Species Guide · Updated January 2025
Red Fox Ownership Laws by State (2025)
Red foxes are native to most US states, which makes them far more restricted than non-native exotic foxes like fennec foxes. Wild-caught red foxes are illegal everywhere. Captive-bred have a narrow permit path in only a few states.
Overview: Red Fox Ownership Laws
Red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) are one of the most legally complicated exotic pets in the United States for a specific reason: they are native to North America. Native species are subject to entirely different regulatory logic than non-native exotics — most states prohibit possession of native wildlife regardless of how the animal was obtained.
The key distinction in red fox law is wild-caught vs. captive-bred. Wild-caught red foxes are prohibited in effectively all 50 states — taking a wild fox and keeping it as a pet is illegal everywhere. Captive-bred red foxes from licensed breeders exist in a narrower legal space: some states permit them with a permit, most do not.
State-by-State Status (Captive-Bred)
| State | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Indiana | Permit | Captive Wildlife Permit from IN DNR; must document captive-bred origin from USDA-licensed breeder |
| New York | Permit | Permit available for captive-bred foxes from licensed fur farm stock; complex application process |
| Ohio | Permit | Post-2012 Act registration required; captive-bred documentation essential |
| Pennsylvania | Permit | Exotic Wildlife Possession Permit; red foxes treated differently from fennec foxes |
| Texas | Permit | Captive-bred red foxes may be kept; native species rules complicate ownership without permit |
| California | Banned | All foxes prohibited regardless of origin |
| Colorado | Banned | Native species; prohibited as wild animal |
| Georgia | Banned | Native wild animal; prohibited |
| Most states | Banned | Red foxes are native wildlife in most US states; captive-bred exemptions are narrow and state-specific |
The "Domesticated" Silver Fox: A Different Legal Path
There is a separate category of red fox that sometimes creates legal confusion: the Russian domesticated silver fox, developed through the famous Soviet domestication experiment begun by Dmitri Belyaev in 1959. These animals have been selectively bred for 60+ generations for tameness and display domestic dog-like behaviors.
Legally, domesticated silver foxes are still Vulpes vulpes — the same species as wild red foxes. Most states' regulations do not distinguish between wild-type and domesticated-strain red foxes. A state that bans all red foxes bans domesticated silver foxes under the same rules. A handful of states have created or are considering specific exemptions for documented domesticated strain foxes, but as of 2025 this is limited.
Fennec Foxes vs. Red Foxes: Why the Rules Differ
Fennec foxes (Vulpes zerda) are not native to the United States — they are from the Sahara Desert. This means they fall under exotic non-native species regulations rather than native wildlife regulations. The result is that fennec foxes are legal in many states where red foxes are prohibited, because the regulatory concern for native species (ecosystem protection, disease, wildlife population management) does not apply to fennec foxes in the same way.
If you have your heart set on a fox as a pet, fennec foxes are almost always the legally clearer path. See our Fennec Fox Laws by State guide for the complete comparison.