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🔊 Noise Ordinances/Barking Dogs

Barking Dogs: Prescott Valley vs Sedona

How do barking dogs rules compare between Prescott Valley, AZ and Sedona, AZ?

Prescott Valley and Sedona have similar restriction levels.

Prescott Valley, AZ

Yavapai County

Some Restrictions

Yavapai County Ordinance 2024-1 (Animal Control, adopted June 5, 2024) prohibits any dog from barking, howling, or disturbing the peace for more than 10 minutes consecutively, or 30 minutes collectively within a 3-hour period, in unincorporated areas.

View full Prescott Valley rules →

Sedona, AZ

Yavapai County

Some Restrictions

Sedona's animal control code prohibits keeping any animal that disturbs the peace by barking, howling, or other persistent noise, especially during the 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. quiet-hours window under §8.25.060.

View full Sedona rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactPrescott ValleySedona
OrdinanceYavapai Co. Ord. 2024-1 (June 5, 2024)-
Consecutive Threshold10 minutes barking/howling-
Collective Threshold30 minutes within 3 hours-
Applies ToUnincorporated areas only-
EnforcementYavapai County Sheriff Animal ControlSedona Police animal control
Authority-SCC Title 6 + §8.25.060
Standard-Reasonable person disturbed
Night Window-9 p.m. to 7 a.m.

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Prescott Valley FAQ

How long can a dog bark before a violation in Yavapai County?

Ordinance 2024-1 sets the line at 10 minutes consecutively, or 30 minutes collectively within a 3-hour period. That standard replaced the older "habitual" definition in June 2024 and applies in unincorporated areas.

How do I report a barking dog?

Contact the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office Animal Control Section. Keep a written log noting times and durations of barking to satisfy the 10/30-minute thresholds in Ordinance 2024-1. Inside city limits call city animal control.

Sedona FAQ

How do I report a barking dog?

Call Sedona Police non-emergency dispatch. Repeat complaints from independent neighbors strengthen the case.

Does this apply to roosters or other animals?

Yes — Title 6 covers any animal whose noise disturbs the neighborhood.

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