The surge is the second-largest increase recorded by any council.
Kildare’s local authority pounds and dog shelters have recorded one of the highest jumps in dog euthanasia cases in the entire State.
New figures seen by Kfm News show 23 dogs were put down in 2024.
Only one was euthanised the previous year.
The surge is the second-largest increase recorded by any council.
Only one local authority - Dublin City - reported a bigger rise.
Nationally, 655 dogs were euthanised last year.
Kildare had been a low-euthanasia county for years.
The sudden jump appears to signal a system under strain and a local authority unable to cope with the volume of surrenders and strays.
Animal welfare groups say councils are facing overcrowded kennels, unregulated breeding and rising abandonment.
Kildare’s five-year record shows the scale of the shift:
23 in 2024, 1 in 2023, 3 in 2022, 1 in 2021, 3 in 2020.
National figures show some councils putting down as few as one dog - and others up to 50 - but Kildare’s year-on-year spike stands out as one of the most severe in the country.
Commenting on the stark figures, Minister for Agriculture and Kildare South TD Martin Heydon said the number of dogs euthanised in local authority pounds/shelters remains "significantly below" where it was a decade ago.
He argued that the overall trend of euthanisations over that period is a "downward one".
Meanwhile, Kildare County Council has confirmed it does not keep a log of complaints, has no record of enforcement actions, and holds no internal reviews related to dog breeding establishments in the county.
It also confirmed that a search of internal drives and email accounts using the keyword “DBE”, short for Dog Breeding Establishments, produced no relevant results for enforcement, internal assessments, or external communications.
This means no emails or letters regarding dog breeding establishments were exchanged between the Department of Agriculture and the council since January 2023.
In response to a Freedom of Information request from Kfm News, the council stated that no records exist for four of the six categories requested, including:
Enforcement actions taken against breeders
Complaints received
Internal reviews, memos, or staffing evaluations
Correspondence with the Department of Agriculture
Specifically, the council wrote that “a log of complaints relating to DBEs is not kept and therefore does not exist.”
Only two categories of the FOI request yielded records: partially redacted inspection reports and the county’s DBE register for 2023 and 2024.
The registers show that ten breeding establishments were licensed in 2024, up from nine in 2023.
Some of these facilities are authorised to keep more than 100 breeding "bitches" and over 300 dogs.
There is no limit to how many dogs a registered premises can have.
Despite the commercial scale of the industry, the council disclosed no information about how complaints are handled, how inspections are evaluated, or whether any welfare concerns have been raised - because, it said, no records are held.
The FOI decision was described as a “part grant”.
Among the inspection reports released to Kfm News, some issues identified at some of the establishments included the following:
One breeder had to be advised on vaccination protocol, specifically the “timing” of vaccinations.
At another establishment, some dogs were being kept in a “crate” outside the designated kennel area.
A report noted the absence of a thermometer on site. The operator was told to source one. The same report highlighted poor storage of chemical cleaners and medication, stating improvements were needed.
One facility was described as operating “below standards” following an inspection visit last April.
The kennels were not purpose-built, although deemed “sufficient if used.”
Cleaning and disinfecting were described as “very poor”, and waste disposal was noted as “not sufficient.”
No identification records for dogs were found at that site.
In a follow up inspection, the inspector noted how cleaning and disinfecting was being carried out, while the breeder showed records including dog owner details.
The report noted how "significant improvements" were carried out bringing the establishment to a "standard now acceptable".
The council told Kfm News that breeding facilities are inspected before being licensed, with annual follow-ups.
But animal welfare issues, they say, fall under the remit of the Department of Agriculture.
The council only released details of dog breeding establishments and protocols after Kfm News submitted an FOI request, having previously stated that they are "not publicly available".
Meanwhile, figures from the Department of Agriculture show that Kildare has had only one year of recorded prosecutions under the Animal Health and Welfare Act 2013 since 2022.
In 2024, Kildare registered six separate offences of animal cruelty.
There were no recorded prosecutions in Kildare in 2022, 2023, or the first half of 2025, according to data from the Department.
Animal welfare enforcement often depends on public complaints, while minor welfare breaches may be dealt with through advice, improvement notices, or animal seizure without court action.

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