PawAlarm

My Pet Is Microchipped — Will the Chip Help Find It?

Published · 6 min read

A vet reading a dog's microchip with a scanner

If your pet is microchipped, it already carries its ticket home under its skin. But the chip only works if the registered details are current — and it is not a GPS tracker. It cannot tell you where your pet is right now. It only does its job the moment someone finds your pet, scans the chip, and the registry leads back to your phone number. That last link — your registration — is where the chain breaks most often.

What a microchip does — and what it doesn't

A microchip is a passive transponder the size of a grain of rice, with no battery and no transmitter. It stores exactly one piece of information: a 15-digit number. Only when a vet, shelter, or animal control officer holds a scanner directly over the chip does that number appear — and it then has to be looked up in a registry to lead anyone to you.

  • It does: prove your pet's identity permanently and tamper-proof — it can never fall off and lasts a lifetime.
  • It doesn't: transmit a location. There is no GPS, no app, no tracking function of any kind.
  • It doesn't contain your contact details — only the number. Your name, phone, and address live in the registry, not in the chip.
  • It only helps if it is registered and the details are current. A chip linked to a dead phone number is effectively silent.

Which registry matters — and why there is more than one

The chip is the same everywhere — what matters is which database it is enrolled in. In the US and Canada there is no single national registry, which is exactly why so many chipped pets sit in shelters unclaimed. Here is how to find yours:

  • Start with the chip brand's own registry: the company that made the chip (listed in your adoption or vet paperwork) runs the database where your details should live.
  • Use a universal lookup: the AAHA Universal Pet Microchip Lookup checks a chip number against many participating registries at once and tells you where — if anywhere — it is enrolled.
  • Ask the vet or shelter that implanted the chip: they have the chip number on file and often know which registry it was enrolled in, or whether registration was ever completed at all.
  • If the lookup shows the chip in no registry, register it today — an implanted but unregistered chip is one of the most common and most heartbreaking findings at shelters.

The 10-minute check to do today

Don't wait for an emergency to find out your registration is stale — verify it now. It takes barely ten minutes:

  1. Find the chip number: it is in your adoption papers, vaccination records, or vet file. If you can't find it, any vet can scan your pet in under a minute.
  2. Verify the entry: run the number through a universal lookup or log in to the chip brand's registry and check that your phone, email, and address are correct.
  3. Update after every change: correct the record immediately after moving or changing numbers — and add a second emergency contact if the registry allows it.
  4. Save the number: store the 15-digit chip number in your phone. If your pet ever goes missing, you'll need it for shelter reports and search alerts.

What happens when a found pet is scanned

The rescue chain looks like this: someone finds your pet and brings it to a vet, shelter, or animal control. The chip is scanned, the number is looked up in the registries — and the registry contacts you or releases your details to the finder. From found to phone call can take just hours.

Every link in that chain can break: the pet isn't found or isn't brought in for scanning, the chip was never registered — or the phone number on file is dead. That's why the full net has three layers: the chip is the safety net, a collar tag is the fastest route for an honest finder, and a targeted lost-pet alert makes sure your pet gets spotted and brought in for scanning in the first place. Only together do they close the loop.

The chip is passive: it waits for your pet to be found and scanned. You can be active — with a targeted alert to the people around the last known spot, delivered through ads on Facebook and Instagram. That way the exact neighbours who might see your pet know to look, and know to get it scanned. Chip working in the background, alert working the neighbourhood — that combination brings pets home fastest.

Frequently asked questions

Can I track my pet's location with the microchip?
No. A microchip is a passive transponder with no battery and no transmitter — there is no GPS. It only reveals a 15-digit number when a scanner is held directly over it. For live location you'd need a GPS tracker on the collar, but that adds to the chip and registration, it doesn't replace them.
How do I check if my pet's microchip is registered?
Find the chip number in your adoption or vet paperwork, then run it through the AAHA Universal Pet Microchip Lookup, which tells you which participating registries hold an enrollment for that number. Then log in to that registry and confirm your phone, email, and address are current. If no registry holds the number, register it today.
Was my pet automatically registered when it was chipped?
Not necessarily. Implanting the chip and enrolling it in a registry are two separate steps, and the second one is often left to the owner. Many shelters complete it at adoption, but plenty of chips are implanted and never registered. The only way to be sure is to look the number up and check.
What does a vet or shelter see when they scan the chip?
Only the 15-digit number — no name, no address. They then look that number up in the registries to find the owner on file. If the registration is missing or the contact details are outdated, the trail ends there, even though the pet is sitting safely in front of them.
I moved or changed my phone number — what do I need to do?
Nothing to the chip itself, everything to the registration: update your address and phone number with the registry right away. Outdated contact details are the most common reason chipped pets can't be returned. Make it part of your moving-week checklist.

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