Service Animals vs. Pets: Navigating the Laws in Austin Rentals
Austin landlords who allow pets under specific lease terms still need to understand that service animals and, separately, emotional support animals are treated very differently under federal fair housing law, regardless of a property's general pet policy.
Service Animals Are Not Considered Pets
Under the Fair Housing Act, a service animal trained to perform a specific task for a person with a disability is treated as a reasonable accommodation, not as a pet. This means a landlord generally cannot charge a pet fee or pet deposit for a legitimate service animal, and a documented 'no pets' policy doesn't apply to them.
Emotional Support Animals Have Similar Protections
Emotional support animals, while different from trained service animals, are also generally protected under fair housing law as a reasonable accommodation for a person with a documented disability-related need, even though they don't perform a specific trained task.
What a Landlord Can Reasonably Ask
A landlord can generally ask for documentation supporting the need for a service or support animal but cannot demand extensive medical records or ask about the specific nature of the disability. Overly invasive questioning can itself create fair housing liability.
Pets Remain Subject to the Lease
A standard pet — with no disability-related accommodation — remains fully subject to whatever pet policy, deposit, or breed and size restrictions the landlord has established in the lease, and can be declined under a legitimate no-pets policy.
Documenting Requests Properly
Handling accommodation requests consistently and in writing, and consulting a fair housing resource or attorney when a request seems unusual, protects an Austin landlord from both discrimination claims and abuse of the accommodation process.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Service animals are treated as a reasonable accommodation under the Fair Housing Act, not as pets, so a landlord generally cannot charge a pet fee or deposit for a legitimate service animal.
No. A landlord can generally request documentation supporting the need for an accommodation but cannot demand extensive medical records or ask about the specific nature of a tenant's disability.




