Main benefit | Exercise + socialization | Full overnight supervision |
| Best for | High-energy dogs, work-from-office owners | Travel, vacations, business trips |
Many facilities offer both, and “boarding with daycare included” is common — your dog boards overnight and joins daytime play groups. That combo is often the best experience for social dogs.
Cost: $20–$45/day, with multi-day packages dropping the per-day rate to $15–$30. Monthly unlimited plans run $300–$600.
What you get: Supervised group play, exercise, socialization, and a tired dog at pickup. Most daycares sort dogs by size and temperament. Good ones do a temperament evaluation before accepting a new dog.
Best for:
Not great for: Senior dogs who’d rather nap, reactive or resource-guarding dogs, or dogs who simply don’t enjoy other dogs (yes, those exist — and that’s fine).
Cost: $40–$110/night depending on city and facility tier. See our full dog boarding cost guide for the breakdown.
What you get: Overnight supervision, feeding, medication administration, potty breaks, and (at better facilities) daytime play. Your dog has a place to sleep and round-the-clock staff presence.
Best for: Any situation where you’re away overnight — vacations, business travel, family emergencies, home renovations.
The key question: Does the boarder include daytime activity, or just kennel-and-feed? A social dog boarded somewhere with no play time gets bored and stressed. Look for “boarding with daycare” or facilities that explicitly include group play.
A third option worth knowing: an in-home pet sitter who stays at your house or visits multiple times a day. Costs $40–$85/night (overnight) or $20–$30/visit (drop-in).
Pet sitter wins when: Your dog is anxious in new environments, you have multiple pets, your dog is a senior who does best at home, or your dog isn’t vaccinated for group settings. The downside is less supervision than a staffed facility, and you’re trusting one individual.
Facility (boarding) wins when: You want 24/7 staffed supervision, your dog is social and enjoys other dogs, or you want the accountability of a business over an individual.
If you go the in-home route, a pet camera helps you check in remotely.
Say you have a 2-year-old Labrador and you work in an office 3 days a week, plus take a 5-night vacation:
If that sounds like a lot, the alternative — a bored, destructive, under-exercised dog — has its own costs (chewed furniture, vet bills from eaten objects, behavioral problems). For high-energy breeds, daycare is often cheaper than the damage.
Every PetSoMo listing shows whether a facility offers daycare, boarding, or both — plus real reviews and pricing. Free to compare, no commission, ever.
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