Document a psychiatric disability with a Wyoming-licensed professional — the foundation for a task-trained service dog under the ADA.
A psychiatric service dog gives Wyoming residents protections an ESA can’t: full public access under the ADA. The trade-off is real task training.
An emotional support animal comforts by presence and is protected for housing only. A psychiatric service dog is individually task-trained for a psychiatric disability and carries full ADA public access — stores, transit, and workplaces across Wyoming. Housing protections apply to both.
Your letter — issued by a mental health professional holding an active Wyoming license — establishes a psychiatric disability that substantially limits a major life activity: the clinical foundation beneath both your housing rights and your dog’s working role. Task training is arranged separately by you, and approved letters arrive within 10–15 minutes.
Task work looks like deep-pressure therapy during panic, interrupting harmful behaviors, medication reminders, or guiding a disoriented handler — trained responses to a disability, which is what creates service-dog status.
The letter documents your psychiatric disability; the dog’s task training is what carries ADA public access. Together they put Wyoming handlers on solid footing.
No — and be wary of anyone selling “registration.” No registry, card, or vest is required in Wyoming or anywhere else, and none of them make a dog a service animal.
The flat rate is $149 ($199 with the optional ID card), plus $60 per additional animal — charged only after a licensed professional approves you.
Only two questions: is the dog required because of a disability, and what task is it trained to perform. Staff may not demand documentation or ask about your diagnosis.
Free pre-screening · Licensed in Wyoming · You only pay if approved
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