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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Cat Rules

Cat Rules: San Jose vs Santa Clara

How do cat rules rules compare between San Jose, CA and Santa Clara, CA?

San Jose and Santa Clara have similar restriction levels.

San Jose, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

San Jose licenses cats under SJMC chapter 6.04, requires current rabies vaccination, and expects ID on outdoor cats. There is no leash law for cats, but owners must prevent nuisances. Animal Care and Services runs licensing, low-cost clinics, and a community cat program.

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Santa Clara, CA

Santa Clara County

Some Restrictions

Santa Clara County Code Title C requires rabies vaccination for cats over four months and sets nuisance standards. SCC Animal Services and city partners support trap-neuter-return for managed feral colonies; outdoor cat owners remain liable for damage and wildlife harm.

View full Santa Clara rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSan JoseSanta Clara
License requirementSJMC chapter 6.04-
Rabies shotRequired for licensing-
Cat leash lawNot required citywide-
Outdoor IDTag or microchip expected-
OperatorSJ Animal Care and Services-
Rabies trigger-Cats over four months
County code-SCC Title C (Animals)
TNR support-SCC Animal Services
Feeding nuisance-Title C plus Vector Control
Leash rule-None for cats

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

San Jose FAQ

Do cats need licenses in San Jose?

Yes. SJMC chapter 6.04 requires licensing dogs and cats over four months old, with proof of current rabies vaccination. Licenses are renewable annually through San Jose Animal Care and Services.

Can cats roam outdoors in San Jose?

There is no leash law for cats, but outdoor cats should wear ID and owners are responsible for nuisance, property damage, or wildlife harm. Feral colonies require enrollment in the community cat program.

Santa Clara FAQ

Do cats need licenses in Santa Clara County?

Most cities tie cat licensing to spay-neuter status or rabies vaccination. Unincorporated SCC focuses on rabies vaccination over four months; check your city or SCC Animal Services for licensing specifics.

Is trap-neuter-return legal here?

Yes. SCC Animal Services and city shelters support TNR for managed feral colonies, including sterilization, vaccination, and ear-tipping. Random feeding outside a managed colony can still trigger nuisance citations.

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