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Legitimate Service Dog Certification
Fight Service Dog Fraud – Defend Your Rights as a Service Dog Handler
Dogs are a man’s or woman’s best friend. We have trained them for generations to help us hunt, farm, and raise livestock. Now that most of us do not have farms or hunt for food, our dogs are here to support us in different ways.
You can have a legitimate certified Service Dog even if you are not blind or wheelchair-bound. If you suffer from a disability, you are legally qualified to have a service dog. Below are the steps to legitimately certify your service dog.
Step #1 – Train Your Dog, No Shaming Allowed
Admitting to yourself that you could benefit from having a service dog can be the hardest step. Facing your own disability and admitting you need support can make you feel weak. This is not true. Standing up for yourself and seeking self-care is an essential part of growing and healing.
Training your dog to perform tasks for your disability is the first step. To learn more about how to make your dog a service dog, read this post.
Once you have trained your service dog, remember to travel with your certified Service Dog with confidence and be proud of your accomplishment. Training your dog to provide a service for you will create a stronger bond between you and your furry companion.
Step #2 – Legal Education, Understanding Service Dog Laws
Service Dog rights are clearly defined by the ADA. However, there are still a few facts that people commonly get wrong.
Fact or Fiction? #1 – Service Dogs require a doctor’s note.
FICTION… – Service Dogs do NOT require a doctor’s note.
Fact or fiction? #2 – Service Dogs cannot be Pitbulls or large dogs such as Dobermans or Great Danes. Only Golden Retrievers can be service dogs.
FICTION… – There are no breed, weight, or age requirements for Service Dogs. As long as the dog is well trained and can perform a task that aids in their handler’s disability, they can be considered a service dog.
Fact or Fiction? #3 – Landlords cannot charge a pet deposit for a service dog or deny them housing access.
FACT! – Service dogs have public access rights to all public places including housing. A Service Dog is NOT a pet and is categorized as a medical tool.
Step #3 – Practice, Practice, Practice
One of the most nervous parts of having a Service Dog is traveling with them in public. Training your Service Dog at home can be much easier since you are in a comfortable environment and your Service Dog has fewer distractions. Below are tips on how to practice training with your service dog.
Tip #1 – Train your service dog at home
Making sure you and your service dog are speaking the same language is key. Remember, your dog does not actually understand English. They associate the sound you are making with the task that they understand you would like them to perform. Making sure you and your service dog are communicating clearly is the first step to having a strong relationship.
Tip#2 – Train your service dog at a park
After you and your service dog are speaking the same language, it is important to start practicing and training in public places that allow for dogs, such as a park. Parks are excellent places to train your service dog since this space allows for dogs, there are plenty of distractions for your dog to overcome, and it is a beautiful way to spend an afternoon!
Tip #3 – Train your service dog at public places that are service dog-friendly
Although every place in the US is required to grant access to service dogs, some places will refuse to follow the law. Once you are confident in traveling with your service dog, we recommend standing up for your rights. We will discuss this in more depth later in this post. However, when you are first training your service dog, we recommend only exposing yourself to kind and safe environments.
A good way to practice traveling with your service dog is to call a restaurant with an open patio. Inform them you are traveling with your service dog and request that they reserve a table in the corner for you. You can have your service dog practice sitting under the table and waiting patiently for you. They will experience various distractions such as food and people wanting to pet them. Make sure you keep control of your service dog so both of you can gain confidence.
Step #4 – Legitimate Service Dog Certification
The ADA only allows employees and others to ask you two questions regarding your service dog.
Question #1 – Is that a service dog? Places can only ask you this question if it is not clear that your dog is a service dog. If your Service Dog is wearing a service dog vest, they should not need to ask you this question.
Question #2 – What task does your service dog provide for you. You can inform them the specific task your Service Dog provides for you and show them your Legitimate Service Dog Certification. They are not allowed to ask you to show them the task or ask specifically about your disability.
Step #5 – Advocacy for Service Dog Rights
Every service dog handler should become a Service Dog Rights Advocate. Too often we have Service Dog handlers accusing others of not being “legitimate” service dog handlers. This is discrimination and self-hate. Please understand that people are fighting disabilities that you may not be aware of. They have challenges in their lives that make having a Service Dog a bright light for them. Shining doubt on other Service Dog handlers is not right and we advocate against such emotional cruelty. Please be kind to others.
About the Author: The writing team at Service Dog Certifications is made up of folks who really know their stuff when it comes to disability laws and assistance animals. Many of our writers and editors have service dogs themselves and share insights from their own experiences. All of us have a passion for disability rights and animals.
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7 month old baby has profound hear loss in both ears. We have a smart that already performs certain functions.
– when the door bell rings, she goes to the door and barks.
– when someone is at the door, she will start whimpering front of the door.
– when we ask her where is “WIlliam” our son, she goes to the room and barks.
Is my son too young to have a service dog registered under him?
We will be flying soon and we want to bring the dog as service dog for William.
I have sleep paralysis and I trained my dog to wake me up when I am having one and most of the time he anticipates if I am going to have one so he wakes me up before it happens.
I also trained him to alert me when having I am having ‘short of breath’ problem due to continuous coughing.
Can I register him as my service dog?
I am 64yrs old female and he is 11yrs old lab mix.
Thank you.
That is an amazing service your dog provides for you! For more information on how to register your Service Dog, you may find this article helpful –
https://www.servicedogcertifications.org/service-dog-registration-process/
Hello I am training my dog to stop and detect panic attacks would she be considered a service dog?
Once your dog is fully trained to help with your panic attacks and has also passed a public access test, your dog can be certified as a psychiatric service dog.
Wow. That is dead wrong. A business may not ask for your doctor’s letter under the ADA, but you are required to have one. (Note, landlord actually can ask for the doctor’s letter under the FHA, and airlines can ask under the ACA.) Courts have consistently established that. In fact, you need a new one every year, to show that your disability is ongoing.
Now if you’re going to ask why one is needed, if you’re not required to show it, that’s obvious. You can’t file a discrimination claim without backing up that your dog truly is a service dog. The doctor’s letter is the only judicially accepted proof of that.
Further, without that letter, some states can fine or criminally charge you for having a fake service dog. Florida, for example, makes it a criminal offense to falsely state you have a service dog.
Logan, I recently read that only a judge has the right to determine if a service dog is legitimate. I believe it was under the ADA guidelines, in the event that someone challenges rather your dog is fake or legitimate.
Hi Logan,
Thanks for your advise. I have a question for you. My son is autistic and out dog has been essential to his improvement. I would like to register our dog as a service dog to avoid issues with our landlord. I already have a letter from my son’s neurologist stating the diagnosis but it doesn’t specifically says he would require a service dog. It is a letter saying my son is autistic and has some intelectual disability as well and I use that letter as proof of my son’s condition when it is required.
Would that letter be enough or do I need to request a letter specifically saying my son needs a service dog to help him?
Thank you
By the way, I live in Miami, Florida
Hi Monica! I too live in Florida and have a service dog … I would like to guide you on this! do you mind if I message you on Facebook ?
While all of this looks nice, no “certification” is needed for Service Dogs. I agree that you can train your own SD, however, ordering these things doesn’t guarantee anyone is going to do their due diligence if they want to make a pet look like a SD.
And yes, I’ve raised pups for Canine Companions for Independence, so I’m aware of the laws as well as the ins outs, negatives and positives. BTW, CCI does not advocate this type of service.
Please do train your dogs if they’ll be out in public, regardless of whether they’re SDs or pets.