Emotional Support Animal Housing Laws: A Landlord’s Guide

happy emotional support dog

Landlord Gurus

As the willingness of doctors to prescribe emotional support animals (ESA) continues to increase, landlords are struggling to understand the emotional support animal housing laws. Navigating how to protect your property against damage, handling threats ESAs can have to other tenants, and the confusion between emotional support animals vs traditional service animals has never been more complicated.

Also Read: Emotional Support Animals and Pets In Your Rental: Landlord Gurus Experience

Questions a landlord might ask:

This article will help sort through common questions and outline your responsibilities and rights when renting to someone with an emotional support animal.

Service vs Emotional Support Animal Housing Laws

It is easy to confuse emotional support animals with service animals, however there are some key differences between the two. One of the main differences revolves around specified training that the animal has received.

Emotional Support Animals

Emotional support animals do not need any specific training, and don’t usually have any. Their primary function is to provide companionship, emotional support, or assistance to those with a disability as defined by a tenant’s licensed health care provider. Those prescribed ESA could suffer from anxiety, depression, or PTSD for example.

Emotional support animal housing laws are narrow and do not extend to legal protections in businesses, places of work, or transportation facilities.

Service Animals

Conversely, service animals do in fact receive special training to perform tasks for their owners that would not be able to perform those same tasks on their own.

Think of service animals the same way you would a necessary medical device such as a wheelchair or prosthetic limb. For example, epileptics often have dogs trained to sense an oncoming seizure, before their owner is aware one is about to happen. Service animals also help a variety of people who do not have physical disabilities. They also perform essential functions for individuals with mental or emotional disabilities as well.

Contrary to popular belief service animals do not have to be certified or registered, although many owners choose to do so. The Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) also does not require owners to provide proof that a service animal has been formally certified, trained, or licensed.

Also Read: How To Screen Tenants in 7 Easy Steps

Also Read: The Best Free Property Management Software for Small Landlords in 2021

How to Verify a Tenant with an Emotional Support Animal

Potential tenants applying to rent from you that have an emotional support animal must be able to provide proof that the animal has been prescribed appropriately. Emotional support animals are prescribed by medical or mental health care professionals in most cases. Given appropriate proof you cannot disqualify a tenant from renting from you simply because they have an emotional support animal. Consequently, this applies even if you have a no-pets policy.

Emotional Support Animal Letter

In most cases, a tenant provides an “Emotional Support Animal Letter” to their landlord as means of demonstrating their disability, and the disability-related need for a support animal.

An ESA letter is a signed statement from the tenant’s doctor, psychologist, social worker, or other medical professional or reliable third-party.

A landlord may require documentation, in writing that:

  1. The tenant or a member of his or her family is a person with a disability.
  2. The need for the animal to assist the person with that specific disability.
  3. The animal actually assists the person with a disability.

HUD does not specify or limit the disabilities that apply to emotional support animal housing laws, and landlords may not inquire about the existence or severity of a tenant’s disability.

Also Read: The Best Rental Property Management Software: Product Overviews

Understanding Emotional Support Housing Laws

Emotional support animal housing laws, along with those addressing service animals, provide tenants with certain rights and protections that you need to consider as a landlord. It is important to know what actions you can take when renting to a tenant with an emotional support or service animal and which you cannot.

6 Things You Should NOT Do:

Renting to a tenant with an emotional support animal can be complex and stressful, and it’s important to know the actions you should avoid taking and questions you should avoid asking.

1. Ask questions about a person’s disability

2. Require Registration

3. Claim “Undue Burden” Except In Extreme Cases

4. Charge Pet Rents, Fees, Or Deposits

5. Treat ESA as Pets

6. Require Training

6 Things You SHOULD Do:

Following are some best practices when dealing with emotional support animal housing laws:

1. Require an emotional support animal letter

2. Document owner responsibilities

Also Read: Understanding Rental Lease Agreements: A Landlord’s Guide

Note: A pet addendum is an important tool when allowing animals in your rentals. For instance, starting with a form such as the one RocketLawyer provides and adapting for emotional support animals could help communicate a tenant’s responsibilities. We recommend using a form such as this form for all animals in your rentals.

3. Request vaccination records

4. Consider these two questions:

5. Protect your property from damage with a Move-In Move-Out Condition Checklist

6. Communicate with empathy and openness

Also Read: The Best Tenant Screening Service for Small Landlords

Emotional Support Animals: Species & Breeds

Keep an open mind and remember that ESA do not have to be of any specific breed or variety.

Miniature horses, pigs, turtles, and even llamas can be valid emotional support animals. Other unique breeds have come to include kangaroos, peacocks, and squirrels.

Also Read: Should You List a Rental on Zillow?

Exemptions To Emotional Support Animal Housing Laws

There are two conditions which exempt landlords from their requirement to accept emotional support animals:

  1. The subject property has 1-4 units and one is owner-occupied.
  2. The rental is a single-family home rented out without the services of a realtor. In addition, the owner of the home must not own more than three single-family homes.

If your building does not fit into one of these categories, that means you must provide reasonable accommodations to those tenants with emotional support animals, giving them equal opportunity to use and enjoy the property.

Also Read: Avoid costly repairs with a rental property maintenance checklist

Valid Reasons To Deny Tenants with Emotional Support Animals

In some ways, it may seem that tenants hold all the power with respect to emotional support animals. In actuality, there are many acceptable reasons to deny a tenant with emotional support animal housing.

Also Read: Residential Lease Agreements: Best Software for Small Landlords

Landlord Gurus Take-Away

Emotional support animals have increased in popularity over the last decade, and there is ample evidence that they provide valuable emotional and psychological support to those with disabilities. In 2011, for example, the National Service Animal Registry listed nearly 2,400 registered emotional support animals and service animals combined. At this point that number sits closer to 200,000.

Landlords need to understand how to handle tenants with these types of companions. Above all, it is important to understand that emotional support animal housing laws are not the same as those relating to pets or service animals. You cannot discriminate against people that own an emotional support animal, but as a landlord you do still have rights. Tenants must be able to provide a valid emotional support animal letter, for example. Landlords are not required to provide housing if an ESA is destructive, threatening, or cannot reasonably be housed humanely due to its weight or size. Furthermore, owners are liable for damages caused by their animals, just as any other tenants would be.

In conclusion, knowing your rights and responsibilities under emotional support animal laws is now more important than ever. If you have any questions or experiences you’d like to share on this topic, please feel free to contact us!

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About Eli Secor

Eli Secor, Co-Founder, Landlord Gurus Eli purchased his first rental property at the age of 20, a fourplex in Gold Canyon, Arizona. He was lucky to have the advice of a shrewd real estate investing grandmother, as well as special incentives for first time buyers following the savings and loan meltdown in the late ‘80’s. In 2004 Eli and his wife purchased their first property together, a triplex in Portland, Oregon. The neighborhood was improving, light rail was coming in, and the property needed a significant rehab. They traveled back and forth from their then home in California, improving and managing the property. Eli did a full remodel on the biggest unit, living in the construction zone while doing so. The property has been cashflow positive since day one, and is now worth 3-4 times its original purchase price. Eli has been involved in residential construction since 2001, having remodeled several houses from top to bottom, rehabbed or improved rental units, and built his family’s primary residence. He leverages his knowledge of buildings to improve and maintain rental properties cost and time-effectively. Since 2007 Eli has been managing property in Seattle for family members, and now oversees 20 apartments and 3 commercial spaces. He has a great handyman, who helps make repairs, maintenance, and improvement smooth and easy. Otherwise Eli is a DIY landlord, and single contact for all of his tenants.When Eli isn’t managing rental property he is working on home projects, sailing, mountain biking, skiing, or spending time with friends and family. Once or twice a week Chris and Eli get together to run their dogs, Lola & Peanut. These meetings do double duty as Landlord Gurus planning sessions!Credentials: - BA in History from Whitman College - General Contractor (Ex) - USCG Licensed Captain (UOPV Six-Pack)

16 thoughts on “ Emotional Support Animal Housing Laws: A Landlord’s Guide ”

Jeff Wunder says:

What is the authoritative data/reference source for the Exemptions to the Emotional Support Animal Housing Laws?
Thank you

Eli Secor says:

Hi Jeff, Thanks for the question. First off, we’re NOT lawyers, so if there is any doubt in your mind about what you need to do to adhere to Emotional Support Animal laws in your location we strongly suggest you consult a lawyer. The best source of information we have is from HUD: https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/PA/documents/HUDAsstAnimalNC1-28-2020.pdf. I hope that helps! Thanks for visiting Landlord Gurus!
Take Care,
Eli

sha says:

What if insurance does not cover pet damage, liability.. What if an ESP hurt someone or other property is the landlord liable, there are 3 houses on shared property with no capabilities to separate by fencing, will loose most/ all access/ driveways to houses.. Never had trouble saying no pets allowed before.

admin says:

Good questions, Sha. Emotional support animals are not considered pets, by the law. So if you deny a tenant because of their ESA, you may be setting yourself up for a discrimination claim under the FHA. However, if you can prove that the animal poses a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals or whose tenancy would result in substantial physical damage to the property of others, you might be able to refuse the accommodation. “The animal must pose a direct threat that cannot be eliminated or reduced to an acceptable level through actions the individual takes to maintain or control the animal.” Regarding damages, you may charge a tenant for damage an assistance animal causes if it is your usual practice to charge for damage caused by tenants (or deduct it from the standard security deposits imposed on all tenants). In essence, you can charge for damage done IF you also do that for non-disabled tenants.

Martin says:

Are tenant with ESA responsible for defleaing and/or deodorizing the property after the lease is over?