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Is Maine dog friendly?

We analyzed 107 cities across Maine. By default, we surface the strongest cities with at least 10,000 residents, then let you switch to the full statewide ranking.

State Preemption Law Active: Local cities in Maine are legally banned from enacting breed-specific legislation against your dog.

State Average Score

C-
13/100

Paw Score™

Top representative city: Portland (B)

Derived strictly from local government data

Statewide Vet Density

2.9clinics / 10k people

Avg Walkable Days

218days without extreme weather

BSL Restricted Cities

0known local breed bans

Data Journalist Analysis

The Leaderboard Disparity

When comparing 13 representative cities (10k+ residents) in Maine, the leaderboard works best as a relative comparison surface, not a blanket relocation recommendation. Portland leads this 13 representative cities (10k+ residents) set, but the lead is relative rather than dominant. Its Paw Score Grade of B suggests a city that still carries meaningful tradeoffs even though it currently ranks first inside Maine. Orono lands at the bottom with a D+, where sparse vet coverage, climate stress, or housing friction create a visibly weaker dog-ownership outlook.

The Hidden Pet Tax

The economic reality of renting with a dog in Maine fluctuates wildly depending on the municipality. While the state median for pet rent sits around $41/mo, moving to a high-demand area like South Portland can push this implicit pet tax up to $58/mo. This doesn't even account for non-refundable localized pet deposits.

Safety & Legislative Climate

Maine has a statewide BSL preemption law. That generally limits local governments from adopting new breed bans, which reduces policy risk for owners of commonly targeted breeds. Housing rules, enforcement practices, and older local language can still vary, so local verification still matters.

Ranked Cities in Maine

Defaulting to cities with at least 10,000 residents so the leaderboard feels representative. Switch to the full statewide ranking any time.

107 cities audited

Showing the first 13 of 13 representative cities in Maine.

State RankCityPaw ScoreWalkable DaysPet RentVet / 10KPopulation
#1Portland
B
208$528.8168,505
#2Westbrook
B
208$488.8120,484
#3Brunswick
B
203$468.8116,928
#4South Portland
B
208$588.8126,780
#5Lewiston
C-
218$333.4137,886
#6Auburn
C-
218$343.4124,294
#7Bangor
C-
218$363.7431,663
#8Waterville
C-
218$333.4616,704
#9Augusta
C-
206$313.4618,999
#10Sanford
C-
218$413.722,095
#11Biddeford
D+
208$423.722,463
#12Saco
D+
208$443.720,636
#13Orono
D+
185$403.7410,699

Frequently Asked Questions

In the default 13 representative cities (10k+ residents) view, Portland currently ranks first in Maine. It posts a Paw Score grade of B, supported by 208 walkable days per year, comparatively solid vet access, and more manageable pet housing costs than many competing cities.
The cost varies, but the median pet rent surcharge across Maine is approximately $41 per month. This is an extra fee piled onto your base rent, not including the one-time, often non-refundable, pet deposit. Renters with large breeds often face higher fees or outright exclusion in denser metro areas.
Maine has a statewide Breed-Specific Legislation (BSL) preemption law. That generally blocks local governments from adopting new breed bans, but you should still confirm local enforcement and housing rules before moving.