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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Englewood vs Fort Lee

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Englewood, NJ and Fort Lee, NJ?

Englewood and Fort Lee have similar restriction levels.

Englewood, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Englewood requires special licensing and muzzling for dogs declared vicious or potentially dangerous, focusing on behavior rather than breed.

View full Englewood rules →

Fort Lee, NJ

Bergen County

Heavy Restrictions

Fort Lee does not impose breed-specific bans, instead following New Jersey's statewide dangerous and potentially dangerous dog framework that judges individual animal behavior rather than breed identity.

View full Fort Lee rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEnglewoodFort Lee
Breed bansNot enforcedNot permitted
Special licenseRequired if vicious-
MuzzleRequired off-property-
StandardBehavior-based-
Dangerous dog law-State-based
Insurance-Required if declared
Court process-Municipal court

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Englewood FAQ

Does Englewood ban any specific dog breeds?

No. A court struck down Englewood's breed-specific ordinance, and state law prohibits breed discrimination. Restrictions apply only to dogs individually declared vicious or potentially dangerous.

What is required if my dog is declared vicious?

You must obtain a special vicious-dog license through the City and provide a muzzle whenever the dog is on any public or private property other than your own.

Who decides if a dog is potentially dangerous?

Designation follows the New Jersey Vicious and Potentially Dangerous Dog Act process, with the Englewood Animal Control Officer initiating the case based on behavior.

Fort Lee FAQ

Can Fort Lee ban pit bulls?

No. New Jersey state law preempts breed-specific legislation, so Fort Lee cannot ban dogs based solely on breed. Individual dogs may be regulated based on documented dangerous behavior.

What happens if my dog bites someone?

Animal control investigates, and a complaint can be filed in municipal court. The judge may declare the dog potentially dangerous or dangerous, requiring enclosures, muzzles, and special handling.

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