Cats over six months in the unincorporated county must be spayed or neutered under County Code 6.10.030 unless the owner holds an unaltered-animal certification. Feeding a feral/community cat colony requires registering with Animal Services and following trapping, sterilization, testing, and vaccination conditions (Code 6.10.040). Pet limits allow up to 2 cats in most residential zones.
Santa Cruz County regulates cats through its breeding/spay-neuter rules rather than a separate cat-license scheme. Under County Code section 6.10.030, no person may own, harbor, or keep a dog or cat over the age of six months in the unincorporated county that has not been spayed or neutered, unless the person holds an unaltered-animal certification (Code 6.10.050 sets out the certification program and conditions). For feral or community cats, Code 6.10.040 makes it unlawful to intentionally provide food, water, or other sustenance to a feral cat colony unless the caretaker furnishes Animal Services with a signed statement agreeing to specified conditions - including registering as a caretaker, feeding regularly (including weekends and holidays), regularly trapping and spaying/neutering the cats, testing for feline leukemia and FIV, ear-tipping for identification, and rabies vaccination. On numbers, the County Animal Shelter's pet-limit summary allows up to two cats in single-family and multiple-residential zones (and counts cats within the four-animal total in rural and agricultural zones). The County Code does not impose a general cat-leash or cat-licensing requirement comparable to the dog license, so the principal cat-specific obligations are sterilization and the colony-feeding registration. These rules apply to the unincorporated county; cities have their own cat rules.
Keeping an unaltered cat over six months without an unaltered-animal certification violates Code 6.10.030. Feeding a feral cat colony without registering and meeting the 6.10.040 conditions is also a violation. Animal Services may cite the owner/caretaker and require compliance, sterilization, or removal.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.36.010 defines the curb colors used in unincorporated Santa Cruz County: red means no stopping/standing/parking, green a 20-minute limit, yellow a 30-...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In unincorporated Santa Cruz County, SCCC 9.36.010 sets curb-color loading rules: yellow curbs are commercial loading zones limited to 30 minutes, white curb...
Santa Cruz County, CA
In county-owned off-street lots, SCCC 9.36.070(16) limits parking in spaces marked 'electric vehicle charging only' to a maximum of three hours. Statewide, C...
Santa Cruz County, CA
SCCC 9.70.610(C) bars parking a vehicle more than six feet tall, including loaded sideboards or trailer contents, within 100 feet of any County-maintained ro...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Beyond height, fences in unincorporated Santa Cruz County must preserve sight distance at driveways and intersections, keep corner sight clearance triangles ...
Santa Cruz County, CA
Retaining walls in unincorporated Santa Cruz County fall under the same yard height rules as fences (SCCC 13.10.525) and are measured the same way. A buildin...
See how Santa Cruz County's cat rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.