Celebrate the Journey from Birth through Loss  - Dog in Field of Wildflowers

The Space Between: How Pet Brands Can Show Up When Families Grieve Courtesy Ryan Meyer

For more than a decade, Pet Perennials has believed that how we show up during pet loss matters just as much as how we celebrate the joyful moments. Long before the broader pet industry began openly discussing grief, we recognized that the bond between people and their pets doesn’t end at the final goodbye—and that businesses serving pet families have a powerful opportunity to offer compassion when it’s needed most. That belief led us to create our Gift Perks Program, an innovative service that helps pet-centric businesses easily send heartfelt sympathy gifts to clients who have lost a beloved pet. By making it simple for groomers, veterinarians, sitters, and other pet professionals to acknowledge loss with care and intention, we’ve helped lead a shift in the industry toward more compassionate client relationships.

The article below from Ryan Meyer thoughtfully explores how pet grief is becoming more visible and why brands that truly care must show up for pet parents during these difficult moments—not just during the happy milestones. His perspective echoes something we’ve long known: when a beloved pet is gone, families remember the people and businesses who stood beside them.

March 4, 2026 by Ryan Meyer LinkedIn

There comes a moment for every pet parent. You know it's coming. You've tried to prepare for it. And still, when it arrives, it lands like something you've never known before.

The morning after, the empty bed, and the bowl you reach for before remembering.

For years, the pet industry has focused on the joyful aspects of the journey: puppy breath, the new adoptee, and the perfectly styled treat unboxing. And those moments matter. They're what draw us in.

But there's another part of the story. The one we don't talk about as much. The one that happens after the product has been used, after the treats are gone, or after the walks have stopped.

It's the space between chapters. And how brands show up during this moment is very important.

Why Pet Grief Is Becoming More Visible

Here's what's changed. Pet parents today don't hide their grief the way they used to.

Twenty years ago, losing a dog or cat was something you took a personal day for, quietly. You didn't necessarily share it. You certainly didn't expect your pet food brand to acknowledge it.

Now? People post tributes. They create memorial shadow boxes. They ask for pet loss resources from their veterinarians, their communities, and the brands they've trusted for years.

A study from the Human Animal Bond Research Institute found that 95% of pet owners consider their pets family members. And when you lose family, you grieve openly. You expect the people who supported you during the good times to show up during the hard ones, too.

The need for pet grief support is a natural result of pets being more embedded in our lives than ever before.

The Moments That Matter Most

When we talk about emotional support for pet owners, we usually think about the final moment.

But the need for support stretches much wider.

There's the diagnosis. The day a veterinarian says "kidney disease," or "cancer," or "we don't know how much time." That's when families begin grieving, often months before the end.

There's the decline. The slow withdrawal of a cat that stops jumping on the bed or the dog that can't make it up the stairs anymore. These small losses accumulate.

And then there's the aftermath. The silence of a house. The wondering and thoughts of whether you did enough.

Each of these moments is an opportunity for brands to offer something beyond a product: their presence.

What's Emerging in End-of-Life Pet Care

The market is starting to respond. You're seeing more pet hospice services, where veterinarians help families manage end of life pet care at home rather than rushing to a clinic. At-home euthanasia services are growing to enable pets “rest” in their familiar spaces. Companies like Lap of Love have built entire practices around this philosophy, meeting families where they are, literally and emotionally.

On the product side, there's more than you might expect. Memorial jewelry that holds a bit of ash or fur. Clay paw print kits. Books for children navigating loss. Even pet loss doulas, trained to guide families through the dying process, the same way human birth doulas guide them into life.

And then there's the digital space: online memorials and grief support groups on Facebook. Websites like the ASPCA's pet loss resources page offer structured support and hotlines for those struggling.

None of these replaces the pet. But they hold space for the people left behind.

The Role of Compassionate Content

This is where pet brands have a genuine opening.

Most companies wait until they have something to sell. But the brands that build lasting trust are the ones that show up when there's nothing to sell at all.

Compassionate content around pet grief support looks like this:

  • It's an email that goes out to customers who haven't purchased in six months, not asking "where did you go?" but offering "thinking of you during this time."
  • It's a blog post about what to expect during euthanasia, written with veterinary input, so families know what's coming.
  • It's a resource page you link to in your Instagram bio, not because it drives sales, but because someone might need it at 2 a.m. when they can't sleep.
  • It's acknowledging anniversaries. Sending a card. Training your customer service team to respond to loss with something more than "we're sorry for your loss" and a coupon code.

The ASPCA's pet loss resources are a model here. They don't sell anything on that page. They just offer hotlines, support groups, and reading lists. They show up.

What Brands Should Avoid

This territory requires a careful approach. Getting it wrong here damages trust permanently.

Never frame your product as a solution to grief. A CBD chew won't bring back a lost companion. A memorial stone won't heal the wound. When you imply otherwise, you reveal that you don't understand grief at all.

Avoid toxic positivity. "They're in a better place" or "at least you had so many good years" lands as dismissive, even when well-intended. Grief doesn't want to be solved. It wants to be witnessed.

Don't make it about you. This isn't the moment for your brand story or your founder's journey. It's about the person who just lost their best friend.

And for the love of everything, don't automate this. A triggered email sequence responding to a customer's loss with "we noticed you haven't shopped lately" is a special kind of horror. Build systems that let you step in personally.

Why Showing Up Matters

Pet parents don't remember the brands that sold them the perfect leash. They remember the ones that sat with them in the hard parts.

When you offer genuine pet loss resources, such as linking to Lap of Love or the ASPCA, or train your team to speak from the heart, you're not just doing something kind. You're building a relationship that outlasts any single transaction.

The families who lose a pet today will eventually bring another one home. And when they do, they'll remember who showed up. They'll remember who understood that being a pet brand means being there for the whole story.

If you're supporting someone through pet loss right now, the ASPCA offers a pet loss grief support hotline and resources. Lap of Love provides end-of-life planning and support. Both are free and are staffed by people who understand and truly care.

 

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.