Pet health questions, answered.
Stop Googling at 2 a.m. Pet Questions uses your registered pet's species, breed, and age to give you guidance that's actually for them, including clear advice on when to see a vet.
Free for members during the beta · Educational guidance only. Always consult your vet for medical care
Trusted by 60,000+ pet owners on PRR
My Golden Retriever stopped eating. Should I be worried?
Educational only. Not a substitute for veterinary advice or diagnosis.
A healthy Golden at 7 years old is entering his senior years, and short-term appetite dips can come from stomach upset, stress from a routine change, or food that's gone stale.
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When to see your vet
If he hasn't eaten for more than 48 hours, or you also see vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, or weight loss, schedule a visit.
Built on the registry that already knows your pet.
PRR already has your pet's species, breed, age, sex, and weight. Now we're putting that data to work for their health.
- Available whenever you're worried. No appointment, no wait.
- Anytime
- Pet owners trust PRR to keep their pets safe.
- 60,000+
- Every answer ends with clear guidance on when to see a vet.
- Vet-aware
How it works
Three taps to a real answer.
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1Pick your pet
- PRR already has their species, breed, age, sex, and weight from your registration. No re-typing.
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2Type your question
- Describe what's going on in your own words: symptoms, duration, anything you've noticed that's different.
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3Get a personalized answer
- A clear, multi-paragraph answer for your pet, plus a "When to see your vet" callout so you know what to do next.
Real questions, real answers
See what other pet parents are asking.
My Golden Retriever stopped eating. Should I worry?
Short-term appetite dips can come from minor stomach upset or stress. But for a 7-year-old Golden, more than 48 hours warrants a vet visit…
Read the full answer →
My cat has been hiding under the bed all day. What's going on?
A normally social cat retreating is one of the most common signs of stress or discomfort. Here's how to tell when it's behavior vs. health…
Read the full answer →
How much exercise should my Lab puppy actually be getting?
Long walks for a 14-week-old Lab can stress developing joints. The "five-minute rule" is a sensible benchmark, and free play matters more than leashed walks…
Read the full answer →
Why this isn't ChatGPT
It actually knows your pet.
Generic chatbots give generic answers. Pet Questions starts with your pet's record so the answer fits the animal you actually have.
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Personalized to your pet
- A 7-year-old Golden gets different advice than a 14-week-old Lab puppy. The answer uses your pet's actual species, breed, age, sex, and weight, not assumptions.
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Always points back to your vet
- Every answer ends with a "When to see your vet" section so you know what to do next. The disclaimer reminds you we're educational, not diagnostic. Your vet is.
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Ask follow-ups, build a record
- Each answer keeps your pet's profile in context so follow-up questions don't start from zero. Browse what other PRR owners have asked, too.
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Available whenever you're worried
- Worry doesn't keep business hours. Get a thoughtful answer at 2 a.m. and decide whether you really need the emergency vet, or whether it can wait until morning.
What Pet Questions is, and isn't.
We'd rather be honest than oversell. Here's the deal.
What it is
- A faster, more personalized first stop than Googling your pet's symptoms.
- Personalized to the pet you've registered with PRR: species, breed, age, sex, weight.
- An answer that ends with clear guidance on when to see a vet.
- Free for members during the beta.
What it isn't
- A diagnosis. It's educational only, not a substitute for veterinary advice or treatment.
- A replacement for your vet, especially for anything serious or urgent.
- An emergency service. If your pet is in distress, call your vet or an emergency clinic immediately.
Common questions
Everything you need to know before trying it out.
Is this a substitute for a real vet? +
No. Pet Questions is educational only. It doesn't diagnose, prescribe, or replace an in-person exam. For anything serious, please contact your veterinarian.
Do I need a PRR account? +
Yes, to ask your own question. Pet Questions uses your registered pet's species, breed, age, sex, and weight to personalize the answer. Anyone can browse example answers without signing in.
What about emergencies? +
Pet Questions isn't an emergency service. If your pet is in distress, call your veterinarian or an emergency animal hospital immediately. Don't wait on a written answer.
Will this cost money later? +
It's free for members during the beta. We haven't decided on long-term pricing yet. Your feedback during the beta will help shape that.
Why is it in beta? +
We're early. We want real pet owners to try it, tell us what's useful, and tell us where it falls short, so we can improve before opening it up more broadly.
Ready to ask?
Pet Questions is in beta and free to try. Bring your worry. We'll help you sort signal from noise.
Free for members during the beta · Educational guidance only
Pet Questions provides educational information only and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If your pet is experiencing a medical emergency, contact your veterinarian or an emergency animal hospital immediately.