Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Boulder City vs Henderson

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Boulder City, NV and Henderson, NV?

Henderson has fewer restrictions than Boulder City.

Boulder City, NV

Clark County

Heavy Restrictions

Nevada criminalizes animal cruelty and neglect under NRS 574.100, applicable statewide. Hoarding situations involving failure to provide necessary food, water, shelter, or veterinary care constitute misdemeanors, escalating to felonies for willful or repeated cruelty.

View full Boulder City rules β†’

Henderson, NV

Clark County

Some Restrictions

Henderson HMC Title 6 limits the number of dogs and cats per household and authorizes Henderson Animal Care to investigate suspected hoarding situations involving neglect, sanitation failures, or excessive animals on a single property.

View full Henderson rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBoulder CityHenderson
StatuteNRS 574.100-
First offenseMisdemeanor-
Willful crueltyCategory C felony-
ForfeitureAll animals seized-
BanFuture ownership prohibited-
Code-HMC Title 6
Agency-Henderson Animal Care
Inspections-Complaint-driven
Penalty type-Misdemeanor

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Boulder City FAQ

Is animal hoarding a specific crime in Nevada?

Nevada has no dedicated hoarding statute, but hoarders are prosecuted under NRS 574.100 cruelty and neglect provisions when failure to provide care causes suffering. Prosecutors often charge multiple counts.

Can authorities remove animals from a hoarder?

Yes. NRS 574.055 allows officers to seize animals when probable cause shows cruelty. Courts can order permanent forfeiture and bar the offender from owning animals.

Henderson FAQ

How many pets trigger a hoarding review in Henderson?

Henderson does not set a single hoarding number. Animal Care reviews when conditions, neglect, or zoning-based pet limits are exceeded and welfare appears compromised.

Can Henderson Animal Care enter without a warrant?

Generally no. Officers seek consent or an inspection warrant unless animals are in immediate danger or violations are visible from public areas.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool