Ring is widening its AI-powered Search Party feature so anyone can create a lost dog alert in the Neighbors by Ring app, even without owning a Ring camera or doorbell. The move turns Ring’s vast user base into a community watch for missing pets, tapping nearby devices to spot dogs on camera and help reunite them with their owners faster.
How the expanded Search Party feature works for lost dogs
Search Party lets a pet owner post details and photos of a missing dog within the Neighbors app. Cameras and doorbells in the area that have the feature enabled use computer vision to identify when a dog enters the frame. If a match or possible sighting occurs, the Ring owner receives an alert and can share the clip with the person who created the listing.

The company says this tool is designed to mobilize neighborhoods quickly, bridging the gap between a pet’s last known location and the crowdsourced camera network that surrounds it. For now, the feature is focused on dogs; Ring has signaled more pet-tracking capabilities are planned but has not named additional species or timelines.
Crucially, people who don’t own Ring hardware can now initiate the search. That widens access for pet owners who might rely on neighbors for camera coverage, a common reality in suburban blocks and apartment buildings.
Early results and the numbers behind lost pets
Ring reports the tool is already reuniting more than one dog per day in the US. While that is a modest figure relative to the scale of the problem, it signals traction for AI-led, community-based recovery efforts.
The scope of need is significant. American Humane estimates roughly 10 million pets go missing in the US each year. The American Pet Products Association says 66% of US households have a pet, underscoring how widespread the impact can be when an animal slips out a door or bolts during a storm.
Technology meaningfully boosts reunions when layered with traditional safeguards. Research published in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association found microchipped dogs were returned to owners at substantially higher rates than non‑chipped dogs. Search Party adds another layer to that stack, potentially shrinking the window between a dog going missing and the first credible sighting.
Privacy and safety considerations for Ring pet tracking
By default, compatible Ring devices participate in dog detection unless their owners opt out in settings. That default-on approach has prompted questions from digital rights groups about expanding what home cameras monitor, even for a well-intentioned use case. Ring has faced scrutiny in the past over how footage is shared; the company has since tightened policies around law enforcement requests made through its community platform.
Users concerned about additional monitoring or notifications can turn off Search Party in the Ring app, limit alerts, or choose not to share clips. For those who do participate, best practices include:

- Sharing video only with the poster seeking a specific dog
- Avoiding public doxxing of addresses
- Contacting animal control or shelters rather than attempting risky rescues on busy streets
How to use Ring’s Search Party effectively for lost dogs
When posting a lost dog listing, include:
- A recent photo
- Breed or mix
- Coat color
- Identifying features
- Collar and tag description
- Last known location
- The time the dog was last seen
Clear, daylight photos improve AI matching and human recognition. Update the post with any new sightings to help neighbors follow a credible trail.
Combine Search Party with conventional tools:
- File a report with local shelters and animal control
- Notify microchip registries to flag the pet as missing
- Canvas the neighborhood with printed flyers
GPS collars and ID tags remain invaluable; the ASPCA has reported that most lost dogs are recovered, and layered methods speed that outcome.
For Ring owners, consider enabling the feature, customizing the detection radius, and reviewing clips promptly when alerted. If your camera captures a likely match, share the footage through the app rather than posting it widely, and note cross streets or landmarks to help the owner search safely.
What this expansion means for smart home AI and communities
Search Party hints at a broader trend: computer vision shifting from security-first applications to community services. As models improve, expect fewer false positives and better identification in low light or motion-heavy scenes. Integration with shelter databases or municipal services could streamline reunification further, provided strong privacy guardrails stay in place.
For now, the expansion to non‑owners makes the system more inclusive. If it continues to reunite dogs at a steady clip—and if privacy settings remain transparent and simple—it could become a staple tool alongside microchips, tags, and neighborhood groups when the question pops up on your block: “Have you seen this dog?”
