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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Breed Restrictions: Rancho Cucamonga vs Rialto

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Rancho Cucamonga, CA and Rialto, CA?

Rancho Cucamonga has fewer restrictions than Rialto.

Rancho Cucamonga, CA

San Bernardino County

Few Restrictions

Rancho Cucamonga does not ban specific dog breeds. California Food and Agricultural Code section 31683 preempts breed-specific bans and limits cities to general dangerous-dog ordinances applied individually.

View full Rancho Cucamonga rules →

Rialto, CA

San Bernardino County

Some Restrictions

California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 preempts breed-specific dog bans, but expressly authorizes breed-specific mandatory spay/neuter and breeding regulation. Rialto does not ban any breed; dangerous and vicious dogs are regulated by behavior under Title 6 and Cal. F&A Code §31601 et seq., and viciousness hearings follow state procedure.

View full Rialto rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactRancho CucamongaRialto
City BanNo breed-specific restrictions-
State LawCA F and A Code 31683-
Dangerous DogEvaluated case-by-case-
HOA/InsuranceMay still impose breed rules-
Animal ControlIVHS (909) 623-9777-
Breed ban in Rialto-None — preempted by Cal. F&A Code §31683
Allowed breed regulation-Mandatory spay/neuter and breeder permits only (§31683)
Dangerous/vicious dog standard-Behavioral, Cal. F&A Code §§31602-31603
Hearing required-Yes — before declaration and restrictions
Local framework-Rialto Municipal Code Title 6 (Animals)

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Rancho Cucamonga FAQ

Are pit bulls banned in Rancho Cucamonga?

No. California law prevents cities from banning breeds. However, your landlord, HOA, or homeowner insurance may restrict certain breeds independently of city rules.

What happens if my dog bites someone?

Animal control investigates and may declare the dog potentially dangerous or vicious, requiring secure enclosure, muzzling, insurance, and spay/neuter regardless of breed.

Rialto FAQ

Can Rialto ban pit bulls or other specific breeds?

No. Cal. Food & Agricultural Code §31683 preempts any local ban or breed-specific 'dangerous dog' designation. Only spay/neuter and breeding rules can be breed-specific.

How is a dog declared 'dangerous' in Rialto?

Through an administrative hearing under Cal. F&A Code §§31601-31683 based on behavior (unprovoked attacks, severe injury), not on breed.

What restrictions apply if my dog is declared vicious?

Title 6 imposes secure enclosure, warning signage, microchipping, and (typically) liability insurance, plus annual registration as a dangerous animal.

Does Rialto require spay/neuter for all dogs?

No general citywide mandate; San Bernardino County offers subsidized spay/neuter, and spay/neuter can be ordered as a condition of release for impounded or declared-dangerous dogs.

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