Become a cat sitter in Toronto
Earn CAD 25 to 45 per in-home visit, set your own schedule, and keep up to 90% of every booking with sitter cashback. Short visits, flexible hours, no assigned shifts.
Petme is live in Toronto. Get verified and start accepting cat visit requests in your neighborhood.
What makes a cat sitter book out in Toronto
Toronto is a condo city, and downtown towers are full of indoor cats. Cats are territorial and hate transport, so owners want a sitter who comes to the cat rather than boarding it. That suits the downtown core perfectly: dense buildings put several homes within a short distance, and the winter getaway and holiday travel season keeps cat sitters busy when owners head somewhere warmer.
In-home, not boarding
Feeding, water, litter, play, and a wellbeing check in the cat's own home. Photos after every visit win the rebooking.
Own a tower cluster
Liberty Village, King West, and the downtown core pack condos together. A tight route keeps short visits profitable.
Keep up to 90%
You set your rate. Petme keeps a small commission, and sitter cashback pushes your take-home toward 90% per visit.
Toronto neighborhoods that book the most cat visits
Liberty Village, King West, and The Annex drive downtown condo demand, while Leslieville, Riverdale, and Roncesvalles book steady visits across the year.
Becoming a cat sitter in Toronto
What new cat sitters ask before signing up on Petme in Toronto.
How much do cat sitters earn in Toronto?
Cat sitting on Petme in Toronto runs CAD 25 to 45 per in-home visit, with higher rates for two visits a day or multi-cat homes. You set your own rate, and with sitter cashback you keep up to 90% of every booking.
Do I need experience to become a cat sitter in Toronto?
No formal experience is required. Cat owners care most about reliability, calm handling, and clear photo updates while they travel. A complete, verified profile with the neighborhoods you cover wins the first bookings.
How do cat sitters find their first clients in Toronto?
Most cats are visited at home rather than boarded, so owners book a sitter nearby. The downtown condo towers are full of cat homes, so list the exact neighborhoods you serve. First bookings usually come from your own building or street.
When is cat sitting demand highest in Toronto?
Demand spikes around the December holidays and March break, when owners travel south or abroad but their cats stay home. Summer vacations and long weekends add steady peaks across the year.
Why do Toronto owners prefer in-home cat visits?
Cats are territorial and stressed by transport, so most Toronto owners prefer a sitter who visits the cat in its own home. Visits cover feeding, fresh water, litter, play, and a quick wellbeing check, with photos sent after each one.
Can I be a cat sitter part-time in Toronto?
Yes. You set your own schedule with no minimum hours and no shift rosters. Cat visits are short, so many sitters build a route of nearby condo buildings they visit once or twice a day around a job or studies.
Start cat sitting in Toronto
Set your own per-visit rate. $20,000 vet protection on every booking, cashback that keeps your clients rebooking, and fast payouts to your bank.