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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Exotic Pets

Exotic Pets: Frisco vs McKinney

How do exotic pets rules compare between Frisco, TX and McKinney, TX?

Frisco and McKinney have similar restriction levels.

Frisco, TX

Collin County

Heavy Restrictions

Frisco prohibits dangerous wild animals under City Code Chapter 14 and TX Health and Safety Code 822.101-116. Large cats, bears, primates, and venomous snakes are banned.

View full Frisco rules →

McKinney, TX

Collin County

Heavy Restrictions

McKinney prohibits dangerous wild animals under City Code Chapter 14, aligned with Texas Health & Safety Code 822.101-116. Lions, tigers, bears, non-human primates, and venomous reptiles require state registration and are generally banned within city limits.

View full McKinney rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactFriscoMcKinney
Large CatsBanned-
PrimatesBannedBanned
Venomous SnakesBanned-
ConstrictorsOver 6 feet banned-
State LawTX HSC 822.101-116TX HSC 822 Subch. E
Big Cats-Banned
Venomous Reptiles-Banned
Registration-County required statewide

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Frisco FAQ

Can I own an exotic pet in Frisco?

Frisco Chapter 14 defines 'high-risk animals' (skunks, bats, raccoons, foxes, coyotes) and restricts them. TX Parks & Wildlife Code requires permits for many exotic species. Contact Frisco Animal Services for current exotic pet rules.

What exotic animals are prohibited in Frisco?

High-Risk Animals: Skunks, bats, raccoons, foxes, coyotes — restricted. TPWD Permits: Required for many exotic species. Code: Frisco Chapter 14 + TX Parks & Wildlife Code.

McKinney FAQ

Can I own a pet snake in McKinney?

Non-venomous snakes such as corn snakes, ball pythons, and king snakes are generally permitted as household pets. Native or non-native venomous snakes and large constrictors fall under dangerous wild animal rules and are effectively banned inside city limits.

Can I keep chickens in McKinney?

Backyard hens are generally allowed under Chapter 14 and TX HB 1750 (2023). Roosters, flock size, and coop setbacks are typically regulated by zoning district and HOA rules. Stonebridge Ranch and other HOAs frequently prohibit poultry entirely.

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