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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Pet Store Rules

Pet Store Rules: Chicago vs Orland Park

How do pet store rules rules compare between Chicago, IL and Orland Park, IL?

Chicago and Orland Park have similar restriction levels.

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Heavy Restrictions

Chicago's Companion Animal and Consumer Protection Ordinance, MCC 4-384, bars pet stores from selling dogs, cats, or rabbits unless they come from a government shelter, humane society, or registered nonprofit rescue. Adoption-only retailers must keep records and post source disclosures on every kennel.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Heavy Restrictions

Cook County Companion Animal and Consumer Protection Ordinance 14-5530 prohibits retail pet stores from selling dogs, cats, or rabbits unless sourced from shelters or registered nonprofit rescues. The 2014 county rule preceded Illinois Public Act 102-1014.

View full Orland Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChicagoOrland Park
OrdinanceMCC 4-384-015 (2014)-
Allowed sourcesShelters, humane, 501(c)(3) rescuesShelters and registered rescues
Disclosure ruleSource posted per kennel-
RecordsThree years, BACP inspection-
Fine range$500-$1,000 per animal-
County ordinance-Cook 14-5530 (2014)
State counterpart-Illinois Public Act 102-1014
Enforcing agency-CCDARC and county counsel
Covered animals-Dogs, cats, rabbits

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chicago FAQ

Can a Chicago pet store sell purebred puppies?

Only if the puppies came from a registered rescue, shelter, or humane society. Direct sales from commercial breeders or USDA Class A dealers are prohibited under MCC 4-384-015 since 2014.

Does the rule cover online or roadside sales?

Roadside sales of live animals are banned outright under MCC 7-12-080. Online sellers shipping into Chicago must still hold a pet shop license under MCC 4-384 and follow the rescue-only sourcing rule.

Orland Park FAQ

Can a pet store still sell puppies in Cook County?

Only if they come from a shelter, animal control, or registered nonprofit rescue. Sourcing from commercial breeders or puppy mills violates Cook County Ordinance 14-5530 and Illinois Public Act 102-1014, with civil penalties per animal.

Does this rule apply to private breeders?

No. Ordinance 14-5530 targets retail pet shops. Private breeders selling directly are regulated by Illinois Department of Agriculture breeder rules and county nuisance and licensing standards rather than the retail sourcing ban.

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