If you own a Rottweiler, pit bull, or German Shepherd, you've probably hit walls trying to find housing, secure insurance, or move to certain cities. Roughly 3.6 million dog owners in America face breed restrictions that determine where they can live and whether they'll keep their pets.
From city ordinances banning specific breeds outright to insurance companies refusing coverage, these policies create real headaches. Worse, they're inconsistently applied and often ignore scientific evidence about dog behavior.
Here's what you need to know to protect your rights and navigate these restrictions without losing your four-legged family member.
Breed restrictions limit or completely prohibit ownership of certain dog breeds. You'll encounter them in three main places: city laws, housing communities, and insurance policies.
When governments pass laws targeting specific breeds, that's called breed-specific legislation (BSL). A breed specific legislation overview shows these laws exploded during the late 1980s after several brutal dog attacks made national headlines. Politicians wanted quick solutions, so they zeroed in on breeds they considered inherently dangerous—primarily pit bull-type dogs, Rottweilers, German Shepherds, and Dobermans.
But here's where it gets messy: the dangerous breed definition in law changes drastically depending on where you live. Some cities list exact breed names like "American Pit Bull Terrier" or "Stafford...