Cat Cancer & End‑of‑Life Care, Part 1 – Understanding the Diagnosis https://hubs.ly/Q03Vm8B60
Honor Pet
Veterinary Services
Los Angeles, California 831 followers
End-of-life care for pets: pre-planning, euthanasia, memorials, water cremation, and pet loss support—all under one roof
About us
→ FOR VET CLINICS ← Every goodbye shapes how clients remember you. Let’s make it unforgettable. Honor Pet is the cremation partner that elevates your clinic’s care—without extra cost, complexity, or headaches. • Save 15 minutes per patient: No double data entry. No clunky portals. Just seamless integration with your PMS. • Cut follow-up calls: We keep pet parents updated throughout, so your team doesn’t have to. • A memorial return you’ll be proud of: Beautifully packaged, thoughtfully handled. Comfort for families, credibility for you. • Leave a living legacy: We plant a tree for every cremation and send you monthly reports so your impact is visible and meaningful. We’re not just a service provider—we’re your silent partner in delivering better care. We save your team time, strengthen your reputation, and help your clinic lead with heart. → FOR PET PARENTS ← A new kind of goodbye, designed around you. Honor Pet is changing how pet end of life can be. We’re the first truly pet parent–centered brand in the cremation space. That means every service, every decision, is built around you. At our LA Comfort Center, we offer a full end-of-life care journey under one roof: pre-planning, euthanasia, water cremation, memorial experiences, grief support, and community events. It’s not just a better version of what came before. It’s a completely new approach—to give you more time, more transparency, and more choice. Because goodbyes matter.
- Website
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https://www.honor.pet/vet
External link for Honor Pet
- Industry
- Veterinary Services
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- Los Angeles, California
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2023
- Specialties
- water cremation, pet end-of-life, euthanasia, quality of life, pre-planning, and memorial experiences
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
717 Mateo St
Los Angeles, California 90021, US
Employees at Honor Pet
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Ben Boyer
Investor / Entrepreneur
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Shea Cox, DVM
Death Vet | Doing Death Differently
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Amy Abadia, MSSW, LCSW
Licensed Clinical Social Worker at Texas Oncology | Veterinary Social Worker | Expert in Geriatric Psychotherapy & Case Management | Certified Mental…
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Dustin Gray
Director of Operations at Honor Pet
Updates
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Should Children Be Present During Pet Euthanasia? https://hubs.ly/Q03Vg9Kx0
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Why Choose In‑Home Euthanasia Instead of a Hospital Visit https://hubs.ly/Q03TLGHg0
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Well this was a surprise 💗 .... Each of our comfort rooms has a memorial station, where families can write a note of goodbye to their pet, draw a picture using our art supplies, create a memorial bouquet from our flower stand, or even raise a champagne toast. What a surprise to find that this family actually wrote US a card instead 💕 We found it left behind for us in the comfort room; during such a difficult day, they cared for us as well. My. Heart. Is. Full.
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Why Choose Euthanasia Over “Natural Death”? https://hubs.ly/Q03SNqWB0
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Making the Choice: How to Know When It’s Time to Say Goodbye https://hubs.ly/Q03SJ1J70
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It's official! Honor Pet is now offering * in-home euthanasia * services for families across the greater #losangeles area 💗 ! This was the final piece of the puzzle in creating truly complete, end-to-end care, all under one roof. Our services include: - pre planning visits - euthanasia in the comfort of home - euthanasia services in our tranquil comfort center - memorial viewings and services - water cremation - free pet loss support with our licensed social worker Amy Abadia, MSSW, LCSW - community events and workshops Pictured here is me and Percy during one of my first in-home euthanasia appointments way back in 2012. It was then I realized the magic of these services. His mom was an endearingly animated and elegant elderly French woman (complete with fancy scarf) who "insisted" we have a champagne toast to honor her boy (her finest bottle, of course!), out on the patio where he loved to lay in the sun. In retrospect, maybe that’s where the idea for the champagne toasts in each of our Comfort Rooms came from :) A full circle moment and I couldn't be more grateful.
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A few weeks ago, I got a message from Pressman Film. They were working on a documentary about immortality and death, and during their research into end-of-life care for pets, they found HonorPet. When asking them, "why us", it was because we’re truly doing death differently. Honor Pet doesn't just offer a place to say goodbye, we create intentional space for something sacred and completely personal. I wasn’t expecting an appointment that day, but when the crew came to film, I had just helped Nixon pass, and by some beautiful cosmic alignment, his family agreed to being interviewed. Asking someone to share their heart following such a loss felt like such a big ask. But they were so open to it, because they hoped their experience might help someone else going through the same thing. The film crew was able to capture not just the emotion of goodbye, but the power of being given the space to say goodbye in a way that was right for this family. At HonorPet, each of our comfort rooms have a memorial station where families can honor their pet through creativity and ritual. Nixon’s family made bouquets from our flower cart, wrote a thank you note, drew a portrait, and even raised a champagne toast to their beach-loving boy. I walked away from this experience knowing this is why Honor Pet exists. To help families say goodbye in a way that feels like them, to honor the bond, and to allow beauty and grief to sit side by side. Watching this family leave with an empty cart really hit me hard, but being trusted to hold that kind of love is something I’ll never take for granted. Thank you to Nixon, to his incredible family, and to Pressman Film for helping tell a story the world really needs to see. 🤍
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Just because they’re gone doesn’t mean they’re gone, right? Our pets truly do remain “everywhere.” They continue to show up in weird little ways, like your morning routine, a sound you forgot you missed, a memory that sneaks up mid-laugh, or a smell that brings you back to a tender moment in time. Love never leaves. It just changes form. For me, I have “a song.” I hear it and I’m instantly transported back to the day I lost my soul dog (even though that was 12 years ago). What’s something that brings you back to your pet?
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Talking to Children About Pet Euthanasia https://hubs.ly/Q03QV8FN0