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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Pinellas Park vs St. Petersburg

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Pinellas Park, FL and St. Petersburg, FL?

Pinellas Park and St. Petersburg have similar restriction levels.

Pinellas Park, FL

Pinellas County

Few Restrictions

Pinellas Park cannot adopt breed-specific dog regulations. Florida Statute 767.14, amended in 2023, preempts local governments from enacting any rules that target dogs by breed, weight, or size. Behavior-based dangerous-dog laws still apply.

View full Pinellas Park rules →

St. Petersburg, FL

Pinellas County

Few Restrictions

St. Petersburg cannot restrict dogs based on breed under Florida Statute 767.14 as amended in 2023, but the city still enforces Chapter 4 dangerous and aggressive dog rules based on individual behavior.

View full St. Petersburg rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactPinellas ParkSt. Petersburg
Breed bansProhibited statewide since 2023-
Governing statuteFS 767.14-
Behavior-based rulesStill permitted-
Dangerous dog statuteFS Chapter 767 Part II-
Local authorityCannot regulate by breed-
BSL allowed-No (preempted 2023)
State statute-FS 767.14
City code-Chapter 4 Animals
Basis for label-Behavior, not breed
HOA/landlord rules-Still permitted

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Pinellas Park FAQ

Can my HOA in Pinellas Park ban pit bulls?

Private HOAs may have contractual restrictions, but public housing authorities cannot. Government-owned or operated housing is barred from breed, size, or weight restrictions under FS 767.14.

Can Pinellas Park still declare my dog dangerous?

Yes. Pinellas County Animal Services can classify any dog as dangerous based on its behavior under Florida Statute 767, regardless of breed, triggering confinement and insurance requirements.

St. Petersburg FAQ

Are pit bulls banned in St. Petersburg?

No. Florida Statute 767.14 preempts breed-specific bans statewide as of October 1, 2023. St. Petersburg regulates individual dogs based on behavior, not breed, under Chapter 4.

Can my landlord still ban my pit bull in St. Petersburg?

Yes. The state preemption applies only to local governments. Private landlords, homeowners associations, and insurance carriers may still enforce breed-specific restrictions in St. Petersburg.

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