Scam
No, there is no credible evidence that Rescue Paws (therescuepaws.com) actually provides meals to 10 homeless dogs per bracelet sold.
The company claims on its website and Facebook page that each bracelet (or similar item) funds **10 meals** for abandoned dogs through unnamed "trusted local partners" and volunteers. They post blog updates with photos of supposed feeding sessions and claim to have funded hundreds of thousands of meals overall.
However, this appears to be a common dropshipping-style operation that's widely regarded as misleading or an outright scam:
- No specific partner organizations, shelters, or charities are named.
- No independent verification, donation receipts, or transparency reports are provided beyond their own blog photos (which could be generic or sourced elsewhere).
- They explicitly state they're not a charity—just a business where "part of the revenue" supposedly funds feeding.
Multiple sources flag it as problematic:
- Reddit threads and Facebook warnings from animal rescue communities call it a scam, noting that buyers may get a cheap bracelet (often resold from sites like Temu/AliExpress at a markup), but no dogs are helped.
- Scamadviser gives the site a low trust score.
- Legitimate animal rescue groups (e.g., Rescue Paws Thailand, a real organization) have publicly distanced themselves and warned about fake "Rescue Paws" bracelet sellers.
- While some Trustpilot reviews are positive (often praising the jewelry itself), many scam reports focus on the lack of real charitable impact.
If you're looking to help homeless dogs, consider donating directly to established, transparent organizations like local shelters, the ASPCA, or verified rescues with public financial reports.
13 janvier 2026
Avis spontané