Foxhunting

Crown Prosecution Service · Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs Last regenerated 5 hours ago · 1 new event since

Summary

What this is

The Hunting Act 2004 makes it an offence to hunt a wild mammal with dogs in England and Wales except under Schedule 1 exemptions (stalking and flushing with a maximum of two dogs, falconry, rats/rabbits, research). The regime is now under active review through a Defra consultation opened on 26 March 2026 on prohibiting trail hunting, alongside a Private Member's Bill seeking statutory amendments.

Why it matters

Trail hunting has become the principal practical loophole through which alleged illegal fox hunting persists, with the CPS confirming it is routinely raised as a defence in prosecutions. A statutory ban — Labour's manifesto commitment — would close the smokescreen but raises enforcement design, exemption scope and rural-economy questions that the 2026 consultation must resolve.

Current status

Defra opened a consultation on 26 March 2026 on proposals to prohibit trail hunting in England and Wales; a Private Member's Bill received first reading on 23 April 2026 with second reading on 8 May 2026. Government has confirmed it will not separately review the mink-hunting exemption.

What changed recently

  • 26 Mar 2026 — Defra opened consultation 'Proposals to prohibit trail hunting in England and Wales'.
  • 23 Apr 2026 — Hunting Act 2004 (Amendment) Bill received first reading in the Commons; second reading on 8 May 2026.
  • 26 Feb 2026 — Defra confirmed in PQ 113773 that the Secretary of State has no plans to review the mink-hunting exemption under the Act.
  • 1 Apr 2025 — Adjournment debate on Trail Hunting (Perran Moon MP); Minister Daniel Zeichner confirmed a consultation 'later this year' but declined a firm timeline.
  • 26 Mar 2026 — Government issued WMS HCWS1473 / HLWS1468 announcing the trail-hunting consultation.

Key documents

Framework

Operationalising

Scrutiny

Commentary

Review

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs → src
    Policy lead for the Hunting Act regime; opened the trail-hunting consultation on 26 March 2026.

Sponsoring minister 2

  • Daniel Zeichner → src
    Minister for Food Security and Rural Affairs; responded to the 1 April 2025 Trail Hunting adjournment debate confirming commitment to a ban and to a consultation.
  • Baroness Hayman of Ullock → src
    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at Defra; issued the Lords WMS (HLWS1468) launching the trail-hunting consultation on 26 March 2026.

Regulator / delivery programme 2

  • Crown Prosecution Service → src
    Publishes the Hunting Act 2004 prosecution guidance and brings prosecutions; trail hunting is routinely raised as a defence in cases reviewed.
  • National Police Chiefs' Council (Wildlife Crime lead) → src
    ACC Matt Longman is the national lead on fox-hunting crime; cited in the 1 April 2025 debate stating that trail hunting features as a defence in all successful Hunting Act prosecutions reviewed.

Commentator 7

  • Perran Moon MP → src
    Labour, Camborne and Redruth — secured the 1 April 2025 adjournment debate on Trail Hunting calling for a statutory ban and removal of Schedule 1 loopholes.
  • Rachael Maskell MP → src
    Labour/Co-op, York Central — intervened in the 1 April 2025 debate citing data that 46% of registered trail hunts end up chasing a fox.
  • Sir Julian Lewis MP → src
    Conservative, New Forest East — argued in the 1 April 2025 debate that banning trail hunting would lead to drag hunting becoming the next target, querying the logical endpoint of incremental bans.
  • Andrew George MP → src
    Liberal Democrat, St Ives — historic advocate of the 2004 Act; intervened in the 1 April 2025 debate noting hunt leaders' own description of trail hunts as a 'smokescreen'.
  • Jim Shannon MP → src
    DUP, Strangford — intervened in the 1 April 2025 debate noting devolution and arguing the hunting community deserves to be heard in the legislative process.
  • Dan Norris MP → src
    Labour, North East Somerset and Hanham; chair of the League Against Cruel Sports — intervened in the 1 April 2025 debate distinguishing drag hunting from trail hunting.
  • Neil Duncan-Jordan MP → src
    Labour, Poole — warned in the 1 April 2025 debate that a ban focused solely on the term 'trail hunting' could be circumvented by re-labelling.

Civil society 2

  • League Against Cruel Sports → src
    Reported 526 incidents of suspected illegal hunting and 870 incidents of nuisance/distress between November 2023 and March 2024; cited by Defra Minister in the 1 April 2025 debate.
  • Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) → src
    Cited in the 1 April 2025 debate on out-of-control hounds harming people, pets and themselves in residential areas.

Political commitments

  • commitment Manifesto pledge Labour · 2024 · Trail Hunting

    Ban trail hunting

    Why linked: Referenced by Defra Minister Daniel Zeichner in the 1 April 2025 adjournment debate as a manifesto commitment the Government is committed to delivering.

  • commitment Manifesto pledge Conservative · 2015 · Amending the Hunting Act 2004

    Repeal the Hunting Act 2004

    Why linked: Cited in the Commons Library briefing SN06853 as the manifesto commitment that led to the July 2015 announcement of intended SI amendments to remove the two-dog limit.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • Defra consultation on prohibiting trail hunting closes — response and date for legislative vehicle not yet announced.
  • Second reading of the Hunting Act 2004 (Amendment) Bill on 8 May 2026 — relationship between the PMB and the Government's intended legislation unresolved.
  • Whether the existing Schedule 1 exemptions (stalking, flushing with two dogs, falconry, rats/rabbits, mink) will be retained, narrowed or repealed alongside any trail-hunting prohibition.

Beyond the corpus

  • MISSING Government response to the trail-hunting consultation — The consultation only opened on 26 March 2026; a response and impact assessment would normally follow before primary legislation is introduced.
  • MISSING Updated CPS guidance reflecting any new offence — If trail hunting is criminalised, CPS guidance and charging standards will need to be re-issued; no draft yet in the corpus.
  • MISSING Impact assessment on rural economy and animal welfare consequences — Lords PQ 494942 raised concern about welfare consequences of a ban; no assessment yet in the corpus.

Confidence gaps

  • Scope of the PMB (Hunting Act 2004 (Amendment) Bill) — whether it tracks the Government consultation or proposes a different model.
  • Whether the policy will extend to all Schedule 1 exemptions (notably mink hunting, which Defra has expressly declined to review per PQ 113773) or be confined to trail hunting only.