About ExoticPetCompliance.pages.dev
Why This Site Exists
Exotic pet ownership laws in the United States are genuinely confusing. They vary enormously by state, often by county and city, change frequently without broad public awareness, and the official sources β state wildlife agency websites, PDFs written for wildlife wardens, and obscure regulatory code β are largely inaccessible to everyday pet owners.
We saw a real gap: people searching "is a hedgehog legal in Georgia" or "capybara permit Florida" were finding outdated forum posts from 2015, PDFs written for enforcement officers, or nothing useful at all. ExoticPetCompliance.pages.dev exists to answer those questions, in plain English, with proper legal context and citations.
How We Research Our Guides
Every guide on this site is built from primary sources, not secondary reporting. Our research process for each state and species guide includes:
- State wildlife agency websites β official prohibited species lists, permit application pages, and published FAQ documents
- State statutes and administrative code β wildlife codes, health and safety codes, and agricultural regulations, accessed via official state legislature websites (e.g., California Codes, Texas Statutes, Florida Statutes)
- Federal statutes β the Lacey Act (18 USC Β§42), the Endangered Species Act (16 USC Β§1531), Animal Welfare Act regulations (9 CFR), and CITES documentation from the US Fish and Wildlife Service
- Agency press releases and official guidance documents β when rule changes are announced or new permits become available
- Direct agency contact β for ambiguous species classifications, we contact the relevant state wildlife or agriculture agency by phone or email to obtain a written determination
All guides carry a "Updated [Month Year]" date stamp. We do not publish guides without verifying the current status of the laws described. When laws change and we become aware of it β through reader corrections, monitoring of agency websites, or news coverage β we update the relevant guide promptly.
Our Editorial Standards
We follow a set of consistent editorial principles across all content on this site:
- Cite the statute, not the summary. When we say a species is banned in a state, we identify the specific statute or regulatory citation (e.g., "California Code of Regulations Title 14 Β§671") rather than relying on secondary sources.
- Distinguish legal from practical. We note when a permit is theoretically available but not practically issued to individual pet owners β a distinction that matters enormously to someone actually trying to obtain an animal.
- Flag ambiguity honestly. Some species occupy genuinely unclear legal territory in certain states. We label these "Unclear" and explain the ambiguity rather than guessing or omitting the information.
- Don't confuse state and local law. Every guide specifies that local ordinances can be more restrictive than state law, and we direct readers to check both before acquiring any animal.
What This Site Is Not
ExoticPetCompliance.pages.dev provides general educational information. We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. Nothing on this site creates an attorney-client relationship or constitutes a legal opinion about any specific situation. Always verify current rules with your state wildlife agency and consult a licensed attorney for advice about your specific circumstances.
We are also not a breeder directory, adoption service, or product retailer. We do not recommend specific sellers or breeders of any animal species.
Corrections and Updates
Laws change, and we cannot catch every change immediately. If you identify an error β an outdated statute citation, a permit process that has changed, or a species classification that has been updated β please contact us with the correct information and an official source link. We take corrections seriously and update guides quickly when notified.
Advertising and Affiliate Disclosures
This site displays advertising through Google AdSense. Advertisers have no influence over our content or editorial decisions. We also participate in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program that allows us to earn a small commission when readers purchase products through our links β at no additional cost to you. Affiliate links are clearly labeled. We only recommend products directly relevant to exotic pet care and ownership documentation.