California has no statewide cat leash law and no flat statewide cat limit. In unincorporated Ventura County, cats are treated as 'pet animals' under the zoning ordinance's lot-size-based number system, and a cat that disturbs neighbors can be addressed as a public nuisance. Spay/neuter is required for cats over four months.
Cats are regulated more lightly than dogs. The State of California does not impose a cat leash law, and there is no statewide numeric limit on how many cats a household may own - those numbers are left to local jurisdictions. In unincorporated Ventura County, cats fall under the Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance's 'pet animal' standards (Section 8107-2.4), meaning the number allowed is calculated from the parcel's zone and lot size rather than a fixed cap, with a permit available for additional pet animals under Section 8107-2.4.6. Even though cats need not be leashed, an owner is still responsible if a cat becomes a nuisance: under Section 4467 of the County Ordinance Code, animals (including cats) kept so as to disturb the peace or health of the neighborhood can be declared a public nuisance, and Animal Services can pursue a citation under Section 4467-12. Importantly, Ventura County's mandatory spay/neuter requirement applies to cats as well as dogs: under Sections 4421-3 and 4421-4 of the Ordinance Code, every cat over the age of four months kept in the unincorporated County must be spayed or neutered unless a specific exception applies (such as a veterinarian's certification that altering would endanger the animal, or other listed exemptions). Free-roaming and community cats are handled through Animal Services and local programs rather than a leash mandate.
A cat that creates a public nuisance can result in a citation under Section 4467-12, and keeping an unaltered cat over four months old without a qualifying exemption violates the County's mandatory spay/neuter rule (Sec. 4421-4); exceeding pet-animal numbers without a permit is a zoning violation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how other cities in Ventura County handle cat rules.
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