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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Breed Restrictions: Chino vs Rancho Cucamonga

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Chino, CA and Rancho Cucamonga, CA?

Rancho Cucamonga has fewer restrictions than Chino.

Chino, CA

San Bernardino County

Some Restrictions

California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 preempts breed-specific dangerous-dog ordinances — no city, including Chino, may declare a breed dangerous or vicious by breed alone. The only carve-out is Health & Safety Code §122331, which lets local governments require mandatory spay/neuter and breeding regulation by breed. Through its San Bernardino County animal-control contract, that exception applies in Chino: San Bernardino County Code §32.1501 requires pit bulls and pit-bull-mix dogs over 4 months to be spayed or neutered.

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Rancho Cucamonga, CA

San Bernardino County

Few Restrictions

Rancho Cucamonga does not ban specific dog breeds. California Food and Agricultural Code section 31683 preempts breed-specific bans and limits cities to general dangerous-dog ordinances applied individually.

View full Rancho Cucamonga rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactChinoRancho Cucamonga
State preemptionCal. Food & Ag. Code §31683 — no breed-specific dog regulation-
Only allowed breed ruleCal. Health & Safety Code §122331 — breed-specific spay/neuter & breeding only-
Active local ruleSan Bernardino County Code §32.1501 — pit bulls/mixes over 4 months must be altered-
Chino-specific banNone — no breed-specific ordinance in Chino Municipal Code Title 6-
Dangerous-dog pathIndividual-dog hearings under Cal. Food & Ag. Code §31601 et seq.-
City Ban-No breed-specific restrictions
State Law-CA F and A Code 31683
Dangerous Dog-Evaluated case-by-case
HOA/Insurance-May still impose breed rules
Animal Control-IVHS (909) 623-9777

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chino FAQ

Can Chino ban pit bulls?

No. California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 preempts breed-specific bans, and Health & Safety Code §122331 expressly forbids declaring a breed or mixed breed potentially dangerous or vicious. The only allowed breed-specific local rule is mandatory spay/neuter.

Do I have to spay or neuter my pit bull in Chino?

Yes. Chino's animal-services contract with San Bernardino County brings County Code §32.1501 into play, which requires all pit bulls and pit-bull-mix dogs over four months old to be spayed or neutered, subject to narrow medical and registered-breeder exemptions.

How are dangerous dogs handled in Chino?

On an individual basis under California Food & Agricultural Code §31601 et seq. A dog can be declared 'potentially dangerous' or 'vicious' based on its own behavior — never solely on its breed.

Rancho Cucamonga FAQ

Are pit bulls banned in Rancho Cucamonga?

No. California law prevents cities from banning breeds. However, your landlord, HOA, or homeowner insurance may restrict certain breeds independently of city rules.

What happens if my dog bites someone?

Animal control investigates and may declare the dog potentially dangerous or vicious, requiring secure enclosure, muzzling, insurance, and spay/neuter regardless of breed.

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