Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Cat Rules

Lakewood vs Long Beach

How do cat rules rules compare between Lakewood, CA and Long Beach, CA?

Lakewood and Long Beach have similar restriction levels.

Lakewood, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

LA County Title 10.32 covers cat care and Title 10.20.060 mandates rabies vaccination for cats over four months. DACC supports trap-neuter-return for managed feral colonies; outdoor cats remain owners' responsibility for damage and wildlife harm.

View full Lakewood rules β†’

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Long Beach requires cats four months and older to be licensed and rabies-vaccinated under LBMC Chapter 6.16, with feral colony caretakers regulated through the city Trap-Neuter-Return program.

View full Long Beach rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLakewoodLong Beach
Rabies ruleRequired over four months-
Care codeLACO Title 10.32-
Vaccination codeLACO Title 10.20.060-
TNR operatorDACC community cats-
Wildlife feeding limitLACO 10.84.010-
License required age-Four months and older
Rabies vaccine-Required by LBMC 6.04.060
TNR program-Run by LBACS
Senior license waiver-Available with income proof

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lakewood FAQ

Do cats need a license in unincorporated LA County?

Cats require a current rabies vaccination over four months under Title 10.20.060. Some DACC jurisdictions also require cat licensing tied to spay-neuter status; check local DACC guidance.

Is TNR legal for feral cats?

Yes. DACC supports trap-neuter-return for managed colonies, with sterilization, vaccination, and ear-tipping. Random feeding outside a colony can still trigger nuisance or wildlife-feeding citations under Title 10.84.010.

Long Beach FAQ

Are indoor-only cats exempt from licensing?

No. LBMC requires every cat over four months old to be licensed regardless of indoor or outdoor status, though indoor cats still need current rabies vaccination on file.

Can I feed neighborhood feral cats?

Yes if you register as a TNR colony caretaker with LBACS, sterilize and ear-tip the cats, and follow feeding-station cleanup rules in LBMC section 6.16.

Want to add a third city?

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

Open Comparison Tool