BLS CPI Series CUUR0000SS62053

Pet Services Inflation Index for Dog Care Budgets

Track BLS CPI changes for pet services, with planning notes for grooming, boarding, walking, and care support.

Latest: May 2026Index value: 282.81512-month API change: 7.0%
Short answer: The latest BLS CPI reading for Pet services is 282.815 for May 2026. The BLS API reports a 12-month change of 7.0%; the same-month year-over-year calculation from the downloaded series is 7.0%.

What this means for dog owners

Service inflation can affect owners who rely on grooming, boarding, daycare, walkers, or paid backup care during travel and schedule changes.

This page is not a price quote and does not estimate a single household bill. It turns a public inflation series into a planning signal that can be paired with breed size, grooming needs, health-risk questions, and local care access.

How to use this in a dog budget

  • Update recurring categories before choosing a breed, especially food and service-heavy breeds.
  • Keep a separate local quote for veterinary care, grooming, boarding, and training because CPI is a national index.
  • Use the five-year dog ownership cost framework to turn this index into a household budget review.

Breed planning examples

The value of this page is not the index number alone. The useful step is connecting the public-data trend to the kind of dog the household is considering. A small companion dog, a giant breed, a working dog, and a grooming-intensive breed can all face the same national CPI environment while creating very different household exposure.

  • Grooming-intensive breeds can feel affordable at adoption and then become service-heavy because coat care repeats on a calendar.
  • High-energy dogs may need walkers, daycare, training classes, or sport outlets when the owner schedule is not enough.
  • Brachycephalic, senior, giant, anxious, or medication-dependent dogs may need more careful boarding and sitter screening.

Questions before choosing a breed

Use these questions before expanding the shortlist. They help turn a general inflation signal into a concrete ownership plan.

  • Which services are optional convenience, and which are required for this dog's health, coat, or behavior?
  • What happens during travel, illness, long workdays, or a family emergency?
  • Can the household pay for professional help before a behavior or grooming problem becomes harder to fix?

What not to infer from this data

This CPI series does not say which breed is cheap, which owner should buy insurance, or what one local clinic, groomer, trainer, boarder, retailer, or shelter will charge. It also does not diagnose medical risk or predict an individual dog. Treat the data as a pressure test: if a budget only works when every recurring cost stays flat, the plan needs a larger reserve before adoption.

For stronger planning, combine this public-data page with written quotes, local rules, veterinary records, breeder or rescue documentation, and a realistic weekly care schedule. The best use of pSEO here is not to mass-produce pages; it is to make each public-data page answer one narrow cost question with enough context that a future owner can act on it.

Recent BLS readings

PeriodCPI index
May 2026282.815
April 2026278.868
March 2026278.446
February 2026277.462
January 2026273.801
December 2025272.224
November 2025271.556
September 2025269.084
August 2025269.738
July 2025269.458
June 2025266.759
May 2025264.380

Source and limits

Data source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Public Data API v2, CPI-U, U.S. city average, not seasonally adjusted. Series title from the API catalog: Pet services in U.S. city average, all urban consumers, not seasonally adjusted.

BreedWise uses this as educational planning context only. It should not replace a veterinarian, insurer, groomer, trainer, retailer, landlord, or local service provider quote.