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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Seminole vs Tarpon Springs

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Seminole, FL and Tarpon Springs, FL?

Seminole and Tarpon Springs have similar restriction levels.

Seminole, FL

Pinellas County

Heavy Restrictions

Seminole addresses animal hoarding through general animal cruelty and nuisance provisions in Chapter 14, supplemented by Florida Statute 828 cruelty laws. Excessive numbers causing neglect can trigger seizure and prosecution.

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Tarpon Springs, FL

Pinellas County

Heavy Restrictions

Tarpon Springs addresses hoarding through Chapter 4 sanitation and number-of-animals provisions, with cruelty and neglect prosecuted under Florida Statutes Chapter 828, and Pinellas County Animal Services investigating complaints.

View full Tarpon Springs rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSeminoleTarpon Springs
Pet number limitNot numerically capped-
Cruelty statuteFS 828.12-
Investigating agencyPinellas Animal Services-
Sanitation requiredYes, under code-
Animal seizureAllowed with warrant-
Local code-Chapter 4 sanitation rules
State cruelty law-Fla. Stat. Chapter 828
Investigators-Pinellas County Animal Services
Possible charges-Misdemeanor or felony
Reporting-Code enforcement or police

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Seminole FAQ

How many pets can I have in Seminole?

Seminole does not set a strict numerical limit, but conditions causing neglect, sanitation issues, or cruelty trigger enforcement under state and local laws.

What is animal hoarding under Florida law?

Hoarding is typically prosecuted as cruelty or neglect under FS 828.12 and 828.13 when animals lack adequate care, food, water, shelter, or sanitary conditions.

How do I report suspected animal hoarding?

Contact Pinellas County Animal Services at (727) 582-2600 or local law enforcement to investigate suspected animal cruelty or hoarding situations.

Tarpon Springs FAQ

How many pets can I have in Tarpon Springs?

The city does not set a single hard cap citywide; instead, sanitation, noise, and nuisance standards effectively limit how many animals can be kept on a residential property.

How do I report suspected animal hoarding?

Call Pinellas County Animal Services, Tarpon Springs Police, or city code enforcement; investigators can inspect the property and pursue cruelty charges if warranted.

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