Texas has no statewide spay-neuter mandate, and Dallas County does not require sterilization. Cities choose their own rules: Dallas requires intact-pet permits, while many suburbs and unincorporated areas remain entirely voluntary unless an animal is adopted from a shelter.
Dallas County government cannot impose pet-sterilization rules inside incorporated cities, and it has not adopted any for the unincorporated remainder, which is small. State Health and Safety Code Section 828.002 only requires shelters and rescues to sterilize dogs and cats before adoption release. Beyond that, Dallas City Code Chapter 7 sets the strictest local mandate, requiring intact-animal permits with annual fees. Suburbs such as Irving, Garland, Mesquite, and Richardson set their own thresholds, often tying spay-neuter to nuisance complaints, multiple-pet households, or running-at-large violations. There is no Dallas County intact-pet permit program.
Without a county mandate, enforcement defaults to city codes. Where cities require intact permits, fines for unpermitted intact pets typically range from one hundred to several hundred dollars per offense, plus impound fees and required sterilization at owner expense.
See how DeSoto's mandatory spay/neuter rules stack up against other locations.
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