From New York City's apartment buildings to the Finger Lakes and the Adirondacks, New Yorkers rely on their emotional support animals,protected in every rental by federal law.
Your therapist will be licensed in New York
Under the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3604(f)) and the HUD/DOJ Joint Statement on Reasonable Accommodations, landlords may request reliable documentation from a health care professional with personal knowledge of the patient's disability and disability-related need. Several state laws, and most landlord-favored practice, go further and expect the issuing clinician to hold an active license in the tenant's state. ExpertESA matches you with an independent therapist who holds an active New York license either way. Your letter is written, signed, and issued under their New York license number on their letterhead, not on Expert ESA letterhead, and is valid for any rental property statewide. Expert ESA facilitates the match and delivers the letter; we do not perform the clinical evaluation.
Fair Housing Act protection in New York
The federal Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3604) applies to landlords in all 50 states, including New York. Once you present a valid ESA letter, your landlord is required to make a reasonable accommodation for your emotional support animal. That means landlords across New York cannot:
- Refuse to rent to you because you have an ESA
- Charge pet rent, pet deposits, or any pet-related fees for your ESA
- Apply breed, weight, or size restrictions to your ESA
- Require you to disclose your specific medical diagnosis
- Contact your therapist directly without your written consent
The same federal protections apply to apartments, condos, single-family rentals, university housing, and most other rental settings. There are narrow exceptions: buildings of four units or fewer where the landlord lives on-site, and a few specialized housing categories. But the vast majority of New York rentals are covered.
How it works for New York residents
The process is the same wherever you live:
- Free initial assessment. Answer a few questions about your situation.
- Match with a New York-licensed therapist. Most states are matched quickly; a few state laws (e.g. California under AB 468) require a longer client-provider relationship before a letter can be issued.
- Brief consultation. Typically 15-30 minutes by phone or video.
- Letter delivered. Signed PDF delivered to your portal within 24 hours of clinician approval.
If your therapist determines an ESA is appropriate for your situation, your signed letter is delivered to your portal soon after clinician approval. If not, you'll receive a full refund.