Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
🐔 Animal Ordinances/Wildlife Feeding

Wildlife Feeding: Corona vs Menifee

How do wildlife feeding rules compare between Corona, CA and Menifee, CA?

Corona and Menifee have similar restriction levels.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Feeding wildlife in Corona — including coyotes, deer, raccoons, and other native species — is discouraged and may be prohibited under state law (California Fish and Game Code) and local nuisance provisions. Intentionally feeding predators creates public safety hazards and can result in citations. Bird feeding is generally allowed if not creating nuisance conditions.

View full Corona rules →

Menifee, CA

Riverside County

Some Restrictions

Menifee does not publish a dedicated wildlife-feeding ordinance; the city defers to California Fish & Game Code §251.1, which prohibits harassment of wildlife, and CCR Title 14 §251.3, which prohibits intentional feeding of big game mammals (deer, elk, antelope, bear, wild pig, mountain lion). General nuisance provisions in Title 11 apply if feeding creates rodent, coyote, or sanitation problems. Riverside County's Inland Empire setting includes mountain lions, coyotes, bobcats, and mule deer in the surrounding hills.

View full Menifee rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaMenifee
--
Big game feeding ban-CCR Title 14 §251.3 — statewide prohibition
Covered species-Deer, elk, antelope, mountain lion, bear, wild pig
Local rule-No standalone Menifee ordinance — state law and general nuisance apply
Nuisance authority-Menifee Municipal Code Title 11
Enforcement-CDFW (wildlife) / Menifee Code Enforcement (nuisance)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Menifee FAQ

Is it illegal to feed deer in Menifee?

Yes — under CCR Title 14 §251.3 it is unlawful to intentionally feed deer, elk, bear, mountain lion, or wild pig anywhere in California, including Menifee.

Can I feed birds in my yard?

Yes, songbird feeding is generally permitted, but feeders that attract rodents or large numbers of pigeons may be cited as a nuisance under Title 11.

What about feeding coyotes?

Not specifically banned by state statute, but strongly discouraged by CDFW. Feeding that habituates coyotes can be cited as a nuisance and creates public-safety risk.

Who do I call about a mountain lion sighting?

California Department of Fish and Wildlife (Inland Deserts Region) or 911 for immediate safety threats.

Want to add a third city?

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

Open Comparison Tool