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PuppySpot


Country United States
State Florida
City Cooper City
Address 12233 SW 55th Street, Suite 811
Phone (866) 306-6064
Website https://www.puppyspot.com

PuppySpot Reviews

Most Useful Comment
  • Aug 3, 2017

I signed up with Puppyspot.com because I thought they were a reputable company and would help me sell my puppies online. I have spent a lot of hours researching my bloodlines, DNA testing, health testing etc. to be sure that I am raising the finest puppies, for temperament, conformation, and soundness of mind. I raise Australian Shepherds, which if not bred correctly, can be a very nuerotic difficult dog to control once grown. My puppies are top of the line. I have many champions in my bloodlines to prove it.

The problems began when after speaking to the manager of Joanne Baron, who told, because I inquired, that they would just add a little on top of the price of my puppy in order to make a small profit, I found out that infact they priced my puppy so that they were actually making more on my dog than I was! If you look at their website, you can see that the purebred dogs are very inferior to quality dogs of the same breed, and their prices are out of this world! They don't care who sells those puppies, as long as they can make a huge profit! Their screening process is a joke at best. All they are really interested in is making money!

Then, after being accepted, when I tried to put my puppies on the website, I had nothing but problems. The photos would not upload, the videos would not upload, and the pedigrees that I had downloaded from my dog's registry took 6 tries before they would upload, and then in the end, those disappeared because a representative contacted me asking for copies of them. I had doubled checked everything; it was all there, and it took me 2 hours instead of the 20 or 30 minutes it should have to get my puppies posted.

So finally, after two weeks, I sold a puppy. Now they want all sorts of things done within a small window of three days, there is all sorts of paperwork that has to be printed and faxed back to them...who has a fax these days? No one, unless you are a business that uses a fax a lot. It is an archaic idea. It would be so much easier to take a picture with a phone and send it via email or text to the proper individual, but oh no, I am expected to drive an hour to the nearest fax, while printing and filling out tons of paperwork, alot of which could have been filled out weeks ago, and then I must fax it back to them. On top of that, I have to get my puppy crate trained to get on a plane, and get an appointment with my very busy veterinarian to get a health check. Mind you, most of us are not big breeders, remember they tought the "no puppy mill" standard, therefore, we work full time jobs, but somehow we are supposed to get all of this paperwork filled out, and fax it back to all of these different departments! Seriously? There should be one point of contact for all of the paperwork period, and that person, Alexa, who was my account manager, and did absolutely nothing the whole time I was with Puppyspot, should be responsible for getting it back to the right departments.

The straw that broke the camel's back was when I received an email from the accounting department asking me for information concerning an account to place payment. Mind you, I had sent that in two days prior, and we are getting down to the wire, and even though I had emailed them the information they requested, they did not have it? I was furious! I had an appointment that day to see the vet to get the health certificate so that my puppy could fly out two days later, and they don't have the account on file, that I had sent them to set up payment! Are you kidding? What a Mickey Mouse operation! So I called the accounting department demanding to know why they did not have the information, and why they were wasting my precious time. They said it was a mistake on their part! Really? So bottom line is they don't care about the experience the breeder has, they can build an inferior website, the right hand doesn't need to know what the left hand is doing, as long as they are making thousands of dollars a day selling inferior puppies online. Then they did a penny test, which is a common test to see if Paypal is receiving money on my behalf and into my paypal account (which charges a 3% commission for taking the money), and the penny test failed too. Now I was really upset! They showed a penny going into my Paypal account, and I saw zero going into my account from Puppyspot. I asked to get the email of the CEO because I had had it with this Mickey Mouse Company wasting anymore of my precious time, and that is when I got the phone call to cancel my account. Of course, when I look on the site tonight, my gorgeous puppies are still on the site...it's good business to show some quality dogs, even though we are no longer doing business together. The rest of their Australian Shepherds look like mutts, so I can understand why they haven't taken my dogs off of their site yet. But funny, once I asked to be able to communicate with the CEO...party over! No worries, I will find out his email address, and I will contact him about his money mongering company.

Mark as Useful [3 votes]
  • Jan 20, 2018

I am a dog breeder that had worked with Puppy Spot for a few years.

while I as a breeder work myself to the bone to produce healthy puppies, ethically, long 18 hour days, sleepless nights, no vaccations, catering to every client request and having no free time for anything, Puppy Spot comes along and makes anywhere from $1000-$2000 per puppy while doing none of the hard work. All they do is advertise and making sales.

They are nothing but a DOG BROKER- "The middle man" making money off of breeders' hard work. Same as a pet store would be- a middle man-only they are high end retail stores that actually have major over head.

Only the difference is that a pet store actually BUYS the puppies from a breeder and cares for the puppy until sold. Puppyspot a Puppy Broker adds their broker fee to the breeder's asking purchase price and sells the puppy for at least double that.. Heck- it makes pet stores sound great now - Huh? At least you get to "see" the puppy you're buying. Not that I would recommend you do so, as I know first hand that stores buy from puppy mills for like $300 a puppy and sells for like $2000-$3000.

As an ethical dog breeder I charge $1850 for my puppies when you find my business and come to me to buy a puppy. I offer a way better warranty than Puppy Spot will ever offer you. Only at Puppyspot you will be paying about $3800 for the same puppy. WOW! Really? YES! really! Now, I know brokers are out there to make money- but profiting $2000 ON TOP of what the breeder makes is a rip off to anyone buying through a broker. Puppyspot used to be "Buy puppies direct"! How would someone buy "direct" from a broker? what a joke! And absolutely misleading- making people believe they are buying "directly" from the breeder. How far from the truth!?

Now hold on; I have talked to the clients that bought a puppy from Puppyspot and we kept in touch. Guess what else I learned. While I bought the crate out of my own money, Puppyspot "Charged" the buyer for the same crate on their end. They DIDN'T buy the crate. So turns out that buyer is also double paying for the airfare as well. In addition client is also paying for the pre shipping vet exam twice as well. Once to the breeder and once to Puppy spot. Did Puppyspot take the puppy to the vet? No. Then they will be paying for another exam when they get the puppy. Client's expenses do not end at the "purchase fee". Puppy spot is so greedy that they will make double and triple their money on Anything relating to the sale.

I am appalled and so disgusted. Paying $3800 for a puppy will not get you a better puppy than the one costing $1850! In most cases clients come to me personally and get their puppies, seeing where I live and how the dogs are kept. So clients: do your research- Pay less, buy from a reputable breeder, get a better warranty and "see" the dog your buying when you pick it up in person. This is a corrupt company and they have many "sick puppies" complaints. So beware. They claim to not deal with puppy mills but I personally know some very shady breeders that work with Puppyspot and they fit the description of a puppy mill to a T. All this was brought to my attention by clients who wanted to know why I charge so much for the puppy- only to find out that they have more than DOUBLE paid for the puppy that they could have had for half the price. I really felt sorry for those clients and writing on their behalf.

Mark as Useful [2 votes]
  • Jan 2, 2018

December 18, 2016 I purchased a long haired chihuahua from puppyspot.com as a christmas gift for my kids. He was falsely advertised as a long haired chihuahua, which parents weighed 4 and 5 pounds each. At his last vet check he weighed 5 pounds at 4 months of age. Dogs continue to grow up until a year and he was estimated by the vet to grow up to 12 pounds. I contacted Puppyspot.com regarding my concern on the double, maybe triple weight the vet had estimated. They told me I was feeding the puppy too much and that was why he was growing so much. I was appalled that they would say such a thing as if a chihuahua can grow into a great dane if you overfeed it? I submitted a claim with them regarding the false advertising to which they said they would contact the breeder and get more information regarding the puppies' parents. I was again surprised they had not gathered that information before they would list a dog for $2, 500 dollars and use what I thought were reputable breeders. The breeder responded that the dogs had grown a pound in the two months since I had purchased the dog. Considering the dogs were 4 and 5 pounds that is 25% of their weight increase in two months. Breeding practices recommend to bread a dog at least when they are a year to a year and half old. Dogs stop growing at a year. If they bred a dog before the dog was fully developed that is poor breeding practices. If the dog was weighed much before and the weight had not been updated before it was pregnant it is false advertising. I have never purchased a dog sight unseen however I felt that I could trust puppyspot.

Boy was I wrong, I overpaid for a dog that is probably not worth more than $300, shipped a puppy from California to Texas and have spent several hundreds of dollars on vet bills for shots and ear mites since he arrived to me with ear mites. I continued to contact puppyspot as I wanted a $1, 500 refund and they responded that they could not guarantee the weight of their dogs. I could understand this if the weight variation was a pound or two however this is a significant weight difference. They said no, so I then proceeded to ask to return the dog and get a full refund including all of his shots and vet expenses. They again said no and have not resolved the issue of fraud and false advertising. I have never reported a business with the BBB however I feel grossly violated, I believe they are committing fraud and false advertising, I believe they are stealing money from customers such as myself who trusted them and believed they were buying from reputable and responsible breeders. .com Complaints & Reviews Puppyspot - misrepresentation in advertising, incompetence [5] Puppyspot - guarantee breach contract three weeks ago I purchased a golden from puppy spot Puppyspot - haven for puppmills. sells by photos. what pup you receive is anyone's guess.[5] Puppyspot.com - breeder experience

Puppyspot - puppy [1] Puppyspot - my sad story Puppy Spot - pet sales/internet puppy sales Puppyspot.com- puppy Puppyspot - employment Puppyspot.com - puppy spot.com aka buy puppies direct

Mark as Useful [2 votes]
  • Oct 6, 2017

We purchased a puppy from PuppySpot in December of 2016. After paying over 2000.00 dollars for the puppy we looked forward to receiving her. We took her to the vet like we were told to do. The vet informed us that she had a infection in her chest which was causing her to cough. She suggested we have her stool checked and we were informed the next day she had coccitia and giardia. We spent none the less 6 months of cleaning and keeping her in a pen by herself so she would not infect my other dog. Well none the less my other dog got infected. Now I had to deal with 2 sick dogs. We had them both on medications for 6 months which cost me over 2400.00 dollars. This has been the worst experience I have ever dealt with when it involved a pet. I love my animals and will do anything I can to fix whatever ails them but I am disappointed. After a year she still has stomach issues and her stool will never be normal. I will never purchase from this company again. Thank you

Mark as Useful [2 votes]
  • Jun 7, 2019

beware of Puppy Spot bait and switch information

I would be very careful buying from PuppySpot on the internet. What they say on the phone when you discuss purchasing a puppy is not what they legally write in their Terms and Conditions you have to agree to prior to buying a puppy. In fact, I would seriously consider it a total bait and switch. Example below, they told be I could breed my puppy if i wanted too over the phone. I was about an five minutes from buying the dog I went and read the Terms and Conditions on the website which stated...

Customer agrees and acknowledges that Customer will not breed the puppy. Customer agrees to spay or neuter the puppy at an appropriate age, as determined in consultation with Customer's veterinarian;

and Registration papers will only be sent for registered puppies and may not be sent until such time as the puppy has been spayed or neutered. Registration papers for all registered puppies will be sent by regular mail typically within two to four weeks of PuppySpot receiving confirmation of spay or neuter and could take up to six months.

This basically means, and I had no intention of breeding my puppy, but they are under no obligation to send you registration papers until you prove that your dog is spayed or neutered. Paperwork that you are legally entitled to after spending the cost of a new puppy.

Since when does a 3rd party broker have the right to tell you what you can or can't do with your dog in the future or worse forcing an owner into spaying or neutering your dog in order to get it's paperwork. Totally freaked me out of buying from them.

I would recommend people do their homework and stay away from this company.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Jul 7, 2018

This company is legitimately troubling, and I highly recommend no one try to adopt a puppy through their service.

Some things to keep in mind:

1) They operate in a way that hides the identity of the breeders they obtain their dogs from. This is deeply troubling, because any and all legitimate breeders in the use have to be registered and obtain a USDA license number (which means they have regular inspections that ensure the dogs are not being housed in appropriately/are not puppy mills). This is public information and anyone adopting a dog from a breeder has the right to have access to the breeder’s records through this ID number. PuppySpot will NOT give this to you. This is not to protect the breeders, but to protect themselves. If it becomes apparent that they do not have this ID number because the breeders are not registered, or if do have it and have knowledge of bad practices by the breeder, then people will not adopt from them. This happened to my brother. They finally gave him the breeder’s USDA ID number and it came out that the breeder had multiple infractions against them and may not have had an inspection in 5 years. Their “no puppy mill promise” is an outright lie.

2) They do not provide any written and signed contracts to ensure the protection of the buyer. They have next no accountability for whatever happens during your transaction with them and you have next to no legal backing to protect you if and when your dog arrives a different breed, is sick, or if just doesn’t show up at all. You’re out thousands of dollars. If you request a contract, they will simply redirect you to their terms of use on their website and ignore any further inquiries. Which bring-s me to my next point.

3) “Taylor M.” (email address is [email protected], phone number is 866-306-6064, ext. 266) will outright ignore you if you ask questions that you have every legal right to ask. This is not only an atrocious and unprofessional business practice, it is also a huge red flag. If your request any information that will support your rights as a buyer of a puppy that is the breed promise, of proper health, and has documentary proof that it does not come from a puppy mill, Taylor will completely cut-off contact with you.

I end this reiterating that no person who loves dogs, believes in protecting themselves, and who does not want to support the puppy mills that this business is protecting, should contact this service to adopt. My brother is the type of person they take advantage of—the eager, non-legal savvy, impatient, and relatively shallow. He paid them without consulting an attorney and without signing a contract ensuring that their promises would be kept. His dog is due to arrive in July—and I have no hope that the dog will arrive in the state that he anticipates. (It will either be sick, a breed they’re passing off as the one he requested, will arrive the breed he requested and healthy but will become sickly further down the road, or will not arrive at all.) When that happens, as I’ve told him, he will be optionless and this terrible service will continue their bad business practices and continue funding puppy mills.

Don’t be my brother. Don’t order from these people. If you choose to contact them, protect yourself and get paperwork, the breeder’s USDA ID number, and a signed contract. If they choose not to provide you with this information that should be public, you’ll know why.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Mar 14, 2018

I am a former breeder of Dalmatians. They have spot patterns that can change after they are welped. They are spot patterns that are visible for only a few minutes after they are born and then disappear. And for the most part they do not change and are like fingerprints. The dals that are on their sight are from puppy mills and are not registered members of the DCOSC (Dalmatian club of Southern California) nor AKC (American Kennel club) registered, I checked.

The pups they are showing have several different pictures of several different pups and advertised cost is about half of what you end up spending. (Or what they try to charge you after the fact.) They are glad to talk to you until you ask too many questions. Their vetting process is highly suspicious and the humane society of the US and animal control law enforcement agencies are investigating them because they are now advertising on Sirius com and internationally.

Homeland security is watching them as well. If you are looking for a good dog go to a registered breeder properly licensed and get a good vet to check them out in your presence. You will save money by doing the it the old fashioned way rather than paying double to do it on the internet. Animals should only be bought face to face.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Feb 8, 2018

My wife and I purchased two German Shepherd puppies from your organization. The first puppy (Camille) we purchased was a little less than two years ago when you were under the name purebredbreeders.com. At that time, Camille came to us with Giardia and we had a very difficult time getting rid of it, however, the customer service was fabulous! They continued to call to check on her and reimbursed us for some of the expense. They also ensured we received her AKC papers in a timely fashion. The second puppy we purchased (Abigail) was under the name of Puppyspot.com. The customer service is horrible or should I say non-existent. The ad on your website stated her parents were 95 pounds each however Abigail is now a year old and weighs only 65 pounds. I believe this was false advertising. Abigail also came to us with Giardia and Coccidia. We had Abigail checked by our veterinarian within 24 hours of her arrival. At that time she was only 8 weeks old and it was too early to have her screened for either one of those diseases. It was after a couple of weeks when she kept having diarrhea (since her arrival) that we took her to our veterinarian when she was diagnosed. We contacted your organization to advise you of the situation but could never speak with anyone. We have left several messages with zero response. Since then, Abigail has had a cyst removed from her side, she currently has hygromas on both front elbows and she has a recessed vulva which causes regular yeast infections. Abigail will need surgery to correct the hygromas and her recessed vulva. We still do not have her AKC registration papers. The puppies you sell on your website come with a 10 year guarantee against congenital defects and the breeders are supposed to be carefully screened. With all of Abigail's issues we have spent hundreds, possibly thousands on her care. We believe she may have come from a puppy mill. We love her very much and would not think of giving her away but we expect some sort of resolution.

Thank you in advance for your prompt response.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Dec 25, 2017

This company Puppyspot/Purebred Breeers is just another Internet puppy mill. Any breeder/good or bad can post cute photos on their site and put descriptions, age and any other info they like. There may be excellent breeders and/or terrible breeders on this site. They charge very high prices for the puppies. They sell any and every breed of dog you can think of including rare mixes.

Anyway, I purchased a Yorkie from them a few years ago. This little puppy was very cute, but he was a biter and a barker. I understand the breed and so I did not complain about these breed spicific qua;ities. For years I loved this little puppy. Finally after a year or two he bit the mailman and drew blood. After this I called Purebred breeders/Puppy spot and told them about the problems. At this point I had paid well over $4000 for training, the puppy and Vet bills. They could care less. I finally read about the owner being involved in a class action lawsuit and read everyting about this company.

So, after awhile I decided to sell my little Yorkie. He was out of control. I found a good home for him with a larger dog, teenage children and adults. I kept in touch with this family. So, finally after this little Yorkie bit another person animal control took him. He was taken to a facitlty and put to sleep. He was only 2/1/2 years old at the time. If you purchase a Christmas puppy from this place you are contributing to this horrible practice of buying from an Internet puppy mill. These people do not see or hold these puppies. They just collect tons of money. I have a beautiful puppy now that I bought from a local breeder for $800. She waited until the puppy was 5 months old before I got him. He came neutered/chipped and with no health issues. Please don't support this abuse. STAY AWAY FROM PUPPYSPOT.

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Nov 30, 2017

Two years ago when PuppySpot was known as Purebred Breeders I bought a very expensive--$3000--Shih-Tzu puppy. He was a beautiful little dog. When my vet examined him she stated that he was not 12 weeks old as stated by his birthdate on Purebreed Breeders paperwork but more like 6-8 weeks old. He was far too young to be seperated from his mother. He had major seperation anxiety issues as you can imagine. I spoke to Purebred Breeders and they again lied about his birthdate. I now realize that Puppy Spot and Purebred Breedeers never actually see the dogs or have any knowledge of their history. The breeders place the photos and all the information on their website. Any breeder from the US can list a dog on the site and write anything they want. They can falsfy the date of birth and any other info they choose.

So, to make this long story short, Toby, became worse and worse. At the age of 2 he would scream when he was away from me even just to take a shower. He would scream and bark all night if not in my bed. He attacked any other dogs if I petted them and he started urinating and deficating in the house. I previously walked him for a mile in the morning and a half mile at dusk after dinner. I called Puppyspot and told them the situation. They stated that they had a re-homing program but Toby did not qualify. Why I do not know as they did not explain further. So, I found a lovely home for Toby with an older couple who will cater to Tobys eery need. They sleep with him, shower with him etc. I explained the situation to them. I then thought I would give Puppyspot anoher try. I bought and paid for another Shih-tzu puppy Gorden. He again was over $3000. After I read all the negative reviews and sopke to a nasty woman in their customer service area I cancelled the order. They said that my $3000 would be creditied. So far nothing. So, I consider this internet fraud. Avoid this company like the plaque!!

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Nov 24, 2017

Imagine how fast the Amish kennels are increasing their breeding dogs now that they have

this huge online abroker to hide behind. Imagine the millions of dollars being made by Puppyspot

being supplied by so many Amish PUPPYMILLS. Whoops excuse me Puppyspot says PUPPYMILLS not allowed ( liars liars pants on fire)

YET Have you seen their own videos of the AMISH KENNELS ???

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Mar 11, 2017

Puppy Spot AKA Pure bred Breeders.com Find Breeders,get them to sign on with them then list their puppies at 2 and sometimes 3 times what the Breeder is asking for the same Puppy.I am a Breeder of Rhodesian Ridgebacks and Cane Corsos and run a clean fun Kennel.These people are only puppy Brokers,they take what a Breeder is asking,Like me $1100.00,they sale the puppy at $2500 to $3000.00,they say they add a 2 year warranty on the puppy,but I already give a 2 year warranty.Its a TOTAL RIPOFF,I stronly urge you to actually contact the Kennel 1st! Leave these scammers out of the equation. They were called Pure Bred Breeders,now have changed their name to Puppy Spot,what doed that say about them??

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Feb 7, 2017

I was sold a very sick puppy and the man who sold it to me are now operating under a new title PUPPY-SPOT or PUPPYSPOT.com they used to be called BUY PUPPIES DIRECT but so many complaints on sick puppies they changed their internet name These are bad people using puppies to get rich And lying about themselves .They write up information to try to look good but they are running Away from old complaints Get normal jobs you hustlers you scavengers

Mark as Useful [1 vote]
  • Sep 6, 2022

For the most part, USDA-licensed commercial dog breeders are high volume puppy producers, aka PUPPYMILLS!! These are the more common type, the larger scale Mills that produce pups for PuppySpot Broker, ONLINE PETSHOP.

Small Breeders of a few to litters a year welcome the public and sell their own puppies. What kind of Breeder uses a broker? If you care about supporting mass producing mills, this it should matter to you.

Please understand how PuppySpot basically works.

1. Dog Breeders (most likely large scale who want to be hidden from public view) sign up to join. They send PHOTOS of puppies they have for sale and PuppySpot assumes the photos are updated current pups for sale (as living puppies are not seen by the PuppySpot brokers). Think about that! A kennel can sent a photo of a puppy that sold years ago and then send you a similar looking puppy, not as nice.

PuppySpot is a well known BROKER which is an online PETSHOP That pays Breeders wholesale price for each puppy that it sells through their website. The breeder may get $500 a pup but PuppySpot lists the puppy for $2300. You see?

  • Jan 31, 2019

I purchased what I was guaranteed to be a teacup Pomeranian. While they now state they make no guarantees to the size of the dog, they did listen to recordings and the agent did indeed guarantee this pup would be 5 lbs or under. At the “ripe old age” of 8 months, this pup is already 12 lbs. I called and spoke to the office numerous time, each time they assured me that they would get back to me.

They blow me off, don’t get back to me and have not kept their word on any type of refund. Once the pup leaves them, there is no such thing as Customer Service. I paid $3,749 for a puppy that I could have rescued at the humane society for. Completely disappointed and let down by this organization and will NEVER recommend them to anyone I know.

  • Nov 22, 2017

PUppyspot False propaganda posted online to try to look respectable when in fact these are people selling puppies from PUPPYMILLS they hide and protect. Adult dogs in kennels live under horrible conditions and even worse conditions if the owners can hide away and just send pictures to a BroKerr like PUPPYSPOT . PUPPYSPOT doesn't know the bloodlines, the health or even size or looks of the puppies and the parents. They sell based on PHOTOS the kennels sends them to post .

  • Feb 23, 2017

December 18, 2016 I purchased a long haired chihuahua from puppyspot.com as a christmas gift for my kids. He was falsely advertised as a long haired chihuahua, which parents weighed 4 and 5 pounds each. At his last vet check he weighed 5 pounds at 4 months of age. Dogs continue to grow up until a year and he was estimated by the vet to grow up to 12 pounds. I contacted Puppyspot.com regarding my concern on the double, maybe triple weight the vet had estimated. They told me I was feeding the puppy too much and that was why he was growing so much. I was appalled that they would say such a thing as if a chihuahua can grow into a great dane if you overfeed it? I submitted a claim with them regarding the false advertising to which they said they would contact the breeder and get more information regarding the puppies' parents. I was again surprised they had not gathered that information before they would list a dog for $2,500 dollars and use what I thought were reputable breeders. The breeder responded that the dogs had grown a pound in the two months since I had purchased the dog. Considering the dogs were 4 and 5 pounds that is 25% of their weight increase in two months. Breeding practices recommend to bread a dog at least when they are a year to a year and half old. Dogs stop growing at a year. If they bred a dog before the dog was fully developed that is poor breeding practices. If the dog was weighed much before and the weight had not been updated before it was pregnant it is false advertising. I have never purchased a dog sight unseen however I felt that I could trust puppyspot. Boy was I wrong, I overpaid for a dog that is probably not worth more than $300, shipped a puppy from California to Texas and have spent several hundreds of dollars on vet bills for shots and ear mites since he arrived to me with ear mites. I continued to contact puppyspot as I wanted a $1,500 refund and they responded that they could not guarantee the weight of their dogs. I could understand this if the weight variation was a pound or two however this is a significant weight difference. They said no, so I then proceeded to ask to return the dog and get a full refund including all of his shots and vet expenses. They again said no and have not resolved the issue of fraud and false advertising. I have never reported a business with the BBB however I feel grossly violated, I believe they are committing fraud and false advertising, I believe they are stealing money from customers such as myself who trusted them and believed they were buying from reputable and responsible breeders.

  • Feb 7, 2017

Puppyspot popped up under the pretense that it would make sure Breeders are safe to buy from, but in reality all you have is the largest broker that exists collecting all the kennel owners around the United States. Puppyspot is a place where Kennels can take cover. My friend bought a puppy that died from Parvo, and we found a buyer that bought a teacup puppy for $2500 and the puppy is 5 lbs and just 15 weeks old.the puppy looks like a miniature Aussie rather then a Chihuahua and her Veterinarian is estimating 12 lbs grown.

Puppyspot is going to rake in so many Breeders and provide safe haven for them because otherwize these breeders are unable to sell locally due to the laws. Puppyspot provides a safe place for kennel owners to place their puppies for sale. These breeders will hide behind puppyspot who pays them for thier puppies and gains a comission for each sale.

PUPPYSPOT HAS NO CONTACT WTH THE PUPPIES THEY SELL.

How easy for Puppyspot to not have to clean up feces nor feed the puppie snor know anything about the puppies lines, pedigrees histories, size and quality. PUPPYSPOT DOES NOT VIEW THE PUPPIES THEY SELL FOR THE KENNELS THEY SUPPORT. PUPPYSPOT DOESNT SEE THE PARENTS, NOR THE PUPPIES AND DOES NOT VIEW CONDITIONS OF KENNEL.

The only hope to stop this madness is for this organization to be revealed for what it truly is by an animal rights group, so Peta isn.t it time you start checking this huge company ut and nip it in the bud? This is not just an advertizing forum but is a puppymill pimping compamy where back yard breeders and kennels will take refuge.

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