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14th Mar 2023

Cat owners face £500 fine under new law

Charlie Herbert

Cat owners

Legislation was passed by Parliament on Monday

Cat owners are being warned that they could face a fine of £500 under new laws that require their pet to be microchipped.

All pets in England are now required to be microchipped, and must be implanted with a microchip before they reach 20 weeks old.

Legislation making cat microchipping compulsory was introduced in Parliament on Monday (March 14), with millions of felines to be inserted with small electronic chips by June 2024.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) estimates that of the more than nine million pet cats in England, as many as 2.3 million are unchipped.

The new law will also mean owners’ contact details can be stored and kept up to date in a microchipping database.

The move will mean that it is easier for lost or stray cats to be tracked down and returned to their homes.

The deadline for owners to have their cats microchipped is June 10, 2024. Any owner that is then found not to have microchipped their pet will be given 21 days to have one implanted.

If they do not do do, they face a fine of up to £500.

In 2016, compulsory microchipping of dogs was introduced, and ever since many have been calling for similar legislation to be introduced for cats.

Speaking about this new rule, Environment Secretary Therese Coffey said: “Cats and kittens are treasured members of the family, and it can be devastating for owners when they are lost or stolen. 

“Legislating for compulsory microchipping of cats will give comfort to families by increasing the likelihood that lost or stray pets can be reunited with their owners.”

And Chief veterinary officer Christine Middlemiss added: “Microchipping is by far the most effective and quickest way of identifying lost pets. 

“As we’ve seen with dog microchipping, those who are microchipped are more than twice as likely to be reunited with their owner. 

“By getting their cat microchipped, owners can increase the likelihood that they will be reunited with their beloved pet in the event of it going missing.”

The move was welcomed by cat rescue and welfare charity Cats Protection, which has been calling for all owned cats to be microchipped since the measure was first introduced for dogs. 

Madison Rogers, of Cats Protection, said: “The charity regularly reunites owners with their much-loved cats and in most cases this is only possible thanks to microchips.

“No matter how far from home they are found, or how long they have been missing, if a cat has a microchip, there is a good chance that a lost cat will be swiftly returned home.”

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