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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Exotic Pets

Missouri City vs Stafford

How do exotic pets rules compare between Missouri City, TX and Stafford, TX?

Missouri City and Stafford have similar restriction levels.

Missouri City, TX

Fort Bend County

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 822 Subchapter E governs ownership of dangerous wild animals — lions, tigers, bears, primates, and more. Owners must register with their county or city animal-registration agency and meet liability and caging standards.

View full Missouri City rules →

Stafford, TX

Fort Bend County

Heavy Restrictions

Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 822 Subchapter E governs ownership of dangerous wild animals — lions, tigers, bears, primates, and more. Owners must register with their county or city animal-registration agency and meet liability and caging standards.

View full Stafford rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactMissouri CityStafford
StatuteTX HSC 822.101–822.116TX HSC 822.101–822.116
Liability insurance$100,000 minimum$100,000 minimum
Registration requiredBefore acquisitionBefore acquisition
Local bansPermittedPermitted

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Missouri City FAQ

Can I own a tiger or lion in Texas?

Only with a certificate of registration, $100,000 liability insurance, USDA-grade caging, and only if your city or county has not banned the species. Many local jurisdictions prohibit them entirely.

What animals are not 'dangerous wild animals' under this law?

Common pets, livestock, and most reptiles are excluded. The law focuses on large cats, bears, great apes, and certain canids. Exotic birds and reptiles fall under separate Parks & Wildlife rules.

Stafford FAQ

Can I own a tiger or lion in Texas?

Only with a certificate of registration, $100,000 liability insurance, USDA-grade caging, and only if your city or county has not banned the species. Many local jurisdictions prohibit them entirely.

What animals are not 'dangerous wild animals' under this law?

Common pets, livestock, and most reptiles are excluded. The law focuses on large cats, bears, great apes, and certain canids. Exotic birds and reptiles fall under separate Parks & Wildlife rules.

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