Beekeeping laws, state by state
Rules for keeping bees change at the state, county and even city level. Start here to see what each state requires — and where to find the official source.
What every beekeeper should check
- State registration — some states require it (often annually), some don't.
- Local zoning & HOA rules — cities, counties and HOAs can be stricter than the state.
- Hive number limits — many areas cap colonies by lot size.
- Setbacks & flyway barriers — minimum distances from property lines, or a barrier to lift flight paths.
- Water source — providing on-site water keeps bees off a neighbour's pool.
- Movable-frame equipment — required in most states so hives can be inspected.
- Disease reporting — many states legally require reporting notifiable diseases.
- Selling honey — cottage-food and labeling rules may apply.
Texas beekeeping laws
Do you have to register a beehive in Texas? A plain-English guide to Texas beekeeping law — registration, hive identification, moving bees, and local rules.
Read →Florida beekeeping laws
Florida requires every beekeeper to register. A clear guide to Florida beekeeping law — mandatory registration, the 15-foot rule, inspections and local zoning.
Read →California beekeeping laws
California requires all beekeepers to register annually via BeeWhere. A guide to California beekeeping law — registration, fees, hive ID and pesticide notification.
Read →New York beekeeping laws
New York requires all beekeepers to register with the state (free). A guide to NY beekeeping law — state registration, extra NYC rules, disease reporting and zoning.
Read →Don't see your state yet? Search "[your state] apiary registration" and look for your state Department of Agriculture — that's the authoritative source. We're adding more states over time.