Comprehensive reference catalog of trained service dog tasks organized by the disability category they serve. 50+ tasks across 12 disability categories.
Category: Blog
What Disabilities Qualify You for a Service Dog?
The ADA defines who qualifies for a service dog using a functional test, not a fixed list of medical diagnoses. Here’s how that plays out across 12 disability categories.
Emotional Support Animal ID Card: What It Is and Why You Might Want One
Most experienced ESA handlers carry a printed ID card and Wallet pass even though the FHA only requires the LMHP letter. Visible documentation accelerates landlord conversations.
Psychiatric Service Dog vs Emotional Support Animal
A psychiatric service dog is a full ADA service dog. An ESA is not. Side-by-side comparison of the legal rights, training requirements, and which fits which handler situation.
Service Dog for Autism: Tasks, Family Use, and How to Qualify
Autism service dogs serve children and adults — with specific legal nuances for child handlers via the family-handler model. Tasks, qualification, and how to navigate the school accommodations process.
Service Dog for Depression: Qualification, Tasks, and the Path Forward
Depression qualifies for a psychiatric service dog under the ADA when the dog is task-trained for symptom mitigation. Here’s the qualifying criteria, specific tasks, and how training-to-documentation works.
Service Dog for Anxiety: Real PSD Tasks vs ESA Comfort
Anxiety qualifies for a service dog under the ADA — but only when your dog is task-trained for specific anxiety mitigation. Here’s the legal line between PSD and ESA, and what trained tasks look like.
Service Dog for PTSD: Tasks, Training, and Qualification
A PTSD psychiatric service dog has the same legal status as a guide dog. Here’s what tasks PSDs perform for PTSD, how to qualify, and the training-to-documentation path for veterans and civilians.
Fake Service Dogs: State Penalties + How Legitimate Handlers Can Self-Distinguish
Most US states have criminal penalties for misrepresenting a pet as a service dog. State-by-state penalty map, why fakes hurt real handlers, and how legitimate handlers can self-distinguish honestly.
Penalty for Refusing a Service Dog: Federal Fines + State Criminal Codes
Wrongfully denying access to a service dog handler is not just an inconvenience; it’s a federal civil rights violation under the ADA. Businesses face significant penalties, including federal fines of up to $192,768 for repeat offenses. But what can handlers do when access is denied? From documenting the incident to filing complaints with the DOJ and state authorities, understanding your rights is crucial. Discover the steps you can take to ensure compliance and protect your rights as a service dog handler. Read on to learn more about the penalties and how to navigate these challenging situations effectively.
