Council directs staff to craft licensing rules for home-based pet boarding, daycare and grooming

5601206 · August 7, 2025

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Summary

After repeated neighborhood complaints about home-based pet boarding and daycare operations, Shakopee councilors asked staff to draft a regulatory approach — including licensure, complaints thresholds and possible limits — for pet services operating from residences.

The Shakopee City Council directed staff to return with a proposed regulatory framework for home-based pet services after hearing about recurring complaints tied to commercial dog-boarding, daycare and grooming operations in residential neighborhoods.

Planning staff told the council that current city code allows pet grooming as a home occupation but limits doggy daycare and boarding to commercial zones (B-1, I-1, I-2). Staff noted there are more than 1,000 people in the city offering pet-related services through consumer platforms such as Rover, many of them operating from houses. Complaints include persistent barking, fights and waste in yards.

Council members and staff discussed a tiered approach that would avoid penalizing occasional, informal pet-sitting while providing tools to regulate commercial-scale operations in residential areas. Suggestions included a home-occupation license with a cap on the number of boarded animals without a special conditional use review; heightened insurance requirements; and a three-complaint threshold that could trigger probation or permit revocation similar to the city’s rental-licensing enforcement model.

An owner who operates an in-home pet service described supervision, camera monitoring, quarantine and separation practices used at her residence and said she typically books only a handful of dogs and maintains liability insurance. The council instructed staff to draft a balanced ordinance that allows small, responsible in-home providers to operate while creating licensing and enforcement avenues for larger, commercial operations that generate neighbor complaints.

Staff will return with draft language for council consideration.