X

Why Pet Adoption Might Just be the Paw-fect Feel-Good Story of 2026

Against the backdrop of searing petrol prices, a housing crisis and global warfare, many Australians are emotionally hanging on by a thread. One held together by TikTok dog videos and the occasional serotonin hit of seeing a rescue greyhound wearing pyjamas.

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

Which is probably why this latest push from the Petstock Foundation feels less like a campaign and more like a reminder of something people desperately need right now: connection, comfort and a little unconditional love with four legs and questionable bathroom habits.

This May, comedian and TV host Melanie Bracewell has teamed up with the Petstock Foundation to encourage Australians to adopt rescue pets amid mounting cost-of-living pressures. And while the initiative comes wrapped in cute dog content (as all good things should), the reality behind it is surprisingly emotional.

New research from the Foundation found one in six Australian pet owners have seriously considered rehoming their pet because they simply can’t afford rising expenses anymore. Food, fuel, rent, vet bills – it’s all adding up. Some pet owners admit they’ve skipped groceries themselves just to keep food in the bowl for their furry family member.

Frankly, if that doesn’t make you want to ugly cry into your cavoodle’s neck fluff, what will?

At the same time, rescue shelters around the country are absolutely barking under pressure. Thousands of pets currently need homes, while rescue organisations scramble to cover soaring costs for food, vet care and shelter. And contrary to old stereotypes about rescue animals being “problem pets”, many are already trained, socialised and wonderfully well-behaved. According to dog behaviourist Lara Shannon, a huge number of pets entering shelters right now are there because families are struggling financially – not because the animals themselves have behavioural issues.

Translation? There are a lot of excellent boys and girls waiting for someone to throw them a bone. And honestly, rescue pets have become the ultimate soft launch into joy. They don’t care about your unread emails, your situationship or the fact you ate cereal for dinner three nights in a row. They’re just thrilled you came home.

Melanie Bracewell knows the feeling well.

The comedian, who shares her life with rescue dogs Charles and Gigi, speaks about them less like pets and more like tiny furry flatmates with rich internal worlds. Charles, a Maltese Shih-Tzu she adopted four years ago, apparently resembles the old man from Up – grumpy exterior, heart of gold, emotional backstory and all.

“He smiles with his bottom teeth,” she joked recently, “like me before I got braces.”

Meanwhile Gigi, rescued from a hoarder home with 35 other dogs, has brought chaos, energy and what sounds like pure youngest-child syndrome into the household. Together, the pair have become Melanie’s daily source of comfort and comedy – which, if you ask most rescue pet owners, is pretty standard behaviour.

While rescue dogs are a paw-fect starting point, Dr Will from Geelong (and proud adoptive dad of rescue Cow Charlie and Goat BOOF) believes the benefits of rescuing a quirky pet are just as wonderful!

Because rescue pets don’t just become companions. They become characters. Tiny household celebrities. Emotional support gremlins. Living proof that healing sometimes comes covered in fur and smells faintly of peanut butter treats.

And perhaps that’s why adoption stories hit differently right now.

In an era where everything feels expensive, exhausting and algorithmically curated, rescue pets offer something refreshingly uncomplicated. They don’t need aesthetic dog beds or organic salmon treats to love you. They just need safety, affection and someone willing to tell them they’re a good boy approximately 45 times a day.

The Petstock Foundation hopes Australians will lean into that spirit this May through its annual Adoption Month initiative, which has already helped more than 41,000 rescue pets find homes since launching in 2007. This year, the organisation aims to raise $170,000 across Australia and New Zealand to support more than 230 grassroots rescue groups doing the hard work on the ground.

There are donations, adoption weekends and even plush “Buddy” toys involved, but the bigger message feels pretty simple: if you can adopt, adopt. If you can donate, donate. If you can’t do either, maybe just remind people that rescue pets are more than a sad story waiting for a saviour. Sometimes they’re actually the ones rescuing us.

Tags: pet adoption
Marie-Antoinette Issa: Marie-Antoinette Issa is the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor for The Carousel, Women Love Tech and Women Love Travel. She has worked across news and women's lifestyle magazines and websites including Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Concrete Playground, The Urban List and Daily Mail, I Quit Sugar and Huffington Post.