Service Animal Clearance — Your Rights, Verified.
Instant verification for your task-trained service animal. Digital certificate, verified ID card, and a shareable verification page — trusted everywhere you go. One payment, no hassle.
Instant clearance • No appointment needed
Choose Your Clearance
Both packages include instant delivery and a lifetime verification portal.
Service Animal Registration
Register your service animal with PawClear.
- Database registration entry
- Digital certificate PDF
- Digital ID card with photo
- QR verification code
- ADA rights summary
Service Animal Premium Bundle
Everything in standard plus public access documentation toolkit.
- Everything in SA Registration
- Public access rights guide
- Business interaction guide
- Documentation organizer
- Lifetime record storage
What is a Service Animal?
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), a service animal is defined as a dog (or in some cases a miniature horse) that has been individually trained to do work or perform tasks for a person with a disability.
The tasks performed must be directly related to the person's disability. Examples include guiding a person who is blind, alerting a person who is deaf, pulling a wheelchair, alerting and protecting a person who has a seizure disorder, reminding a person with a mental illness to take prescribed medications, or calming a person with PTSD during an anxiety attack.
Unlike emotional support animals, service animals are permitted to accompany their handlers in virtually all public places — including restaurants, hotels, stores, and transportation — under federal law.
Your Rights Under the ADA
Public Access
You and your service animal have the right to enter most public places — restaurants, hotels, shops, gyms, hospitals, and more.
No Certification Required
The ADA does not require service animals to be certified or registered. Documentation is optional but gives you instant credibility and prevents misunderstandings.
Housing Rights
Under the Fair Housing Act, landlords must allow service animals even in no-pet buildings. Pet fees and deposits do not apply.
Limited Questions Allowed
Staff may only ask two questions: (1) Is this a service animal required due to a disability? (2) What task is it trained to perform?