How to Register a Service Dog in District of Columbia
District of Columbia service-dog handlers: skip the printable PDFs. Get a Wallet pass, a real photo ID card, and a public verification URL.
- Apple & Google Wallet pass with auto-updating QR
- Fargo HID-printed photo ID card
- Public verification at
/verify/?reg=YOUR-ID - Ships in 3 business days
Service-dog rights in District of Columbia
Service dogs are protected under three overlapping federal laws: the ADA (public accommodations), the FHA (housing), and the ACAA (air travel). District of Columbia handlers get every one of those protections by default. Whether you live in Washington, D.C., , or anywhere else in District of Columbia, the federal protections move with you. State law (DC Code § 7-1009 and § 2-1402.31) supplements those federal protections. The District of Columbia Human Rights Act provides service-animal access protections that closely track federal ADA standards. Worth saying plainly: registration is documentation, not certification. The ADA has no official registry, District of Columbia has no registration requirement, and no business can demand a certificate to grant you access. What a USAR record does is make verification frictionless — a quick QR scan, a photo ID a manager can look at, a Wallet pass that updates automatically.
What you get with USAR
One registration, three deliverables, and a public verification URL that doesn't expire.
usserviceanimalregistrar.org/verify/?reg=YOUR-ID. Anyone with a phone camera can scan and confirm.
District of Columbia service-dog FAQ
Is service-dog registration required in District of Columbia?
No. Neither the ADA nor District of Columbia state law require you to register a service dog before exercising public-accommodation rights. Registration is documentation, not certification. Where it helps is friction — handlers report fewer disputes when they can produce a USAR ID card and a verifiable QR link.
What can a service-dog handler do in District of Columbia?
Under federal law and DC Code § 7-1009 and § 2-1402.31, a service-dog handler in District of Columbia can bring a trained service dog into virtually any place open to the public — restaurants, hotels, retail, transit, hospitals, government buildings — and into rental housing regardless of pet policies. Air travel is governed separately by the ACAA, which allows trained service dogs in the cabin with the right paperwork.
What questions are businesses allowed to ask in District of Columbia?
Federal ADA rules — applied identically in District of Columbia — limit business staff to two questions when the dog's role isn't obvious: whether it's a service animal required because of a disability, and what task it's trained to do. Demanding a certificate, asking about your medical condition, or charging a pet fee are all prohibited.
Where can my service dog go in District of Columbia?
Anywhere open to the public — restaurants in Washington, D.C., hotels statewide, grocery stores, hospitals, taxis and rideshare, trains and buses, government buildings, and most private businesses. The ADA carves out only narrow exceptions (sterile hospital environments, situations where the dog is out of control or not housebroken). Outdoor public spaces — parks, beaches, transit hubs — are also covered.
Can my landlord deny my service dog in District of Columbia?
In almost every case, no. The FHA requires landlords to grant reasonable accommodation for service dogs and emotional support animals — including in "no pets" buildings — and forbids pet deposits or pet fees for them. District of Columbia state housing law provides parallel coverage. Landlords can deny accommodation only in narrow situations (the animal poses a direct threat, the request creates an undue burden).
Do I need anything special to fly with my service dog from DCA (Reagan National)?
Yes — the DOT Service Animal Air Transportation Form. The ACAA requires it for most U.S. airline cabin travel. DCA (Reagan National) handlers should submit the form to their airline at least 48 hours ahead. USAR's Premium and Elite packages include this form; it's also available standalone from the U.S. Department of Transportation.
How does USAR verification work?
Every USAR registration gets a public verification URL at /verify/?reg=YOUR-ID. The QR code on your printed ID card and Wallet pass links to it. A doorman, server, or gate agent scans, the page loads in a second, the record either says ACTIVE or it doesn't. Nothing to download, nothing to install. The Wallet pass auto-syncs when you update vaccinations or photos.
How much is a USAR registration?
Tiered pricing — pick what you actually need. Essential is $89 first year then $29.99 annually. Classic adds the printed ID card at $149/yr 1. Premium ($219 SD/PSD, $209 ESA) bundles the printed card, Wallet pass, certificate, housing letter, and DOT form. Elite ($349 SD/PSD, $299 ESA) adds the harness/leash/collar set. Standalone Lifetime is $79.99 one-time. See /pricing/ for the full comparison.
Ready to register your service dog in District of Columbia?
Three minutes to register. Three business days to ship. Lifetime $79.99 or $29.99/yr — you pick.




