Animal hoarding in unincorporated Sacramento County is addressed through the County's four-dog/four-cat pet limit and animal-care duties plus California's cruelty law. Keeping more than four mature dogs or cats without a kennel/cattery permit is a code violation, and overcrowding that harms animals can be prosecuted under California Penal Code 597, with mandatory ownership bans under Penal Code 597.9.
Sacramento County does not advertise a stand-alone 'hoarding' ordinance, but two layers of law apply in unincorporated areas. First, the County's Title 8 framework caps mature dogs and cats at four each per premises and requires animals to be kept in healthy, sanitary, nuisance-free conditions; exceeding the limit without a kennel or cattery use permit, or keeping animals in unsanitary/overcrowded conditions, is enforceable by Code Enforcement and Animal Care and Regulation. Second, California Penal Code section 597 makes it a crime to maliciously harm an animal or to neglect one by failing to provide proper food, drink, shelter, or care; hoarding situations where overcrowding compromises animal health and safety can be charged under section 597. A 597 violation can be a misdemeanor (up to one year in county jail) or a felony (up to three years in state prison), and a conviction triggers a mandatory ban on owning or living with animals under Penal Code section 597.9 โ five years for a misdemeanor and ten years for a felony. Suspected hoarding or neglect in unincorporated Sacramento County should be reported to Animal Care and Regulation, which investigates and can seize animals, with criminal cases referred for prosecution.
Exceeding the four-dog/four-cat limit without a permit, or keeping animals in unsanitary or overcrowded conditions, draws Code Enforcement/Animal Care abatement and possible seizure. Cruelty or neglect from overcrowding is prosecutable under Penal Code 597 (misdemeanor up to one year jail; felony up to three years prison), with a mandatory 5-year (misdemeanor) or 10-year (felony) animal-ownership ban under Penal Code 597.9.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Galt, CA
Galt allows residential recreational fire pits when fueled by clean wood, propane, or natural gas. California Fire Code sets a 3-foot maximum fuel area with ...
Galt, CA
Galt is one of the few Sacramento County cities that permits Safe and Sane fireworks. Sales and discharge are allowed from July 1 through July 4 only, from s...
Galt, CA
Backyard recreational fires in Galt are allowed in approved containers using clean wood or gas fuel, subject to SMAQMD no-burn days. Burning yard waste or tr...
Galt, CA
Galt encourages drought-tolerant and California native plantings through the state MWELO landscape ordinance. New residential landscapes over 500 square feet...
Galt, CA
Galt requires property owners to keep grass and weeds trimmed so vegetation does not become a fire or public health nuisance. The City's weed abatement progr...
Galt, CA
Rainwater collection is encouraged in Galt. California law allows rooftop rainwater capture without a water right permit, and typical residential rain barrel...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Sacramento County.
See how Galt's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.