Keeping livestock such as horses, cattle, goats, sheep, and pigs in unincorporated Ventura County is governed by the Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance's animal husbandry standards. The number of large animals allowed is tied to your zone and lot size through an animal-unit system, with required setbacks for corrals and enclosures.
Animal husbandry in the unincorporated County is regulated by the County Planning Division under Section 8107-2 of the Non-Coastal Zoning Ordinance (NCZO), with the keeping of farm animals/livestock addressed under the animal-unit standards in roughly Section 8107-2.5. Rather than a flat per-property number, the ordinance assigns animals to unit factors and ties the allowed number to the parcel's zone classification and lot area, so a small residential lot supports far fewer (or no) large animals than an agricultural-zoned parcel. All animals must be contained on the property, and corrals, stables, pens, and similar enclosures must meet setback distances from off-site dwelling units to limit odor and nuisance impacts. Agricultural (AE), Rural (RA), and Open Space (OS) zones generally allow more substantial livestock keeping than standard residential zones. Some specific animals have drawn County attention - for example, a Ventura County case denied a couple's bid to keep five potbellied pigs - illustrating that pigs and other livestock are subject to the zoning limits and are not automatically permitted on every lot. In the coastal zone, the Coastal Zoning Ordinance's Section 8175-5.2.4 (Animals and fowl) applies parallel standards. Because the exact number of horses, cattle, goats, or other livestock allowed depends entirely on your specific zone and acreage, the County advises confirming with the Planning Division before acquiring large animals.
Keeping more livestock than the zoning animal-unit limits allow, housing animals on a lot not zoned for them, or failing to meet enclosure setbacks are zoning violations that can be enforced by the Planning Division and Code Compliance, with orders to reduce animal numbers or relocate enclosures.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Oxnard, CA
Persistent barking dogs in Oxnard are treated as a noise nuisance. Owners whose dogs bark excessively and disturb neighbors may receive warnings followed by ...
Oxnard, CA
Oxnard restricts overnight parking on certain streets and in designated zones. Oversized vehicles and RVs may not park on residential streets overnight. Stre...
Oxnard, CA
Oxnard's zoning code limits front yard fences to 3 feet and side/rear yard fences to 6 feet in residential zones. Corner lots have additional visibility requ...
Oxnard, CA
Oxnard adopts the California Fire Code (CFC). Recreational fires are limited to a 3-foot maximum diameter, must be at least 25 feet from any structure or com...
Oxnard, CA
Oxnard enforces CRC Sec. R314 (smoke alarms) and R315 (carbon monoxide alarms) as adopted in the Oxnard Building Code. Alarms are required in every sleeping ...
Oxnard, CA
Oxnard requires property owners to maintain defensible space by clearing brush, weeds, and combustible vegetation. The Oxnard Fire Department enforces cleara...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Ventura County.
See how other cities in Ventura County handle livestock.
See how Oxnard's livestock rules stack up against other locations.
Quick Compare
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.