Arizona preempts breed-specific dog laws statewide. Since SB 1248 (2016), no Arizona city or county may regulate dogs by breed. Coconino County restricts none; dangerous dogs are handled by behavior under A.R.S. §11-1025.
Contrary to a common misconception, Arizona does not let localities ban breeds—it forbids it. Senate Bill 1248 (2016) amended state law so that Arizona cities, towns, and counties may not enact or enforce dog regulations specific to any breed; §11-1005 lets a county enforce city dog ordinances only if they are not breed-specific. Neither Coconino County nor Flagstaff restricts any breed. The framework is behavior-based: A.R.S. §11-1025 governs an animal declared vicious or dangerous because of what it has done—biting or attacking—not what it is, imposing containment and control duties on the owner. Landlords and insurers may still exclude breeds by private contract.
No breed is banned to violate in Coconino County. A dog is restricted only after an individual vicious- or dangerous-dog determination under §11-1025, based on its own biting or attacking conduct.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how Page's breed restrictions rules stack up against other locations.
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