Our cats and kittens can be seen at the Hoboken Animal Hospital, 640 Washington Street, Hoboken, New Jersey (20 minutes by Path train from Manhattan). Our dogs live at a kennel in Hillsborough, New Jersey. Come and meet these wonderful animals.
Call the contact numbers to make an appointment with one of our volunteers.
Companion Animal Placement has many wonderful cats and dogs available for adoption. Please check out our Hoboken and Hillsborough websites for the most recent listings. If you have a particular kind of pet in mind, and you don't find him/her pictured here, please email us a description of your "dream" companion, and we will watch out for one for you.
We ask that you fill out an Adoption Questionnaire and provide personal and vet references; it also includes a questionnaire about your household, other pets, and lifestyle. We make every effort to evaluate each animal's personality and preferences so that we can advise you on the best match to your situation. After you adopt, we will be available to offer advice to help your new companion adjust to a new home. Consider us as "godparents."
Please email us for the Adoption Questionnaire.
COMPANION ANIMAL PLACEMENT, CAP, is a non-profit organization committed to saving the lives of animals while educating the public about the spaying and neutering of all pets.
CAP is run 100% by volunteers and was founded in 1989 for the sole purpose of finding homes for unwanted animals. Our animals come from shelters, abusive homes, the street, or once happy homes forced to abandon their helpless pet. All of our rescues are seen by a vet, vaccinated, and altered if they are old enough.
CAP is not a shelter, and we do not have a shelter facility. All the cats and dogs in our care stay in foster homes or at a private boarding facility. For this reason, CAP is limited in the number of animals we can care for at any one time.
PLEASE NOTE: AT PRESENT, CAP IS NOT ABLE TO ACCEPT ANY MORE ANIMALS TO BE PLACED THROUGH OUR ADOPTION CENTERS. We will continue to try to place the many many animals we have under our care, but until our numbers are down, we cannot take any more into our foster homes. We will still be responsible for any animal we have placed for the rest of its life.
