Canine Standards Atlas

The Atlas/Breeding/Licensing of Activities Involving Animals Regulations 2018

LawUK

Licensing of Activities Involving Animals Regulations 2018

SI 2018/486 · Local authority licensing, England

The statutory licence a commercial dog breeder in England must hold, awarded on a vet-led inspection and shown as a public star rating.

01 What It Is

The Animal Welfare (Licensing of Activities Involving Animals) (England) Regulations 2018 are the statutory framework that licenses several animal businesses in England, dog breeding among them. Anyone breeding dogs as a business must hold a licence from their local authority. The regime replaced an older patchwork of breeding-licence law with a single, inspection-based system.

02 What It Covers

The same regulations license a range of activities: selling animals as pets, boarding cats and dogs, hiring out horses, breeding dogs, and keeping or training animals for exhibition. For dog breeding, a licence application triggers an inspection in which an appointed vet works alongside the local authority’s inspector and must see how and where puppies are bred, born, reared and kept until sale. A baseline of standards sits beneath higher, optional standards a breeder can choose to meet.

03 How It Is Checked

Licences are issued by local authorities on a risk-based inspection, and each carries a star rating from one to five that sets how long the licence lasts and how often the business is re-inspected. The rating is published. Meeting the higher standards is the only route to a higher rating, and a breeder can appeal a rating within a short window of its issue. Running a licensable breeding business without a licence is an offence.

04 Why It Matters

Commercial breeding is where a dog’s life can be shaped, for better or worse, before it is ever sold. This is the law that puts a vet inside the breeding premises, ties the licence to what the inspection finds, and publishes the result, so a buyer can check a breeder’s standing rather than take it on trust.

Primary sources