Your dog just nipped the neighbor's kid. Or maybe you're the one who got bitten while jogging past someone's yard. Either way, you're wondering: do I legally have to tell someone about this?
Here's what most people don't realize—whether you must report a dog bite depends entirely on where you live and who you are. A doctor in California faces different rules than a dog owner in Texas. What triggers mandatory reporting in one county might be completely optional 50 miles away.
The confusion makes sense. We don't have a single federal rule governing dog bite reports. Instead, you're dealing with a jumble of state statutes, county ordinances, and city regulations that don't always line up. Some places require reports for every scratch that breaks skin. Others only care about severe attacks or suspected rabies cases.
Why does any of this matter legally? Because failing to report when required can cost you—sometimes in fines, sometimes in lawsuits, and occasionally in professional licenses. More importantly, unreported bites create public health blind spots that prevent communities from tracking rabies and stopping dangerous dogs before they attack again.
Let's clear something up right away: you won't find a federal statute requiring dog bite reports. Congress hasn't touched this issue. What you will find is a complicated web of state and local mandatory dog bite reporting laws that sometimes contradict each other.
Here's how it typically works....