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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Coyote Management

Frisco vs Plano

How do coyote management rules compare between Frisco, TX and Plano, TX?

Frisco and Plano have similar restriction levels.

Frisco, TX

Collin County

Few Restrictions

Coyotes are common in Frisco greenbelts, golf courses, and creeks. The city promotes hazing techniques rather than relocation. Texas Parks and Wildlife regulates lethal control, and homeowners may not discharge firearms inside city limits.

View full Frisco rules β†’

Plano, TX

Collin County

Few Restrictions

Plano follows a hazing-first coyote management approach coordinated with Texas Parks and Wildlife. Residents are urged to secure trash, remove pet food, and report aggressive coyote behavior to Plano Animal Services rather than attempting private removal.

View full Plano rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactFriscoPlano
Primary toolHazing, not relocation-
Firearm useProhibited in city-
Aggressive coyotesReport to Animal Services-
Wildlife authorityTexas Parks and Wildlife-
Approach-Hazing first
Partner agency-Texas Parks and Wildlife
No private shooting-Discharge banned in city
Report aggressive coyotes-Plano Animal Services

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Frisco FAQ

Can I shoot a coyote in my Frisco backyard?

No. Discharging a firearm inside Frisco city limits is illegal except in narrow self-defense situations and never as a routine wildlife-control method on residential lots.

Will Frisco trap coyotes from my neighborhood?

Only in cases of confirmed aggression or disease. Healthy urban coyotes are typically managed through resident hazing, food-source removal, and Animal Services education.

Plano FAQ

Can I shoot a coyote in my Plano backyard?

No. Discharging firearms inside Plano city limits violates Chapter 26 and Texas Penal Code Section 42.12, except in narrow self-defense scenarios. Use hazing or call Animal Services.

When does Plano trap coyotes?

Only when an individual coyote shows persistent bold or aggressive behavior toward people. Routine sightings, even daytime, are not grounds for removal under city policy.

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