Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Breed Restrictions: Burbank vs Los Angeles

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Burbank, CA and Los Angeles, CA?

Burbank and Los Angeles have similar restriction levels.

Burbank, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Burbank imposes no breed-specific restrictions. Its potentially-dangerous and vicious-animal rules are based on behavior, and California Food and Agricultural Code section 31683 prohibits any dog-control program from being breed-specific.

View full Burbank rules β†’

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Los Angeles does not have breed-specific legislation banning any dog breed. However, LAMC 53.06.1 requires all dogs over 4 months to be spayed or neutered unless the owner obtains an intact permit. Dangerous or vicious dog declarations are based on individual behavior, not breed, under LAMC 53.34.4.

View full Los Angeles rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBurbankLos Angeles
Breed BansNone - prohibited by state lawNone in Los Angeles
State LawCA Food & Agric. Code S 31683-
Local BasisBehavior, not breed (BMC 5-1-1602)-
Spay/Neuter-Mandatory unless intact permit (LAMC 53.06.1)
Dangerous Dogs-Behavior-based, not breed-based
Code Section-LAMC 53.34.4

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Burbank FAQ

Are pit bulls or any breeds banned in Burbank?

No. California Food and Agricultural Code section 31683 forbids breed-specific dog regulations, and Burbank's dangerous/vicious-animal rules (BMC Article 16) classify animals by behavior, not breed.

Can Burbank regulate my dog at all based on breed?

Only narrowly: state law permits breed-specific spay/neuter or breeding programs (Health & Safety Code 122331), but a dog cannot be declared dangerous or vicious based on its breed.

Los Angeles FAQ

Are any dog breeds banned in los Angeles?

Los Angeles does not have breed-specific legislation banning any dog breed. However, LAMC 53.06.1 requires all dogs over 4 months to be spayed or neutered unless the owner obtains an intact permit. Dangerous or vicious dog declarations are based on individual behavior, not breed, under LAMC 53.34.4.

Are there pit bull restrictions in los Angeles?

Breed Bans: None in Los Angeles. Spay/Neuter: Mandatory unless intact permit (LAMC 53.06.1). Dangerous Dogs: Behavior-based, not breed-based. Code Section: LAMC 53.34.4.

Want to add a third city?

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

Open Comparison Tool