Northeast · Service dog laws · New Jersey
What's the penalty for misrepresenting a pet as a service dog in New Jersey?
Educational content, not legal advice. For your specific situation, consult a state-licensed attorney.
What the law says
Federal law does not directly criminalize misrepresentation. Many states have enacted their own misrepresentation statutes — see New Jersey's state-specific section if one applies.
Source: Americans with Disabilities Act, Title III, 42 U.S.C. §§ 12181–12189 ↗
In plain language
Federal law does not directly criminalize falsely claiming a pet is a service dog. A growing number of states — including some with statutes enforced through fines, community service, or misdemeanor charges — have made misrepresentation an offense. Whether New Jersey has such a statute, and how it applies, is described in this page's state-specific sections. Beyond legal penalties, misrepresentation harms people who actually need service dogs by eroding businesses' willingness to honor legitimate teams.
Read the full New Jersey service dog laws guide
This page covers one question; the full guide walks through the federal floor, state-specific carve-outs, the documentation standard, and the accommodation process.
Service dog laws in New Jersey →