Updated April 2026

Seattle has one of America's best park systems. For dogs, it's one of the worst.

99% of Seattleites live a 10-minute walk from a park. 9.6% live that close to a dog park. This site is a sourced, reproducible public-data reference on Seattle's off-leash area (OLA) system — and what has gone wrong with it. Every chart links to its source. The opinion page is clearly marked; everything else is factual.

OLAs in Seattle, 2025
14
Fully-fenced, dedicated off-leash areas
OLAs opening fall 2026
+2
West Seattle Stadium, Othello Playground
Dog parks per 100K residents
1.82
Portland: 5.74 · SF: 5.03 · Vancouver BC: 5.44
Off-leash citations, 2014–2019
4,803
SPR Animal Control, via public records request

The reports, in short

Each report below reopens a specific claim Seattle Parks & Recreation has made about the OLA system, checks it against primary sources, and publishes the data behind the check. In order:

All the reports

Part I

The Gap

Seattle's OLA count has been stuck at 14 for ~15 years while the population grew 34%. Per-capita comparison to Portland, San Francisco, Vancouver BC, and Austin. Budget analysis through Park District Cycle 2.

Read Part I →
Part II

Access

Walkshed coverage, peer-city OLA acreage, the Kinnear Park case study, and the pattern of illegal off-leash use that follows from insufficient supply. Interactive map of all existing, under-construction, and planned OLAs.

Read Part II →
Enforcement

Hotspots

Where Seattle Animal Control issued 4,803 off-leash citations between January 2014 and October 2019. Interactive hotspot map, year trend, and a top-20 table — six of the top ten cited parks have no designated OLA at all. A follow-up public records request covering October 2019 to present has been filed; this page will update when received.

Read the enforcement analysis →
Budget

Where the money goes

Seattle Parks & Recreation total budget versus dedicated off-leash area spending, 2016–2026. Absolute dollars, percentages, per-dog figures, Cycle 1 vs. Cycle 2 comparison, and a peer-city transparency table showing why the comparison is so difficult. Every row sourced.

Read the budget analysis →
Opinion

Opinion & recommendation

A clearly-marked opinion page with six principles, three opinions that fall out of the data, and one policy recommendation: a time-zoned shared-use model for Seattle's parks, modeled on New York City's long-standing off-leash-hours policy. Signed by Andre Vrignaud.

Read the editorial →

Primary data

All underlying data lives in the GitHub repo under /data. Plain CSVs; no database, no build step, no login.

Methodology & caveats

This site favors explicit methodology over headline-friendly numbers. Every derived number on every page links back to its underlying CSV and, where applicable, to the script that produced it. The master reference is METHODOLOGY.md — the "show your work" index. A few caveats readers should also carry:

Corrections and contributions welcome This site deliberately flags where the underlying data is incomplete, approximate, or stale. If you spot an error, have a better primary source, or can fill in one of the known data gaps — especially around current dog-population counts, SPR's internal methodology, or per-OLA usage observations — please get in touch at [email protected] or file an issue on the repo. The site will be updated.
How this site was built The data analysis, primary sources, public records requests, methodology choices, and editorial claims on this site were collected and verified by Andre Vrignaud, a Seattle resident and long-time off-leash-area advocate. The site's HTML, CSS, charting, and prose were built with substantial assistance from Claude Code (Anthropic). Every factual claim on this page links to its primary source; every derived number links to a CSV in the public repo and the script that produced it (see METHODOLOGY.md). AI was used as a writing and engineering partner, not as an autonomous researcher; Andre reviewed the analysis, placed the primary sources, and stands behind the claims. Errors are his, and corrections are welcome via the block above.