Bhutan Animal Rescue & Care. Saving Homeless Animals

Rescue, Heal, Protect

Balanced Compassion, Copyright Jon Kolkin 2025, All Rights Reserved

Bhutan Animal Rescue & Care. Saving Homeless Animals

Rescue, Heal, Protect

Bhutan Animal Rescue & Care. Saving Homeless Animals

Rescue, Heal, Protect

Bhutan Animal Rescue & Care. Saving Homeless Animals

Rescue, Heal, Protect

Bhutan Animal Rescue & Care (BARC) is a leading animal welfare organization in Bhutan, integrating rescue, veterinary medicine, animal-assisted therapy, and wildlife rescue & rehabilitation.

In 2025, we treated 1,508 animals, including 301 in-patient animals and 1207 out-patient animals.

BARC currently provides full-time residential care for over 350 animals — including dogs, cats, macaque monkeys, and wildlife.

One act of kindness changes a life

BARC provides animal rescue across Bhutan and free veterinary care at its Center for Animal Happiness in Tshaluna for strays, working animals, and wildlife.
When you give, 100% goes directly to animal care.

A woman in teal scrubs gently holds a brown tabby cat on a pink towel outdoors with a mountain and forest in the background.

Our Mission

BARC's mission is to promote the health and well-being of all animals in Bhutan through rescue, medical treatment, rehabilitation, and compassionate long-term care. We believe animals are sentient beings deserving respect, kindness, and compassion—aligned with Bhutan's philosophy of Gross National Happiness.

A man with gray hair and a beard holding a fluffy puppy outdoors with a blurred green background.

Our Work

We rescue animals that have been injured, are suffering from disease, are abandoned, or are too old to fend for themselves. We nurse them back to health and reintegrate them into their community, or we provide them with a welcoming home if they have no place to live.

Two people handling a pet carrier in a forest setting

Animal Compassion

Bhutan's constitution enshrines Buddhism as the country's spiritual heritage — the only nation that does so. BARC partners with the Government to extend those compassion ethics to animals.

Meet the Animals

Every animal has a story. Here are a few waiting for your support. 

What we do

BARC provides animal rescue across Bhutan and free veterinary care at its Center for Animal Happiness in Tshaluna. We rescue injured and abandoned animals, treat illness and injury, and work to prevent suffering through education and advocacy.

Medical kit with a cross symbol.

Rescue & Treatment

Emergency response and ongoing medical care for injured, sick, and abandoned animals throughout Bhutan.

An icon of a house with a graduation cap inside it.

Shelter & Rehabilitation

Safe haven for animals in recovery, with physical therapy, specialized care, and long-term housing for permanent residents.

Icon of an open book in brown color

Education & Prevention

BARC is launching school-based animal welfare programs and partnering with therapists to use animal-assisted therapy in mental health treatment."

What veterinary care does BARC provide?

• Veterinary surgery
• Spay and neuter clinics
• Disease and wound management
• Intensive care and long-term inpatient treatment
• 24/7 emergency service
• Infectious disease treatment
• Rehabilitation from starvation, neglect, and abuse
• Physiotherapy
• Wildlife rescue

Two veterinarians, one man and one woman, are examining a dog on an examination table in a veterinary clinic. The woman is holding the dog steady while the man gently holds the dog's head. The clinic is equipped with shelves and medical supplies.

Meet the Team

Our board members, staff, and volunteers.

Our Partners

Organizations that support our mission.


Where your donation goes

Dog and puppy with pet services and prices listed, including spay/neuter for $150, Bordetella vaccine for $10, Deworming for $5, DHPP-L vaccine for $35, Microchip for $15, and Flea/Tick prevention for $20.

Thousands of animals in Bhutan lack access to basic veterinary care and assistance when sick or injured.

Since January 2025, we've admitted and treated 300+ in-patient animals from communities throughout Bhutan.

Of the dogs in our care

Annually, on average

  • 15 are under Intensive Care treatment

  • 100 have chronic conditions such as epilepsy, diabetes, or kidney disease

  • 35 are handicapped, such as paraplegic or blind

  • 12 are abandoned or orphaned puppies

  • 50 are geriatrics

Outpatient care - annually

1,207 animals in total

  • 580 were pets

  • 98 animals were rescued and brought to our rescue center by people

  • 55 cows belonging to local farmers

  • 474 were rescued by BARC itself

Outpatients are mostly dogs (60%), cats (25%), and cattle (15%), but can be any kind of animal, including birds, mules, and horses.

0

Dogs

0

Cats

Silhouette of a primate, possibly a monkey, with a long tail, walking on all fours against a black background.
Silhouette of a small bird facing left, standing on two legs.
Silhouette of a sitting cat against a black background
Silhouette of a howling wolf.

0

Other Animals

0

Macaques

Stories of compassion

A Message of Hope and Thanks

We at BARC have a deep sense of gratitude for the trust placed in us by both human supporters and the animals in our care, whose recovery is the measure of our work, who seem to understand that they are being helped and loved.

Tshelung Ney Monastery

Be the example yourself. Like us, animals seek happiness too. And when we help animals, we too will live with greater prosperity, peace, and a long life free from illness.

Center for Animal Happiness

Discover the Center for Animal Happiness

Frequently asked questions

  • Bhutan is the only country that measures success by Gross National Happiness rather than GDP, and whose Buddhist ethics extend compassion to all sentient beings. Yet there is no national infrastructure for animal welfare here.

  • BARC's mission is what we do every day: provide veterinary care, rescue, and rehabilitation for Bhutan's street and wildlife animals, while training the people and partnerships that make that care sustainable.


    Our vision is where that work leads — a nationally recognized, financially self-sustaining animal welfare organization that sets the standard for Bhutan. Mission is the daily practice; vision is the destination.

    BARC opposes the capture or breeding of wildlife for human entertainment.