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HB 26-1011

signed

Transfers of Certain Pet Animals

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

HB 26-1011, a Colorado law that took effect after being signed, bans pet stores from selling or transferring ownership of dogs and cats starting January 1, 2027. This means that pet stores will no longer be able to sell these animals directly but can still display them for adoption under certain conditions without charging fees. The bill also restricts brokers who profit from selling pets bred by others from dealing in dogs and cats, though it allows exceptions for specific situations like animal shelters, hunting dog sales, and health-related research facilities. This law aims to improve the welfare of dogs and cats by reducing commercial breeding practices that are often associated with poor treatment of animals.

Official Summary

Under current law, a pet store in Colorado is permitted to sell or offer for sale dogs or cats if the pet store abides by certain requirements. The bill removes the existing permission so that, beginning January 1, 2027, a pet store is no longer permitted to sell, lease, offer to sell or lease, barter, auction, or otherwise transfer ownership of a dog or cat. Nothing prohibits a pet store from providing space for the display of dogs or cats available for adoption if the pet store does not collect a fee from the display and if certain requirements are met.The bill defines "broker" as a person that, for profit, sells, leases, offers to sell or lease, barters, auctions, or otherwise transfers ownership of, in person or online, a pet animal bred by another person. A broker does not include a person that transfers no more than 3 single pet animals per each calendar year if the person transfers each single pet animal no more than once. The bill states that a broker is not permitted to sell, lease, offer to sell or lease, barter, auction, or otherwise transfer ownership of a dog or cat. The bill clarifies that the following are still permitted:The sale, transfer, or adoption of an animal, including a law enforcement animal, to a governmental agency;The sale, transfer, or adoption of a guide, signal, or service dog;The sale, transfer, or adoption of a dog or cat by an animal shelter or pet animal rescue; The sale, transfer, or adoption of a dog bred or trained for lawful hunting to or by an individual who possesses a current hunting license;The sale or transfer of a dog or cat by the original breeder of the dog or cat; and The sale or transfer of a dog or cat by, or on behalf of, the bona fide owner that is not the original breeder of the dog or cat to a new owner, so long as the bona fide owner does not sell or transfer a dog or cat more than three instances per each calendar year; andThe sale, transfer, or adoption of a dog or cat by a health-related research facility.(Note: Italicized words indicate new material added to the original summary; dashes through words indicate deletions from the original summary.)(Note: This summary applies to the reengrossed version of this bill as introduced in the second house.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2026-04-29
Latest action
2026-01-14
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources
OpenStates
View source ↗

Topics

Agriculture

Votes

REPASS
2026-04-02 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
CONCUR
2026-04-02 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
Refer House Bill 26-1011 to the Committee of the Whole.
2026-03-24 · Senate · passYes: · No: · Other:
BILL
2026-03-02 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Refer House Bill 26-1011, as amended, to the Committee of the Whole.
2026-02-23 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.002
2026-02-23 · House · passYes: · No: · Other:
Adopt amendment L.003
2026-02-23 · House · passYes: · No: · Other: