Northeast · Service dog laws · New York
Do service dogs have housing protections in New York too?
Educational content, not legal advice. For your specific situation, consult a state-licensed attorney.
What the law says
24 C.F.R. § 100.204 (FHA reasonable accommodation) protects assistance animals — both ESAs and service dogs — in housing. HUD's 2020 guidance applies the same framework to both.
Source: 24 C.F.R. § 100.204 (HUD Reasonable Accommodation regulation) ↗
In plain language
Yes — service dogs are protected by the federal Fair Housing Act in New York the same way ESAs are. Housing providers must make reasonable accommodations for tenants with disabilities, which includes allowing trained service dogs even where a "no pets" policy exists. The FHA's accommodation framework applies to both categories of assistance animal. The difference between ESAs and service dogs matters mostly for public access (ADA) and air travel (DOT 2021 rule), not for housing.
Read the full New York 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 York →