Skip to content
BT BT

Pets News

  • Pets News
  • Pets Clinic
  • Pets Food
  • Animals
  • Pets Market
BT
BT

Pets News

New rules make microchipping for cats in England compulsory

Gino, 02/08/2025

Cats must be implanted with a microchip before they reach the age of 20 weeks under the legislation (Gareth Fuller/PA)

All pet cats in England must be microchipped under a new law which could see their owners face a £500 fine if they do not get it done.

Millions of cats are set to be inserted with the small electronic device by June 2024 after the compulsory cat microchipping legislation was introduced in Parliament on Monday.

Under the new rules, cats must be implanted with a microchip before they reach the age of 20 weeks and their contact details are stored and kept up to date in a pet microchip database.

The aim is to make it easier for lost or stray pet cats to be returned home safely, which Environment Secretary Therese Coffey described as a time of “devastating” loss for many owners.

All owners must have their cat microchipped by June 10 2024.

Any owner who is found not to have microchipped their cat will have 21 days to have one implanted, or they may face a fine of up to £500.

There are more than nine million pet cats in England, with as many as 2.3 million unchipped, according to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

Compulsory microchipping of dogs came into effect in April 2016.

Ms 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 provide comfort to families by increasing the likelihood that lost or stray pets can be reunited with their owners.”

Chief veterinary officer Christine Middlemiss said: “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 owners.

“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 Cats Protection, the cat rescue and welfare charity, which has been calling for all owned cats to be microchipped since the measure was first introduced to 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.”

Microchipping involves inserting a chip, generally around the size of a grain of rice, under the skin of a pet.

This has a unique serial number that the keeper needs to register on a database.

When an animal is found, the microchip can be read with a scanner and the registered keeper identified in a database so that the pet can quickly be reunited with them.

It will not be compulsory for free living cats that live with little or no human interaction or dependencies, such as farm, feral or community cats.

Owners with cats that are already microchipped should ensure their details are up to date, Defra said.

Pets Food

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Keep pets indoors, warn police, after 2 dogs died of poisoning in Trail, BC

01/10/2025

RCMP in Trail, BC, are warning residents to keep their pets indoors after the poisoning deaths of two dogs. Police said they were alerted to the deaths on Tuesday, even though the dogs died Sunday and Monday, respectively. They occurred in a rural neighborhood on the Trail, approximately 300 kilometers…

Read More

Man walking across Canada for homeless people who have pets

05/06/202326/03/2024

‘There were absolutely no homeless shelters … that would take pets, so I decided to fix that,’ said the man whose trans-Canada walk aims to raise awareness of the issue For those experiencing homelessness, choosing between housing and keeping a beloved pet can be a grim, but necessary choice, as…

Read More

More people in Windsor are surrendering their pets after struggling to afford them

15/06/202326/03/2024

More people than ever are turning to Feeding Windsor-Essex’s pet food bank as inflation hits grocery bills hard for humans and pet food. And local organizations say the number of people who’ve had to surrender their pets because of rising costs has more than doubled in the last three years….

Read More

Recent Posts

  • When you adopt a desert tortoise, prepare for a surprisingly social and zippy pet
  • Are pets in too many public spaces? The case for and against pets at your next brunch, get away
  • A Canadian animal shelter’s ‘camera broke’ so it posted hilarious sketches of pets up for adoption instead
  • Aberdeenshire Dog Photography, Holidays at Home, Chickens, Ticks and Other Observations…
  • COLUMN: Photographer ‘just here to pet all the dogs …’

Tags

analysis arabia Art automotive beauty berita business camera cooking developments devices digital estate excessive fashion gadget headlines health house housing improvement indonesia information jewellery jewelry latest malaysia market mobility motoring movies newest occasions online pictures property saudi shopping sport sports suggestions tales technology updates world

About Us

  • Contact Us
  • Disclosure Policy
  • Sitemap

Partnerlik

KAjedwhriuw024hvjbed2SORH  

©2026 BT | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

WhatsApp us