FAQ

Plain answers before a consultation.

These answers explain how the team approaches training, suitability, public access, and service-dog responsibilities.

What is the difference between a psychiatric service dog and an emotional support animal?

A psychiatric service dog is trained to perform specific disability-related tasks. An emotional support animal may provide comfort by presence, but comfort alone is not the same as trained service work.

Can the team help with owner-trained service dogs?

Yes. Owner-handler coaching is a core focus when the dog is suitable and the handler can commit to consistent practice.

Does the company provide trained service dogs?

Trained service-dog placement may be available when there is a suitable dog and a responsible match for the handler's needs.

Can training guarantee access everywhere?

No training program can control every public setting, housing request, travel plan, or carrier review. Behavior, task work, handler skill, and each organization's process all matter.

What makes a dog unsuitable for service work?

Serious aggression, high reactivity, poor recovery, unsafe public behavior, severe environmental stress, or health limitations may make service work inappropriate.

How long does training take?

Timelines depend on the dog, handler, tasks, public access goals, and current behavior. A consultation and evaluation are needed before estimating a plan.