Know Your Rights
Understand exactly what the ADA grants you, what businesses can legally ask, and how to respond when your rights are challenged.
Do Service Dogs Have to Be Registered? No. Here's What That Means for You
There is no federal service dog registry, no state requires one for ADA access, and no business can demand papers. An ID seller explains, honestly, why registration is voluntary, what the DOJ actually says, and when a card is still worth having.
What Can a Landlord Legally Ask About Your Service Dog? (2026 HUD Update)
HUD withdrew its long-standing assistance animal guidance in September 2025, and a May 2026 enforcement memo now centers on trained task work. Here is exactly what a landlord may ask, what they may never ask, and how the new rules affect ESAs.
Service Dogs and Renting: Pet Fees, Breed Bans, and No-Pet Buildings (2026 FHA Guide)
No pet deposit, no pet rent, no breed restrictions: under the Fair Housing Act a service dog is not a pet. A practical renting guide updated for HUD's 2025 guidance withdrawal and the May 2026 enforcement memo, with scripts and a step-by-step request.
The Only 2 Questions a Business Can Legally Ask You Under the ADA
The Americans with Disabilities Act lets a restaurant, hotel, or store ask exactly two things — and prohibits everything else. Here's what they are, why they matter, and what to say if a business pushes for more.
Service Dog vs ESA vs Therapy Dog: The Real Legal Differences
These three terms are often used interchangeably online — but the ADA gives one category enormous protection and the other two almost none. Get the categories right and your conversations get easier.
Your ADA Rights in Restaurants, Airlines, and Rideshare (2026 Edition)
Three of the most common friction points for handlers. The ADA covers them differently — and rideshare drivers have started canceling at higher rates than ever. Here's the law and the scripts that actually work.
When a Business Refuses Your Service Dog: Your Step-by-Step Response
You walked in. They said no. Now what? The exact escalation path — from polite ADA reminder, to manager, to ADA Information Line, to small-claims court — without losing your cool.