Polk County sets no fixed numeric cap on dogs or cats per home. Instead, keeping animals in numbers that create a public nuisance is prohibited, and boarding/breeding operations meet the definition of a kennel. Incorporated cities may impose their own numeric limits.
The Polk County animal code does not state a hard maximum number of dogs or cats per household. It controls over-keeping two ways. First, Chapter 4 declares it a public nuisance to keep animals 'in such manner or in such numbers' that they harm the health, safety, or peace of the community - so an excessive count can be cited even without a set cap. Second, any premises used for boarding, breeding, buying, or selling dogs or cats is a 'kennel,' which triggers zoning and land-development requirements. Residents wanting many animals should confirm their Future Land Use district allows it. Cities such as Lakeland and Winter Haven may set explicit per-household limits within city limits.
Nuisance-number cases are cited as animal-nuisance offenses (civil fines rising with repeat offenses); operating an unpermitted kennel is a separate zoning/code-enforcement violation.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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See how Lakeland's pet limits rules stack up against other locations.
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