SponsoredBuild your website with Vincony

Aviso legal: Esto no constituye asesoramiento jurídico. La legislación y la jurisprudencia cambian. Consulte siempre con un abogado cualificado para su situación específica.

UK Law Reference
Todos los temas

Bienestar animal y derecho agrario

Protección animal, regulación de prácticas agrícolas y subvenciones post-Brexit.

Environment & Resources
England & Wales

Introducción

La legislación de bienestar animal protege a los animales de tratos crueles y regula las prácticas agrícolas.

In Brief

Anyone responsible for an animal must meet its welfare needs under the Animal Welfare Act 2006, s.9 (the duty of care). Causing unnecessary suffering is a criminal offence (s.4 AWA 2006) with a maximum penalty of 5 years' imprisonment. Wild birds, animals, and plants are protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Fox hunting with dogs is banned under the Hunting Act 2004. Post-Brexit farm subsidies are transitioning to Environmental Land Management schemes under the Agriculture Act 2020.

Principios fundamentales

1

Duty of Care — The Animal Welfare Act 2006 imposes a duty on any person responsible for an animal to ensure its welfare needs are met (s.9): a suitable environment, diet, ability to exhibit normal behaviour, housing with or apart from other animals, and protection from pain, suffering, injury, and disease.

2

Unnecessary Suffering — It is an offence to cause unnecessary suffering to a protected animal (s.4 AWA 2006). Maximum penalty: 5 years' imprisonment (increased by the Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Act 2021).

3

Wildlife Crime — The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 protects wild birds, wild animals, and plants. Offences include killing or taking listed species, destroying habitats, and trading in endangered species (CITES).

4

Livestock Regulation — Animal health legislation governs disease control (Animal Health Act 1981), movement of livestock, identification and traceability, and slaughter and meat hygiene.

5

Post-Brexit Farm Subsidies — The Agriculture Act 2020 replaces the EU Common Agricultural Policy with Environmental Land Management schemes. Payments are transitioning from area-based subsidies to 'public money for public goods' (environmental improvements).

6

Hunting — The Hunting Act 2004 prohibits hunting wild mammals with dogs in England and Wales, with limited exemptions.

7

Dangerous Dogs — The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 prohibits certain breeds and creates offences for dogs dangerously out of control.

8

Animal Testing — The Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 regulates the use of animals in scientific research, requiring licences and compliance with the 3Rs (replacement, reduction, refinement).

Leyes clave

Animal Welfare Act 2006

2006
Ver →

Agriculture Act 2020

2020
Ver →

Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981

1981

Hunting Act 2004

2004

Casos principales

RSPCA v Johnson

[2009] EWHC 2702 (Admin)

Leer caso →

Escenarios comunes

Neglected dog reported to the RSPCA

The RSPCA may investigate and, if it finds evidence of unnecessary suffering or failure to meet welfare needs, may bring a private prosecution under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. Local authorities and the police also have enforcement powers. A court may disqualify the owner from keeping animals.

Farmer applies for environmental land management

Under the Agriculture Act 2020, farmers can apply for payments under the Sustainable Farming Incentive, Local Nature Recovery, or Landscape Recovery schemes. These replace the Basic Payment Scheme (EU subsidies) and reward environmental outcomes such as wildlife habitats, water quality, and carbon sequestration.

Related Careers

Frequently Asked Questions

Is fox hunting still legal in the UK?

The Hunting Act 2004 prohibited the hunting of wild mammals with dogs in England and Wales. Fox hunting is therefore illegal. Drag hunting (following an artificial scent trail) and trail hunting (following a pre-laid trail) are permitted, but actual pursuit of a wild fox with hounds constitutes an offence. Conviction can result in an unlimited fine.

What should I do if I find an injured wild animal?

Wild animals that are injured should be taken to a local vet (who must treat them free under their professional obligations), an RSPCA wildlife centre, or a local wildlife rehabilitator. It is generally lawful to take in an injured wild animal temporarily to provide first aid. However, keeping wild animals for extended periods without a licence may breach the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

What are the rules about keeping certain animals as pets?

Dangerous wild animals (e.g. big cats, certain reptiles) require a licence from the local authority under the Dangerous Wild Animals Act 1976. All pets must have their welfare needs met under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. Certain invasive non-native species (e.g. American mink, certain turtles) cannot be kept without a licence under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

What is the Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Act 2021?

The Animal Welfare (Sentencing) Act 2021 increased the maximum penalty for animal cruelty offences under the Animal Welfare Act 2006 from 6 months to 5 years' imprisonment. It applies to offences including causing unnecessary suffering, administering poison, involvement in animal fighting, and mutilation.

Important Deadlines

RSPCA/local authority investigation — report animal crueltyReport immediately; no time limit on the RSPCA bringing a private prosecution (subject to 6-month magistrates' court limitation for summary offences)
Appeal against a livestock movement/quarantine restrictionVaries by regulation; check the specific notice served — typically 21 or 28 days
Challenge an Environmental Land Management decisionAdministrative review/appeal timescales set by the Rural Payments Agency; judicial review must be brought promptly and within 3 months

Typical Costs

Typical Costs & Fees
RSPCA complaint / cruelty reportFree
Animal welfare prosecution fine (on summary conviction)Unlimited fine; up to 5 years’ imprisonment (AWA 2006)
Veterinary report for legal proceedings£200–£1,000+
Solicitor defence costs for animal welfare prosecution£2,000–£15,000+

Related Content

Related Legislation

Related Cases