The Global Stray Dog Crisis: A Location-by-Location Look (2024–2025)
The stray dog crisis is one of the most pressing yet overlooked animal welfare issues of our time. Across continents, millions of dogs live without homes, facing hunger, disease, and persecution. The crisis looks different in each country, shaped by culture, politics, economics, and public health systems. But the thread that unites them is clear: systemic neglect of both dogs and the communities they live in.
Below, we explore the situation region by region, supported by the most recent data available (2024–2025).
The Global Picture
There are an estimated 900 million dogs worldwide.
Of these, hundreds of millions are free-roaming, living as strays, feral dogs, or “community dogs.”
Recent research suggests that India, Mexico, Turkey, Pakistan, and Morocco are among the hardest hit
India: The World’s Largest Stray Dog Population
India is estimated to have 52–70 million stray dogs.
Delhi alone is thought to host around 1 million street dogs.
In 2024, 3.7 million dog bites were officially recorded, and rabies still causes ~18,000–20,000 deaths per year.
While many NGOs run Catch-Neuter-Vaccinate-Return (CNVR) programmes, progress is slowed by lack of funding and infrastructure.
Mexico: A Community-Led Battle
Mexico has around 18 million dogs, and 70% (≈12.6 million) live on the streets
In Yucatán, more than 50,000 dogs and cats roam freely; 2,000 die each year in Mérida alone.
Grassroots sterilisation and rescue projects are on the rise, but systemic support remains weak.
Turkey: A Country Divided
Turkey has around 4 million stray dogs.
New laws require municipalities to remove, sterilise, and shelter strays, with euthanasia allowed for “aggressive or diseased” dogs.
Istanbul and Ankara alone was home to tens of thousands of dogs, many cared for by local communities.
Pakistan: Millions at Risk
Pakistan is estimated to have 3 million stray dogs
Karachi alone has around 200,000 stray dogs, where mass poisoning campaigns are still common.
Public health authorities push culling as rabies prevention, despite growing calls for CNVR as a humane alternative.
Morocco: The Struggle of the “Beldi” Dogs
Morocco is home to 1.2–1.5 million stray dogs, though some estimates reach 3 million.
In Tangier alone, around 30,000 “Beldi” dogs roam the streets.
CNVR programmes are being introduced, but outdated practices like shooting and poisoning still occur.
Romania: A Legacy of Neglect
Romania has an estimated 500,000–600,000 stray dogs.
In Constanța, authorities recorded 8,000–10,000 stray dogs. In 2024 alone, 3,286 were killed in shelters.
EU membership has encouraged sterilisation over mass killing, but shelter overcrowding remains a crisis.
Comparing National & City-Level Numbers
National Estimates (millions):
India — 52.5M
Mexico — 12.6M
Turkey — 4M
Pakistan — 3M
Morocco — 1.35M
United States — 1.5M
Romania — 0.55M
City/Subnational Case Studies:
Delhi (India) — 1M
Karachi (Pakistan) — 200k
Tangier (Morocco) — 30k
Quito (Ecuador) — 150k
Foz do Iguaçu (Brazil) — 100k
Constanța (Romania) — 9k
Yucatán (Mexico) — 50k (dogs + cats combined)
What the Crisis Reveals
The numbers tell a story of global inequality:
In Western Europe, strict sterilisation and microchipping laws have nearly eliminated strays.
In developing regions, lack of resources leads to cycles of uncontrolled breeding, public health risks, and cruel culling policies.
War, displacement, and poverty create new stray populations in already fragile societies.
The Way Forward
The stray dog crisis cannot be solved by culling. Lasting solutions require:
Catch-Neuter-Vaccinate-Return (CNVR) as the global standard
Education campaigns to reduce abandonment
Stronger animal welfare laws and enforcement
International collaboration and funding for sterilisation programmes
Recognition of community dogs as part of local life
Conclusion
From the streets of Delhi to the alleys of Tangier, from Karachi to Mexico City, stray dogs are part of the fabric of human society. Their suffering is not inevitable it is the result of policy choices, neglect, and misplaced priorities.
By working together, advocating for humane approaches, and sharing resources globally, we can reduce suffering and create a world where no dog is left behind.
Sources
Reuters (2025) — India’s Supreme Court orders relocation of stray dogs
Economic Times (2025) — 37 lakh dog bites in a year
World Footprints (2024) — Mexico’s street dog problem
Yucatán Magazine (2024) — 50,000 dogs and cats roam Yucatán
Time (2024) — Turkey’s stray dog law
Arab News (2025) — Pakistan’s stray dog crisis
Courting the Law (2024) — Karachi’s 200,000 stray dogs
AP News (2024) — Morocco’s stray dog numbers
National Geographic (2023) — Meet the people helping Morocco’s stray dogs
Wild at Heart Foundation (2024) — Stray dogs in Romania
European Parliament (2025) — Stray dogs in Constanța
Petscare (2024) — Stray dog statistics USA
Dogster (2024) — Global dog population















Turkey's law says one thing, but its government acts differently, same with Morocco's. Dogs are being killed en masse.