XL bully dogs to be banned, with penalties including fines of up to €2,500 or jail

Animal welfare charity fears measure could lead to dogs being abandoned and put further pressure on rescue centres

An XL Bully: the dog is set to banned in the State following a series of attacks on people. Photograph: Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty Images
An XL Bully: the dog is set to banned in the State following a series of attacks on people. Photograph: Daniel Leal/AFP/Getty Images

Dog-owners found to be in breach of the incoming ban on the XL bully crossbreed will face fines of up to €2,500, a prison term, or both.

Minister for Rural and Community Development Heather Humphreys outlined her plans for the ban which is being brought in after a number of savage attacks by XL bully dogs, including a recent fatal attack in Limerick on Nicole Morey by her own dogs, one of which was an XL bully. Alejandro Mizsan, a boy living in Co Wexford, suffered serious facial injuries in 2022 when he was attacked by one of the dogs.

“I know a lot of people will not agree with this decision. I’m a dog owner myself and I know people love their dogs. We must be mindful however that no dog’s life is worth more than human life,” Ms Humphreys said on Friday. “Ultimately that is what guided me in making this decision.”

The Dublin Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it was concerned that some dogs could be abandoned as a result of the ban.

READ MORE

“We understand that Minister Humphreys has had a difficult discission to make and we will wait to see how this will work in practical terms,” it said in a statement. “As a charity our fears are that people will panic and abandon their pets or look at already full rescue centres to rehome them.”

Nicole Morey: died in a dog attack at her home in Co Limerick.  Photograph: RIP.ie
Nicole Morey: died in a dog attack at her home in Co Limerick. Photograph: RIP.ie

From October 1st there will be a ban on the breeding, rehoming, reselling and importing XL bully dogs. From February 1st next there will be a ban on owning an XL bully unless the owner has secured a ‘Certificate of Exemption’. These certificates will only be issued to owners who can prove their XL bully is licensed, microchipped and neutered.

According to the Department of Rural and Community Development, the necessary regulations to bring in the ban will be put in place before October and these will include the penalties for offences. The penalties will be in line with those in the existing the Control of Dogs Act under which people found to be in breach of regulations is guilty of an offence.

People found guilty of an offence under the Act are liable on summary conviction to a fine of up to €2,500, or to imprisonment of a term of up to 3 months, or both.

Announcing the ban Ms Humphreys said: “The XL bully was responsible for the horrific attack on Alejandro Mizsan in Wexford last year and it was also the breed which killed a young woman in Limerick recently.

“If we do not take action now the number of these dogs in the country will grow and my fear is that these attacks will become more frequent.”

Limerick dog attack: What is an XL bully and how dangerous are they?Opens in new window ]

The introduction of the ban brings Ireland in line with Britain and Northern Ireland and follows the establishment of a Stakeholder Group on Dog Control, chaired by John Twomey, a former deputy Garda commissioner.

Minister for Rural and Community Development Heather Humphreys. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Wire
Minister for Rural and Community Development Heather Humphreys. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Wire

XL bully dogs are not a breed as such but a type of bulldog with a muscular body and blocky head. They must be at least 51cm tall at the shoulder to qualify for the designation.

The UK government describes them as a “variant of the wider American bully breed type. The XL bully breed type is typically larger (in terms of height and body shape) and more muscular than other American bully breed types such as the micro, pocket, ‘standard’ and ‘classic’.”

Cormac McQuinn

Cormac McQuinn

Cormac McQuinn is a Political Correspondent at The Irish Times