Looking to learn about Florida’s emotional support animal laws? This guide will explain the laws and help answer your ESA legal questions in Florida. And we keep it up-to-date, so bookmark this page and always be in the loop.
Florida’s Emotional Support Animal Statute Section 760.27, as well as federal Fair Housing laws, protects owners of emotional support animals from housing discrimination. These laws give Florida residents the following rights:
Under the Florida ESA statute, Florida residents can prove they need an emotional support animal by getting an ESA letter from a licensed healthcare practitioner (which includes telehealth providers).
The rules in Florida also prevent landlords from creating unnecessary obstacles for tenants who request ESA accommodation. For example, Florida housing providers can’t require the use of a specific form or a notarized document (Florida Statute 760.27(3)). Landlords also cannot deny an ESA request solely because the tenant didn’t follow the landlord’s own procedure for ESA accommodations.
Florida’s ESA rules make clear that in order to have a valid emotional support animal, all you need is an ESA letter from a licensed healthcare practitioner.
Landlords can face legal consequences for violating the rights of residents with emotional support animals in Florida. Here are a few cases where landlords were brought to court for their failure to comply:
Landlords who fail to accommodate emotional support animals in Florida can face legal repercussions. One lawsuit was initiated after a Florida resident’s request for an emotional support animal, a 12-pound toy Manchester Terrier named Harrison, was challenged.
The tenant had provided a letter from his physician, veterinarian records for his ESA, and photographs of his ESA. However, the condo’s lawyer requested further documentation and inappropriate details about the tenant’s disability and the necessity of his emotional support animal.
The case eventually resulted in a settlement in which the condo association agreed to fair housing training and confidential monetary relief.
Under Florida’s ESA laws, landlords are not permitted to charge any type of pet fee. That includes fines for having a pet, monthly pet fees, pet application fees, and pet deposits. This was illustrated in a case where a non-profit fair housing organization successfully resolved a disability complaint filed with HUD on behalf of a Florida couple, the Johnsons, who faced issues with their condo association in Lauderhill, Florida.
The Johnsons obtained their dog at a time when the condo community was pet-friendly. Later, the condo association passed a no-pet policy. The Johnsons sent a reasonable accommodation request for their emotional support animal to the condo board.
The Johnsons never received a response from the condo, and the association fined them for walking their ESA on the premises. In the end, the fines totaled $1,100 for repeated violations of the condo pet rules.
Following a HUD complaint and investigation by the Broward County Human Rights Section, a settlement was reached. It allowed the couple to walk their ESA on the property, dismissed all fines, and awarded them $10,000 in monetary compensation.
Florida’s ESA laws prevent landlords from enforcing size and weight restrictions on emotional support animals. In one case, a Florida tenant suffering from PTSD successfully sued his condo association for violating federal and Florida Fair Housing Acts by enforcing a pet weight policy against his emotional support dog.
Florida Statute Section 760.2 prohibits landlords from requesting: 1. information that details the diagnosis or severity of the tenant’s disability and 2. any medical records relating to the tenant’s disability. In one Florida case, a tenant had provided a letter from his physician, but the condo’s lawyer requested further documentation and inappropriate details about the tenant’s disability.
The case eventually resulted in a settlement where the condo association agreed to fair housing training and monetary relief without admitting wrongdoing. This case highlights that ESA owners not only have housing rights in Florida, but a right to privacy regarding sensitive details surrounding their condition.
No, Florida Section 760.2(3)(b) prevents landlords from making things difficult for tenants who request ESA accommodation. Housing providers can’t require the use of a specific form or a notarized document. Landlords also cannot deny an ESA request because the tenant did not follow the landlord’s procedure for ESA accommodations.
No, Florida Section 760.2(3)(c) specifically states that registrations, ID cards, or certificates are not sufficient to prove that you have an emotional support animal.
ESA Doctors 2024-08-28T17:00:55+00:00 ESA Laws, State |About the Author:
The ESA Doctors writing team has extensive experience relating to disability and housing laws, mental health, animal training, and pet health. Each article is fact checked and reviewed by multiple members of our team. Many of the writers have emotional support animals and speak from real life experiences.
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