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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Breed Restrictions: Kentwood vs Wyoming

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Kentwood, MI and Wyoming, MI?

Kentwood has fewer restrictions than Wyoming.

Kentwood, MI

Kent County

Few Restrictions

Kent County, MI does not impose any breed-specific legislation (BSL). The Kent County Animal Control Ordinance (Ord. No. 06-23-22-82, effective July 1, 2022) contains no breed-based bans, restrictions, or special insurance/muzzling requirements for any breed of dog. Instead, Section 11(c) applies a behavior-based standard: it is unlawful for an owner or custodian to intentionally or by failure to exercise due care allow a dog or other animal to menace, attack, or bite a person or other animal in a place where the person or animal is legally entitled to be. Michigan has no statewide preemption of local BSL, but Kent County and its largest city, Grand Rapids, have both declined to enact breed restrictions. Individual cities, villages, or townships within Kent County may have their own ordinances (Section 4 / MCL 287.289a) — check locally before assuming the county rule applies.

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Wyoming, MI

Kent County

Some Restrictions

Michigan does not have statewide preemption of breed-specific local ordinances — cities and townships are free under home rule to adopt breed-specific rules if they choose. Wyoming's current Chapter 6 (Animals) regulates dogs by behavior through nuisance, restraint, and dangerous-dog provisions rather than by an enumerated breed list. Wyoming's dangerous-dog framework is aligned with the state dangerous-dog statute at MCL 287.321 et seq. enforced through Kent County District Court (61st District).

View full Wyoming rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactKentwoodWyoming
--
State BSL Preemption-None — Michigan permits local BSL
Wyoming Current BSL-No enumerated breed list (verify Ch. 6)
Local Rule-Behavior-based dangerous-dog framework
State Dangerous Dog Act-MCL 287.321 et seq. (1988 PA 426)
Court-61st District Court, Kent County
Verify Before Moving-Wyoming Code Compliance 616-530-7226

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Kentwood FAQ

Are pit bulls banned in Kent County, Michigan?

No. The Kent County Animal Control Ordinance (Ord. No. 06-23-22-82, effective July 1, 2022) contains no breed-specific legislation. Pit bulls, Rottweilers, and other commonly targeted breeds are not banned or restricted by Kent County rule. Dangerous-dog issues are handled by behavior-based standards in Section 11(c) (menace/attack/bite) and through Michigan's state-level Dog Law of 1919. Note: cities and townships within Kent County may have their own animal codes (Section 4), so check your specific municipality — but neither Kent County nor the City of Grand Rapids has BSL.

Does Kent County have a dangerous-dog law?

Yes, but it is behavior-based, not breed-based. Section 11(c) of the Kent County Animal Control Ordinance prohibits an owner or custodian from intentionally or negligently allowing any dog or animal to menace, attack, or bite a person or other animal where the victim is legally entitled to be. "Menace" includes charging, scratching, toppling, teeth-baring, snapping, growling, and other predatory mannerisms. Section 14 requires reporting bites within 24 hours and surrendering the animal for quarantine. The Michigan Dog Law of 1919 (MCL 287.286a et seq.) provides additional state-level dangerous-dog procedures.

My homeowner insurance asks if my dog is on a "restricted breed list." Does Kent County have one?

No. Kent County does not maintain a restricted-breed list, and the county Animal Control Ordinance does not single out any breed. Many private insurers maintain their own restricted-breed lists independent of any government regulation, so your insurer's list reflects their underwriting policy — not Kent County or Michigan law. Michigan has no state BSL and no preemption statute either way.

What happens if my dog bites someone in Kent County?

Section 14(a) of the Kent County Animal Control Ordinance requires you to report the bite to Animal Control or the Animal Shelter within 24 hours of learning of it (call 616-632-7310; on weekends, call 911). You must provide proof of current rabies vaccination on request (§ 14(b)). The animal will be quarantined as required by Michigan state law at the shelter, a veterinary office, or another place designated by Animal Control (§ 14(c)). You may also be cited under § 11(c) for a civil infraction ($100/$200 under § 15(a)) and, in serious cases, the dog may be subject to state-level dangerous-dog proceedings under the Michigan Dog Law of 1919.

Can a Kent County township or city enact its own breed restrictions?

Yes. Michigan has no statewide preemption of local breed-specific legislation, and Section 4 of the Kent County Animal Control Ordinance (citing MCL 287.289a) expressly recognizes that any city, village, or township that adopts its own animal-control ordinance is not bound by the county rule. To date, no major Kent County jurisdiction — including the City of Grand Rapids (Chapter 155 of its City Code) — has adopted breed-specific legislation. Always confirm with your specific municipality.

Wyoming FAQ

Are pit bulls legal in Wyoming, MI?

Wyoming's current Code of Ordinances Chapter 6 does not list breed-specific restrictions and regulates dogs by behavior. Unlike many states, Michigan does NOT preempt local breed-specific legislation — cities can adopt BSL if they choose. Verify the current ordinance with City Code Compliance at 616-530-7226 before acquiring or moving with any breed sometimes targeted by local rules, since Wyoming's Council retains authority to amend Chapter 6.

Can Michigan stop Wyoming from passing a breed ban?

No. Michigan has not enacted statewide preemption of local breed-specific legislation. Under home rule, Michigan cities including Wyoming may adopt breed-specific ordinances if they choose, and several Michigan municipalities have historically done so. The state's dangerous-dog framework at MCL 287.321 et seq. is behavior-based but does not bar local BSL.

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