HB 5283 would allow cities to impose “pet prohibition” laws that ban licensed local businesses from selling pets, limiting residents’ choices on where they can get their next pet.

Supporters claim the bill protects animals, but experience from other states shows these policies often produce the opposite outcome.

HB 5283 would:

  • Push pet sales into unregulated online marketplaces and social media platforms
  • Increase pet scams and fraud targeting Connecticut families
  • Reduce transparency and accountability in how pets are sourced
  • Penalize responsible, licensed pet shops while failing to stop bad actors

When lawful, transparent pet sales are restricted, consumers do not stop looking for pets. Instead, they turn to unregulated sellers operating on social media and online platforms, where there is little oversight and no consumer protection. The Better Business Bureau continues to warn families about a growing surge in pet-related scams tied to online sellers.

Connecticut already has animal cruelty laws and regulatory tools to address genuinely inhumane breeding operations. Policies that rely on vague definitions and punitive penalties risk discouraging compliance and driving pet sales underground, leaving animals and families less protected.

What Are Pet Bans?

Pet bans don’t ban pets outright, but they make it harder to get one. Typically, these laws ban stores from selling dogs, cats, and rabbits. Increasingly, these laws ban guinea pigs and other pets, too. A recent law in D.C. bans the sale of mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and birds. 

Advocates claim these laws help pets, but it’s the opposite: They actually hurt pets.

Here’s how these laws hurt pets:

Better Solutions

People are rightly seeking to ensure the welfare of animals sold through stores. The way to do this is to address animal welfare directly. Banning stores from selling animals only creates a black market where there is less protection for animals. After all, Prohibition didn’t stop moonshiners–it helped them. 

Effective solutions include:

Ready To Help?

Tell your legislators to oppose pet bans!