IQPets logo

IQPets

Pet care & training app

Compatibility

Pet Match: choose better routines before pets share space

Pet Match explains how IQPets compares species, temperament, routine load, and home fit before a multi-pet plan becomes private app work.

Public/private boundary

This page explains the feature for visitors. Saved profiles, progress, matching, purchases, rankings, and personal training data stay inside the private app.

Who it is for

Best fit

  • Owners considering a second pet or a more complex household.
  • Families comparing species, energy levels, handling style, and routine needs.
  • People who want fewer surprises before they build private pet profiles.

Why it helps

Benefit for pet and owner

  • Pets benefit because introductions and expectations start more realistically.
  • Owners benefit because the app turns vague pet choice questions into clearer care and training priorities.
  • Multi-pet homes can spot risk areas before they become daily friction.

How it works

1

Start with the species or pet types you are comparing.

2

Review fit signals such as energy, social pressure, space, routine load, and handling needs.

3

Use public species and guide pages to understand the main tradeoffs.

4

Log in only when you are ready to create profiles and turn the match into a plan.

Next step

Learn publicly, act privately

Use this page to understand the feature. Open IQPets when you are ready to create profiles, save progress, and turn the idea into a real training routine.

Start in app

Internal links

Useful pages to read next

FAQ

Questions about Pet Match

Is Pet Match public?

This page is public explanation. Personal matching, saved profiles, and household-specific recommendations stay inside the private app.

Does Pet Match guarantee compatibility?

No. It supports better decisions by showing routine, environment, species, and behavior fit, but real introductions still need careful management.

Can Pet Match compare different species?

Yes. IQPets is built around species-aware expectations, so dogs, cats, birds, rabbits, fish, horses, pigs, and guinea pigs are not treated as one generic pet type.