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🔊 Noise Ordinances/Barking Dogs

Bergenfield vs Paramus

How do barking dogs rules compare between Bergenfield, NJ and Paramus, NJ?

Bergenfield and Paramus have similar restriction levels.

Bergenfield, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Bergen County Animal Control investigates barking and nuisance dog reports referred by local police, but the underlying barking dog ordinance is set by each municipality. State law makes habitual unreasonable barking a public nuisance under New Jersey municipal authority.

View full Bergenfield rules →

Paramus, NJ

Bergen County

Some Restrictions

Paramus Chapter 309 prohibits keeping any bird, dog, or other animal whose frequent, habitual, or long-continued noise disturbs the peace, comfort, or repose of neighbors or passersby on Borough streets.

View full Paramus rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactBergenfieldParamus
ReportingCall local police first-
County roleShelter and field assistance-
License requiredAll dogs over 7 months-
Typical threshold15-20 minutes continuous-
State lawN.J.S.A. 4:19 dog control-
Code Chapter-Chapter 309 Noise
Standard-Frequent or long-continued noise
Applies To-Birds, dogs, other animals
Each Day-Separate offense

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Bergenfield FAQ

Should I call Bergen County Animal Control about a barking dog?

Call your local police department first. They enforce the municipal noise ordinance. County Animal Control assists with stray, injured, or aggressive animals, not residential barking complaints.

How long does barking have to last to be a violation?

Most Bergen County municipalities define a violation as continuous barking for 15 to 20 minutes or intermittent barking lasting 30 minutes or more. Check your borough's specific ordinance.

Paramus FAQ

How do I file a barking dog complaint in Paramus?

Residents typically contact the Paramus Police Department to report habitual barking. Officers investigate and may cite the owner under Chapter 309 if the noise meets the ordinance threshold.

Does occasional barking violate the ordinance?

No. The rule targets frequent, habitual, or long-continued noise that disturbs neighbors. Brief or isolated barking generally does not meet the standard for a citation.

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