Shropshire Star

Tinder-style app matches dogs in shelters to potential owners

Sadly the dogs don’t get to swipe…

Published
Dog matching app GetPet in action

If the pooch melts your heart, swipe right.

Animal lovers in Lithuania have created a mobile application inspired by the popular dating app Tinder to match up dogs in local shelters with new owners.

Called GetPet, the app was launched last month and is getting hundreds of new users daily – and has already made a few matches.

Ruta Buisaite plays with her new dog Cipe
Ruta Buisaite adopted her new dog Cipe via GetPet (Mindaugas Kulbis/AP)

“It is like Tinder, but with dogs,” said Vaidas Gecevicius, one of the app’s creators. “You can arrange a meeting with the dog — a date.”

The app features profiles of furry four-legged creatures looking up with soft yearning eyes. Scrolling down reveals more information about the pup, and those interested can then swipe right.

But there are limits to the Tinder comparison. The dogs don’t get to have a swiping experience. If you swipe left another dog profile appears.

Two friends, Emily and Elena, recently scanned the app and then visited the SOS Gyvunai shelter in Vilnius to meet Piff, a medium black-and-grey mongrel. They took him for a walk in a snow-covered park and said they would return soon to take him home.

Lithuania Dog Matching App
The creators of GetPet hope to match stray dogs like this one to new owners (Mindaugas Kulbis/AP)

Gecevicius said the app only features dogs for now but the plan is to eventually include cats and other animals.

“I think it’s actually a very great idea because in Lithuania we have a lot of stray dogs and a lot of people who want to adopt,” 24-year-old Elena said as dogs nearby ran around in outdoor cages barking.

Ilona Reklaityte, the shelter’s founder, said she is very happy about the innovative approach to an old problem.

“I really welcome this new app as it gives us more chances to find our pets new owners and a new home, and that means we can then help other dogs still on the streets,” Reklaityte said.

“We have 140 dogs right now. Sometimes we give away one or two of them every day, but now we receive (many) more calls and people are coming more often.”

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