Crimes Relating to Animals - Restrictions on Keeping Roosters
The law restricts private keeping of roosters by capping to no more than 5 per acre or 25 per property, effective Jan 1, 2027 (with some exemptions).
The law restricts private keeping of roosters by capping to no more than 5 per acre or 25 per property, effective Jan 1, 2027 (with some exemptions).
Status and sponsors
- Enacted as Chapter 184; approved by Governor Wes Moore on April 22, 2025.
- Bill sponsor: Senator Chris K. Kramer (and cross-file HB 513).
- Act effective date: October 1, 2025. The substantive prohibition on keeping certain roosters begins January 1, 2027 (unless authorized by the Department of Agriculture).
Purpose and intent
- Reduce illegal cockfighting activity and associated public‑health risks (including the spread of avian influenza) by limiting the number and manner in which privately kept roosters may be maintained on residential or other nonexempt properties.
Key provisions
- Definitions
- “Rooster” — a male chicken that is at least 6 months old, has fully developed adult plumage, or is capable of crowing.
- “Enclosure” — a confinement structure (including repurposed items such as barrels) used for long‑term housing of a single adult rooster and that prevents interaction with other roosters.
- “Property” — a parcel of land or a combination of parcels operating as a single unit.
Prohibition (effective Jan 1, 2027)
Exemptions
Enforcement and penalties
Projected fiscal and operational impacts
- Fiscal note: potential minimal increase in State general fund revenues from civil penalties; State enforcement manageable within existing resources. Local animal control and law enforcement agencies may see minimal additional expenditures if they choose to enforce the law. No identified small‑business impact.
Who is affected
- Private individuals keeping roosters on residential or other nonexempt properties (especially those keeping multiple roosters).
- 4‑H/FFA members, schools, animal welfare organizations, government shelters, and commercial poultry producers (all exempt under conditions).
- Local and State animal control and law enforcement agencies (enforcement role and regulatory cooperation).
Notable limits and timeline
- Act effective Oct 1, 2025; substantive prohibition and numerical limits take effect Jan 1, 2027 (unless the Department issues a specific authorization).
- The Department of Agriculture is charged with adopting regulations to implement the Act. Localities may maintain or adopt stricter rules.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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