In unincorporated Santa Barbara County, dogs in public places must be restrained on a leash not longer than 6 feet, held by a person able to control the animal. Dogs may be off-leash only in posted designated off-leash areas. County Code Chapter 7 (Animals and Fowl) administered by Santa Barbara County Animal Services governs leashing, licensing, rabies vaccination, and dog-at-large violations. Every dog four months of age or older must be currently rabies-vaccinated and licensed with the County. Within city limits (Santa Barbara, Santa Maria, Lompoc, Goleta, Carpinteria, etc.) the corresponding city ordinance applies, though County Animal Services typically provides field enforcement under contract with most cities.
Santa Barbara County Code Chapter 7 (Animals and Fowl), Article III (Animal Regulations / Care and Custody), requires that any dog in any public place or on private property other than that of its owner be (a) on a leash held by a person competent to control the animal, of a length not to exceed 6 feet, or (b) restrained inside a vehicle or kennel. 'Dog at large' is defined as any dog off the owner's premises and not under the immediate physical control of the owner via a leash. Designated off-leash areas exist within the County park system and certain city parks, but all other public spaces - sidewalks, streets, trails, parks, beaches, school grounds, shopping centers, the Santa Barbara County Trail Network in most segments - require a 6-foot leash. Every dog over four months of age must be currently vaccinated against rabies and licensed annually with Santa Barbara County Animal Services (proof of spay/neuter reduces the license fee). A dog that bites a person or another domestic animal must be reported to Animal Services within 24 hours under California Code of Regulations Title 17, Section 2606 and County Code Chapter 7, and may be subject to a 10-day quarantine. Repeated leash-law violations and dog-at-large citations support designation of a dog as 'Potentially Dangerous' or 'Vicious' under California Food and Agriculture Code Sections 31602-31683, which can lead to confinement orders, mandatory muzzling, and in severe cases destruction. Dog defecation in public spaces must be picked up immediately by the handler. Within incorporated cities, the relevant city municipal code applies (the City of Santa Barbara's Municipal Code Title 6 imposes similar 6-foot leash, license, and vaccination rules); County Animal Services contracts with most cities for field response.
Allowing a dog to be 'at large' (off the owner's premises and not under the immediate control of the owner on a leash of 6 feet or less) in unincorporated Santa Barbara County is a violation of County Code Chapter 7 and may result in impoundment by Animal Services and an administrative citation. Failure to license a dog over four months of age, or failure to maintain current rabies vaccination, is a separate violation. Failure to report a bite within 24 hours is a public-health violation enforceable under California Code of Regulations Title 17. Repeated dog-at-large or bite incidents can lead to designation as a 'Potentially Dangerous' or 'Vicious' dog under California Food and Agriculture Code Sections 31602-31683 with mandatory confinement, signage, liability insurance, and possible destruction. Failure to clean up after a dog in a public space may result in a separate citation in many County parks. Within city limits, the city's parallel ordinance applies and city or contract animal-control officers cite under city code.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Santa Barbara County.
See how Lompoc's dog leash laws rules stack up against other locations.
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