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You do not need a licence if you want to keep animals in a rural area.
There are no Auckland-wide restrictions on the number of chickens, poultry or other animals you can keep in rural areas and any property over 4000 square metres (one acre). But some legacy district plans have restrictions on the type and number of stock or poultry that you can keep on a rural property.
Contact us to check if your property has any restrictions.
To check if you are living in a rural zone, visit Unitary Plan Maps and type your address into the search.
Some legacy district plans have restrictions on the type and number poultry that you can keep on a rural property.
Contact us to check if your property has any restrictions.
You may need to apply for an animal licence if you want to keep a large number of poultry in an urban area.
This table shows the number of poultry you can keep without a licence, as long as it does not cause nuisance issues for your neighbours:
| Type of poultry | Properties smaller than 2000 square metres | Properties larger than 2000 square metres |
|---|---|---|
| Chickens (excludes roosters) | 6 | 12 |
| Ducks | 0 | 6 |
| Geese | 0 | 6 |
| Pheasants | 0 | 6 |
| Quail | 6 | 12 |
Under the Animal Management Bylaw 2015, you must meet certain requirements for keeping birds and poultry.
Chickens should have access to an area of land greater than three square metres and include:
Set up the coop in a place that is least likely to cause a nuisance to neighbours.
Ensure that chickens are confined and that they cannot freely leave the property.
To keep your chicken coop clean, you should:
Excess food and bedding waste can attract flies, mice and rats to a property.
Once vermin find an accessible food supply, they will continue to return, leaving excrement that can:
Make sure you regularly dispose of waste.
Rather than scattering food across the ground, use a vermin-proof container specifically for poultry feeding. This will also keep out the rain and give poultry good access to dry pellets or grain.
There are no restrictions for keeping pigeons or other bird aviaries on private property but there are still requirements you must meet.
If you are keeping pigeons you must ensure they are not a nuisance to anyone else or causing health and safety issues to the public.
Before you have birds on your property, find out which parrots and other bird species are pests in the Auckland region.
There are restrictions on breeding, distributing, releasing and selling birds that are considered pests. Visit Tiaki Tāmaki Makaurau for more information.
It is illegal to keep protected native birds in captivity without a permit from the Department of Conservation (DOC).